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From generations of infidelity and pain, Beyoncé makes 'Lemonade'

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned. But apparently a woman scorned is also the foundation of a creative tour de force.

On HBO this past Saturday – in a time slot generally reserved for feature films – Beyoncé released “Lemonade,” a series of music videos compiled into a short film that’s both eclectically...

Read more: From generations of infidelity and pain, Beyoncé makes 'Lemonade'

Trump culture: threat, fear and the tightening of the American mind

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

For the past 10 months, Donald Trump has been a political enigma. Against the predictions of journalists, policy wonks and odds makers, a tabloid darling with no political experience and few coherent policies is now poised to be the Republican nominee for president.

Hundreds of journalists and political scientists have tried to explain...

Read more: Trump culture: threat, fear and the tightening of the American mind

Should we worry about arsenic in baby cereal and drinking water?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWhat's in that baby cereal?Baby via www.shutterstock.com.

Even though most people don’t know much about chemicals in general or poisons in particular, virtually everyone knows that arsenic is bad. In the first century, arsenic was already known to be a deadly poison . However, it was the Borgias in the 14th and 15th centuries who perfected...

Read more: Should we worry about arsenic in baby cereal and drinking water?

Ireland in 1916: the Rising, the War and controversial commemorations

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

This week marks the centennial of the Easter Rising – the armed insurrection that would trigger nationalist Ireland’s final battle for independence from Great Britain.

The first of July will mark another centennial, that of the Battle of the Somme, one of the bloodiest battles in human history, in which over 3,500 Irish soldiers were...

Read more: Ireland in 1916: the Rising, the War and controversial commemorations

The effect racist rhetoric has on young Latinos, and why all Americans should care

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Luis is an upper-middle-class American-born Latino.

When I interviewed him in 2008, he told me he had spent long hours, and a substantial amount of money, restoring a classic Chevy truck. One day, clad in grease-stained work clothes, Luis decided to take the truck for a test drive around his affluent neighborhood. As he cruised past his neighbors'...

Read more: The effect racist rhetoric has on young Latinos, and why all Americans should care

Why Prince’s music will become more accessible after his death

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Last Thursday, the world was shocked by the untimely death of Prince, the highly prolific, Grammy-winning music icon who not only transformed music and the record industry but also provoked questions about race, gender and sexuality.

Apart from his songs, musical genius and virtuosic skills, the “Purple Rain” singer is also widely...

Read more: Why Prince’s music will become more accessible after his death

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