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Slouching Towards Bethlehem, 21st Century Style

Slouching Towards Bethlehem, 21st Century Style

If art is a window on the soul of a nation, what does ours look like? Who do we think we are in the sense of identity?

New Thinking for a New World - a Tallberg Foundation Podcast

July 15, 202138m 47s

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Show Notes

If art is a window on the soul of a nation, what does ours look like? Who do we think we are in the sense of identity?

We live in a time of profound change. For anyone who doubted how fundamentally our world is changing, the global pandemic was a catastrophic proof point. Even as we in the West become more conscious of inequalities that have been part of our societal fabric for a long time, we're becoming less sure of our identities. Even as technology breaks down borders and barriers, many of us are retreating to our tribes, becoming ever more local and isolated rather than global and engaged.

If art is a window on the soul of a nation, what does ours look like? Who do we, defined loosely as the West, think we are in the sense of identity? What's our mood?

Of course, these are questions without answers or, at least, unique answers. In this episode of New Thinking for a New World, Shirin Neshat, an acclaimed Iranian visual artist who has lived and worked in the United States for decades and Jonathan Burnham, president and publisher of the Harper Division at HarperCollins, discuss our evolving zeitgeist.

Topics

leadershipGlobal leadershipidentityNew Thinkingvisual artzeitgeistDemocracyGeopoliticssocietynational identity