On Wisdom and Migration, 3

Photo credit: Michael Karnavas

At a time when white masculinity has driven what Barbara Tuchman called “the persistence of unwisdom in government” to new depths, narratives like Mbue’s and Nguyen’s could not be more important, nor more welcome.

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On Wisdom and Migration, 2

Photo: prhinternationalsales.com

But then along comes “Behold the Dreamers,” a debut novel by a young woman from Cameroon that illuminates the immigrant experience in America with the tenderhearted wisdom so lacking in our political discourse. 

Ron Charles, The Washington Post
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On Wisdom and Migration, 1

Photo: A Mile in My Shoes, Empathy Museum, U.K.

This is the first in a series

The quest for wisdom is a physical as well as intellectual undertaking…. [T]he early history of wisdom unfolded on the road.

Stephen S. Hall, Wisdom: From Philosophy to Neuroscience

We are living through a time of extraordinary nativist backlash, most tellingly emblematized in the U.S. by the candidacy, then presidency, of Donald J. Trump.  A 2017 survey by PRRI and The Atlantic found that white working-class voters who said they “often feel like a stranger in their own land” were 3.5 times more likely to have supported Trump than Hillary Clinton in the 2016 election. Those who “favored deporting immigrants living in the country illegally” were 3.3 times more likely to have done so. 

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