//=time() ?>
In this essay, @djain3 reflects on the grief that Foo Fighters' “Best of You” so perfectly articulates– and how music can grow beyond its roots to find those who need to be comforted, to not feel alone, or simply just to scream. Read more: https://t.co/n8wJfgvCzt
Sixty is slowing down from December 1st to January 29th. Read our note on why we're prioritizing quiet, still, and unscheduled time this winter: https://t.co/fFuiJaunFX
Today and every day, we celebrate Indigenous Peoples’ Day. Here are some of our favorite essays and interviews by Indigenous writers and artists: https://t.co/e4W1ykgNCj
View Sixty’s selection of art exhibitions and events in Chicago and the Midwest for September 2022, created in collaboration with @VisualistGo https://t.co/Qf1UZ4rq2k
Inspired by the book An Apartment on Venus by Paul B. Preciado, Riley Yaxley reflects on and writes about the moments of desire, confusion, and self discovery that have shaped their trans identity. Read their essay "The Wound": https://t.co/BnkuQFkImE
In recent years, Occultism has left the niche world of counterculture and has become part of the mainstream's obsession with commerce, capitalism, and social recognition. https://t.co/fj3xpZL1Jp
The film "I’m White Like You, Right Mom?" explores the felt separation and uncomfortable realizations that come about when a child is classified as a different race than one of their parents. https://t.co/EEMqcJaqdf
Juleana Enright's exhibition biskaabiiyang at All My Relations Gallery in Minneapolis is a reclamation of Indigenous sovereignty—a transcendence of past, present, and future. Interview by Ian Hanesworth: https://t.co/UlwxfNsf2K
November is #FamilyStoriesMonth & we all have stories to tell. In this piece, #RileyYaxley writes about motherhood–their own mother, books about mothers, & embodying the identity of a mother–as they move through the emotional landscape of transitioning. https://t.co/zq7aXyGAMo
"Mourning Racial Categories: The Categories of Black & White" by @Yisrael_Ariel is a series discussing four films that have been created as part of the Mourning the Creation of Racial Categories Project.
https://t.co/Dp3jnNuhiQ