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Beatrice Institute Podcast


Dec 21, 2020

Marilyn McEntyre is a steward of words. She has taught courses on English and medical humanities, and she has written or edited over twenty books, including Caring for Words in a Culture of Lies. Marilyn joins Elise to discuss the meaning of four words: dwelling, compassion, truth, and awe. Marilyn discusses why she loves participles and how “Christianese” can constrict the meaning of a word. She also reads three of her own poems and explains the background and inspiration of each.

 

Words as building materials

 

How space shapes us

 

Particularity and universality

 

A productive relationship between loneliness and dwelling

 

Touch deprivation

 

The strength and resilience of compassion

 

Christianese

 

Our relationship to Industrial food system

 

A broader examination of conscience

 

Truth as embodied and relational

 

The act of translation

 

Convicted civility

 

Why do we lie?

 

Relationship between death and awe

 

Accompanying the dying

 

Links:

Dwelling in the Text by Marilyn McEntyre

Word Tastings: An Essay Anthology by Marilyn McEntyre

Teaching Literature and Medicine by Marilyn McEntyre

The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

Caring for Words in a Culture of Lies by Marilyn McEntyre

The Overstory by Richard Powers

The Hidden Life of Trees: What They Feel, How They Communicate―Discoveries from A Secret World by Peter Wohlleben

Should Trees Have Standing?: Law, Morality, and the Environment by Christopher D. Stone

I MARRY YOU: A Sheaf of Love Poems by John Ciardi

Speaking Peace in a Climate of Conflict by Marilyn McEntyre

Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky