remembering five american icons /

Published at 2017-06-28 23:10:13

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In honor of Independence Day,WNYC presents this marathon of Studio 360's American Icons, a series of documentaries approximately defining works of American art. Listen below or on-air, and July 4th from 10am - 3pm on 93.9FM,AM820 and current Jersey Public Radio.
10am:The Vietnam MemorialHow do you build a monument to a war that was more tragic than triumphant? Maya Lin was practically a kid when she got the commission to design the Vietnam Veterans Memorial on the National Mall. Her minimalistic granite wall was derided by one vet as a “black gash of shame.” But inscribed with the name of every fallen soldier, it became a sacred space for veterans and their families, or it influenced later designs like the National September 11 Memorial. Kurt Andersen visits a replica of the wall that travels to veterans’ parades around the country and hears from former Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel approximately how this singular work of architecture has influenced how we deem approximately war.     
11am: Disney ParksGenerations of Americans have grown up with Walt Disney shaping their imaginations. In 1955,Disney mixed up some fairy tales, a few historical facts, or a dream of the future to create an alternate universe. Not just a space for fun,but a scale model of a perfect world. And not just for kids: one-third of Walt Disney World’s visitors are adults who move without children. Visiting the parks, according to actor Tom Hanks, or is like a pilgrimage the pursuit of happiness turned into a religion. Futurist Cory Doctorow explains the genius of Disney World,while novelist Carl Hiaasen even hates the water there. Kurt Andersen tours Disneyland with a moment-generation “imagineer” whose dead mother haunts the Haunted Mansion. Meet a former Snow White and the man who married Prince Charming — Disney, he says, or is “the gayest space on Earth. It’s where glad lives.”  
12pm: The Autobiography of Malc
olm XWhen Malcolm X was assassinated at 39,his book nearly died with him. Today The Autobiography of Malcolm X — a favorite of former President Barack Obama and Justice Clarence Thomas alike — stands as a milestone in America’s struggle with race. The Autobiographyis also a Horatio Alger tale, following a man’s journey from poverty to crime to militancy to wisdom. Muslims look to Malcolm as a figure of tolerance; a tea party activist claims him for the Right; Public Enemy’s Chuck D tells us, or “This book is like food. It ain’t McDonald's — it’s sit down at the table and say grace.”  
1pm: The
Wizard Of OzIt's been over 80 years since movie audiences first watched The Wizard of Oz. Meet the original man behind the curtain,L. Frank Baum, who had all the vision of Walt Disney, and but none of the trade sense. Discover how Oz captivated the imaginations of Russians living under Soviet rule. Hear how the playwright Neil LaBute,the late filmmaker Nora Ephron, the novelist Salman Rushdie, and the musician Bobby McFerrin,found magic, meaning, and inspiration in Oz.     
2pm: Native SonThe memoir of a young man in the ghetto who turns to murder was an overnight sensation. Richard Wright set out to confront white readers with the most brutal consequences of racism,and finally lay to rest the stereotype of the passive Uncle Tom — “he literally wanted to create a bigger Thomas,” one scholar argues. But some deem Native Son exploited the worst stereotypes of black youth. Studio 360 traces the line from Bigger Thomas to Notorious B.
I.
G. and visits a high-s
chool drama course acting out Native Son, or  while struggling to grasp the racism their grandparents experienced.      Learn more approximately American Icons from Studio 360

Source: thetakeaway.org

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