Mother Courage, Death Do Us Part, Beyonce's Police Boycott
Top of Mind with Julie Rose - Season 1, Episode 253
- Mar 15, 2016 6:00 am
- 1:41:55 mins
Why Americans Are So Worked Up (1:01) Guest: Jacob Hickman, PhD, Professor of Anthropology at BYU Donald Trump has been criticized for incidents of violence against protesters and the press at a number of his rallies. Trump says he doesn’t condone violence, and blames protesters for being so “dangerous” they need to be controlled or ejected. We’ve heard recently on Top of Mind how 2015 saw an increase in hate group participation, fueled partly by angry political rhetoric. There was also a rise in anti-government groups like the militia that occupied a wildlife refuge in Oregon for more than a month. Hateful threats against Muslims are increasing, too. Experts say the anger is driven by lots of things—including a sense of economic disenfranchisement, toxic political partisanship and the fear that terrorism is an increasing threat in our communities. Mother Courage and Her Children (26:23) Guest: Barta Heiner, Founder and Director of BYU’s Bachelor of Fine Arts Acting Program High school students in the US today have never known a time when American troops were not deployed abroad, when the nightly news was not consumed with grim reports of conflict abroad. Even the experts express dread that there’s no clear end in sight to the wars gripping many parts of the world. Against this backdrop, a play written in 1939 by German exist Bertolt Brecht has renewed currency. “Mother Courage and Her Children” is considered by some to be the greatest play of the 20th century and maybe the greatest anti-war play of all time. It’s set during the Thirty Years War that took place in the 1600s across Central Europe and centers on a woman – nicknamed Mother Courage – who is so dedicating to profiting from the conflict that she loses everything in the process. BYU is staging the play on campus this week with Barta Heiner in the lead role. Death Do Us Part (51:50) Guest: Kyle Bourassa, PhD Candidate in the University of Arizona’s Clinical Psychology Program Nearly 14 and a half million Americans have been widowed b