Some links today that would be great and pertinent anytime but especially so here at the top of Black History Month

• As this CNN.com op-ed writer notes: ‘A lot of great films by women got snubbed by the Oscars and none of them are Barbie.’ One of them, though, is Ava DuVernay’s latest highly regarded film, “Origin,” which is a creative adaptation of Pulitzer-winning journalist Isabel Wilkerson’s bestseller Caste: The Origin of Our Discontents, in which DuVernay zooms out to include Wilkerson in the storyline, and to tell the story of the book’s own origins. The director and star spoke to The Hollywood Reporter about the lack of nominations. “Origin” is apparently only in theaters for now, but I look forward to watching when I can. (The Times had a fairly interesting piece this week about what constitutes “original” versus “adapted” in the Oscarverse, which “Origin” and “Barbie” factor into. NYT Gift Link)
• The first class of students applying for college in the wake of the Supreme Court’s overthrow of affirmative action are — thanks to the way the court crafted that decision — now faced with the question of how much or how little to emphasize their race in their essays. This is a more well-rounded look at the position it puts kids in than the headline suggests: After Affirmative Action Ban, They Rewrote College Essays With a Key Theme: Race (also an NYT Gift Link)
• I started Teju Cole’s new novel Tremor last night, and I’m just never not blown away by the power of his writing, so visceral and visual. Anyone else reading it? (If you’re not familiar with him, I recommend the ‘On Being’ interview from a few years back as a good introduction.)
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[ IMAGE: Promotional still from the movie “Origin” ]
