The Lens Features Editor Anne Cary listens as Former Botswanan President Ketumile Masire speaks about the role of ethnicity in his country
Welcome to The Lens!
Now Accepting Applications for the 2006-07 Staff
The Lens is a nationally distributed magazine of politics and culture featuring high quality interdisciplinary writing. Our target audience is students and faculty at the undergraduate level. Similar publications in terms of content and style include The New Yorker and The New York Times Magazine. We plan to distribute three issues during the 2005-2006 school year.
The following articles from the first issue are currently available for free on this website:
- From The Editors by Taylor Valore and Anna Duchon
- Digging for my roots in Ratnagiri by Scott Vignos
- The Ethical Representation of Difference in Photojournalism Today and Yesterday by Andrew Ladner and Andrew Biliter
- New Labour, Newer Democrats? by John Aho
- Foreign Food Aid to Bangladesh by Hibah Hussain
- Perspectives of a Gringo in Mexico by Martin Miller
- Steve Sviggum: Minnesota Speaker of the House by Anna Duchon and Taylor Valore
- Materializing a Cause by Anna Duchon
- Immigrant Integration Policies in France and Italy by Becky Farmer
- Language Not Lost by Miranda Blue
- Jews in Space by David Schraub
- Jewish Hip-Hop by Rob Thomas
- Gym Culture in Argentina by Leah Sipher-Mann
- A Holistic Theory of American Foreign Policy by Taylor Valore
- A Thousand Words (a Photo Essay) by Boris Scherbakov
- Name Collector by Marley Glassroth
- Didgeridoo or Didgeri-don’t? by Clinton Peterson
- Finding A Place: Asylum Seekers in Australia by Scott Vignos
- Interview with Jawad Khaki: Microsoft Vice President and Interfaith Activist by Staff
- Scything Farmers: How American Corporate Policy Undercuts Developing Nations by Aleks Stoller