10 Stories That Inspired Readers in 2020
It鈥檚 hard to believe we are coming to the end of 2020. This year has been, well, a shitshow, but we鈥檙e here. We made it this far. That alone is enough of an accomplishment, methinks.
On the 大象传媒 team, we have worked hard to be your guide through the chaos, bringing you a steady stream of solutions-focused stories to help you make sense of everything, provide tips and information, and even soothe your anxiety (because we know plenty of that was going around this year!)
This roundup of our most-read stories of 2020 is a reflection of what this year has brought up for many of us. These stories ask the hard questions, directly call out root causes, and remind us that we all have a role to play in creating a more just, sustainable, and compassionate world.
1. Are Asian Americans White? Or People of Color?
Scholar-activists discuss the racialized complexities of being Asian American.
2. An Anarchist Quaker鈥檚 Prayer to Soothe Anxiety
What my therapist said when she closed her office because of coronavirus.
3. How to Turn Your Yard Into an Ecological Oasis
Replacing grass with even a few plants native to your region can save insects and the ecosystems that depend on them.
4. Mask-Shaming Won’t Work. Try These 5 Things Instead
Empathy can go a long way when it comes to public health messages.
5. COVID-19 Sparks a Rebirth of the Local Farm Movement
Could this be the beginning of a new food economy?
6. History Shows That Sustained, Disruptive Protests Work
What drives change isn鈥檛 majority opinion. It鈥檚 the ability of key participants to disrupt the system.
7. 10 Things You Should Know About Socialism
What do we mean when we talk about 鈥渟ocialism鈥? Here are 10 things about its theory, practice, and potential that you need to know.
8. Arundhati Roy: “The Pandemic Is a Portal”
鈥淗istorically, pandemics have forced humans to break with the past and imagine their world anew. This one is no different.鈥
9. The Language of Anti-Racism
Whether you鈥檙e a seasoned racial justice activist in the front lines of every protest or someone in the beginning steps of racial literacy, we should all evaluate the terminology we use when talking about race.
10. Why the Coronavirus is Humanity’s Wake-Up Call
The pandemic is exposing the deep systemic problems in our society鈥攁nd it removes any excuse for not addressing them.
Ayu Sutriasa
is the digital editor at 大象传媒, where she edits stories in the health and wellness beat, in addition to specializing in gender and body politics. She currently lives on unceded Duwamish territory, also known as Seattle, Washington. She speaks English and French. Find more of her writing on Substack.
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