Sunday Edition April 12, 2020 I am so pleased to present Hyperallergic's inaugural Sunday edition! This idea has been gestating for a while, but it wasn't until earlier this year that we finally decided to put the plan into action, and today we are excited to publish our very first-ever Sunday edition. This new section is designed to allow us to dive into both timely and timeless topics in a multifaceted way. For this first edition, we’ve chosen the theme "Viral.” With the help of editor Seph Rodney and our editorial team, I've gathered together this collection of essays that explores what "viral" means in our culture, from the epidemiological to the more contemporary notion of mass popularity. We hope you enjoy this latest addition to Hyperallergic. This week's edition "Viral" includes: For now, we’ll be publishing the Sunday edition monthly, with hopes to increase the frequency after we weather this pandemic and can devote more resources to this new edition. If you want to help, please consider supporting us by becoming a Hyperallergic Member so we can continue bringing you the quality journalism, reviews, and essays you look forward to every day. If you are in the position to support us, please consider becoming a member now. In our appeal letter earlier this month, we wrote about why your support is crucial to the survival of Hyperallergic and the existential threat that the current pandemic has posed on independent media like us. If you haven’t read it yet, please take a look and become a member.
Enjoy this week's Hyperallergic Sunday and we hope to bring you many more in the months ahead. (If you’d rather not receive our new Sunday Edition email newsletter, just update your preferences now, or at any time by clicking the Preferences link at the bottom of every email.) Thin as one-thousandth the width of an eyelash, the malign virus appears to us in magnified images as a round glob of genetic material surrounded by a beady shell. The so-called crowns (corona in Latin) on its surface are its means of destruction. Hakim Bishara What can we learn from the exponential unleashing of viral codes, as they circulate and duplicate beneath the surface of your cultural and physical world? Joseph Nechvatal The emergence of spiritual circles online in the face of COVID-19 strikes me as the opposite of viral — a place to be still in the face of viral turbulence on the streets and in the air, and viral turbulence on social media and the broader internet. An Xiao What happens when an epidemic strikes and that profoundly human urge to kiss and touch items thought to be sacred becomes part of the problem? Anthony Majanlahti A writer reflects on Giotto, St. Francis, and what it means to have faith amid a pandemic. Debra Brehmer A one-location movie tills fertile thematic ground for auteurs, celebrities, and ordinary people who explore facets of being alone through film and video — the subtle distinctions between solitude, loneliness, isolation, confinement, paranoia, and sanctuary. Dan Schindel I asked myself what makes entertainment media go viral, in particular music videos, these videos that call up some feeling of want or remembrance so that millions of people (or perhaps billions) reach for them again and again. Seph Rodney |