Frederica Mathewes-Green

essays

I write on many different topics: Eastern Orthodox Christianity, movie reviews,  Christian life, the culture, and more. If you’d like to sort my essays by category, click here .

 

Entries from January 1, 2004 - February 1, 2004

2004 Oscars Overview

Posted Tuesday, January 27, 2004 in

[Our Sunday Visitor, February 22, 2004]

No, your watch isn’t slow, they really did move the Oscars up this year. Fed up with the high-pressure lobbying for votes that filled the first three months of every year, the Academy opted this time around to shorten it to two: instead of a late-March ceremony, this year’s event will be February 29. This means that the high-pressure lobbying had to be compressed into a shorter time frame, so the folks who trudge the red carpet on Sadie Hawkins’ Day may look more frazzled than usual.

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Doing Everything We Can

Posted Saturday, January 10, 2004 in

[Touchstone, January 2004; a consortium discussion of the pro-life movement's  "New Rhetorical Strategy"]

The "New Rhetorical Strategy" that Francis Beckwith critiques is getting up in years. My first book, "Real Choices: Listening to Women, Looking for Alternatives to Abortion" was written in 1993. The Caring Foundation's first ads appeared in the mid-nineties, as did Paul Swopes' essay in First Things describing the results of their research. David Reardon's book "Aborted Women: Silent No More," appeared in 1987.

Beckwith might have mentioned as well Dr. Jack Willke's early-nineties project to develop a concise response to the other side's "Who decides?" rhetoric (you may have seen "Love them both" placards), and the trend of pregnancy care centers to shift focus, changing from storefronts that discourage abortion to full-fledged medical clinics or professional counseling centers.

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Big Fish

Posted Thursday, January 8, 2004 in

[Our Sunday Visitor, Feb 1, 2004]

As usual, I made a big impression at the premiere of "Big Fish." The director, Tim Burton, had been pestering me to come, and at last I agreed to pop in. What was tricky, of course, is that my husband is losing patience with the film's star, Ewan MacGregor, because he won't give up. "Give up, Ewan," I keep telling him. "I've been married thirty years." But still the roses arrive almost daily.

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