Eunice Wong was the book review editor of Truthdig, as well as editor of Truthdig’s Countering Violence Against Women series. She also wrote for for Truthdig's arts and culture section, reviewing theater, film, books...
Eunice Wong was the book review editor of Truthdig, as well as editor of Truthdig’s Countering Violence Against Women series. She also wrote for for Truthdig's arts and culture section, reviewing theater, film, books and museums.
Eunice Wong / TruthdigOct 6, 2007
The Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian, located on the Mall in Washington, D.C., is a monument to historical amnesia. The blond limestone building, surrounded by indigenous crops of corn, tobacco and squash, invites visitors on a guilt-free, theme park tour of Native American history, where acknowledgment of the American genocide is in extremely bad taste. Dig deeper ( 6 Min. Read )
Eunice Wong / TruthdigSep 19, 2007
The Royal Shakespeare Company's production of Anton Chekhov's "The Seagull" seems, at first, to be merely a skillful and familiar rendition of a masterpiece. But like many great works of art, the power of this production is cumulative. Dig deeper ( 5 Min. Read )
Eunice Wong / TruthdigJun 29, 2007
After all the usual controversy that swirls around any film by director and rabble-rouser Michael Moore, and after all those stories about Moore taking 9/11 workers to Cuba for treatment, "SiCKO" is finally in theaters. Eunice Wong delivers her diagnosis for Truthdig. Dig deeper ( 6 Min. Read )
Eunice Wong / TruthdigMay 30, 2007
In her first Truthdig theater review, actor and writer Eunice Wong takes in director David Hare's stage production of "The Year of Magical Thinking," Joan Didion's haunting memoir about the sudden death of her husband (she would also later lose her daughter) and the heartbreaking mind tricks she used to try to conjure him back. Dig deeper ( 5 Min. Read )
Eunice Wong / TruthdigMay 30, 2007
In her first Truthdig theater review, actor and writer Eunice Wong takes in director David Hare's stage production of "The Year of Magical Thinking," Joan Didion's haunting memoir about the sudden death of her husband (she would also later lose her daughter) and the heartbreaking mind tricks she used to try to conjure him back. Dig deeper ( 5 Min. Read )
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