Steven Barrie-Anthony is a research fellow in religious studies at Occidental College in Los Angeles, and the journalist-in-residence at NewSchools Venture Fund, a philanthropic foundation that supports educational entrepreneurship in underserved communities. His current research focuses on American religious change, and on the conflict between objectivist and relativist worldviews in religion, politics and society. He has published lengthy overviews of contemporary Indian religion and Hinduism, and research on the Meher Baba movement, in two academic encyclopedias, and a coauthored model analyzing the interaction between religious fundamentalism and authoritarian government in the Journal of Terrorism and Political Violence.

Prior to taking his current post, he was a staff features writer for the Los Angeles Times, where he developed the technology and arts/culture beat, profiled Gore Vidal and others, wrote about art, architecture, green/sustainable design, crime, the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, music, the movie business, literature. His Times pieces also appeared in numerous other publications, such as the Chicago Tribune, the Boston Globe, the San Francisco Chronicle, and China’s The Standard. An essay on his prematurely balding pate was reprinted in a college English textbook.

He graduated magna cum laude with a B.A. in religious studies from Occidental College, and lives in Los Angeles with his girlfriend, journalist Kathleen Nye Flynn.

Blog Entries by Steven Barrie-Anthony

Get Out of Their Darn Way and Let Educators Innovate

Posted September 25, 2007 | 06:26 PM (EST)


When Jackie Elliot made the switch to teaching, from a career in public health, she was 36-years-old and by no means a naïf - she understood that public education was not in the best possible shape. Still, in 1986 as a novice teacher at Pacoima Elementary School in L.A.'s San...

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Finally, Some Real Changes in Public Education

Posted September 18, 2007 | 03:44 PM (EST)


Public education is royally screwed up in Los Angeles, as in urban centers the country over, and in L.A. it's heartening to watch a groundswell of outrage shape itself into action. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa's gallant play for control of the embattled school district was struck down by the courts, but...

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The Bourne Ultimatum: Fantasy Meets Reality

Posted August 10, 2007 | 02:34 PM (EST)


In The Bourne Ultimatum, amnesiac superspy Jason Bourne (Matt Damon) finally confronts the CIA schemers responsible for erasing his memory and reprogramming him as the ideal assassin. Audiences flocked to watch Bourne on opening weekend -- it was the biggest August opening ever, taking in over $70 million -- and...

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It's a Confusing Moment To Be a Young Journalist

Posted June 1, 2007 | 04:33 PM (EST)


It's a terribly confusing time to be a young journalist, but you won't hear many of us complaining out loud. Jobs are too precious, corporate owners too fickle. "It's witch-hunt city around here lately," a young Los Angeles Times staff writer emailed me yesterday, when I mentioned this post....

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Blissful Outrage in Our Nation's Capitol

Posted April 23, 2007 | 10:12 PM (EST)


It poured rain on a recent Sunday in Washington D.C. My girlfriend Katie and I were visiting my 88-year-old grandmother, staying in her apartment in the suburbs, but this Sunday we drove our rented Toyota into the district to do the requisite monument tour. Normally there would be crowds,...

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The Meaning of Suffering

Posted April 4, 2007 | 09:24 PM (EST)


I began writing poetry as soon as I learned to write - it became a salve, a means of connection, a mode of reckoning with the contradictoriness of life. Occasionally, a line from some long-forgotten verse leaps into my consciousness, clear as day, as if to impart relevant wisdom...

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Kosovo Boy

Posted March 28, 2007 | 07:11 PM (EST)


Do you remember 'Kosovo Boy?'

I refer, naturally, to the massively popular NPR series "Emails from Kosovo," and specifically to Finnegan Hamill, the Berkeley teenager whose email correspondence with pseudonymous Adona - an imperiled ethnic Albanian teen who miraculously found an internet connection in the war torn region...

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Obama's Poetry

Posted March 26, 2007 | 12:09 PM (EST)


I pay less attention to what politicians say, more to how they say it. I'm looking for humanity, somewhere beneath layers of handlers and speechwriters and general hoopla - for fragility, for an indication that these folks and I share the same kind of DNA. Yes, policy stuff matters,...

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