Inclusive Public Spaces

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Are our public spaces inclusive? Who has the power to take up space? Who has a voice? Artists and activists discuss visibility, belonging, and representation within the cultural sphere of Reykjavik and beyond.

Reykjavik City Library


    • Jul 4, 2020 LATEST EPISODE
    • infrequent NEW EPISODES
    • 31m AVG DURATION
    • 6 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from Inclusive Public Spaces

    4. Artist Interventions Part 1

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2020 48:00


    How can art disrupt and intervene publicly, while expressing the deeply personal? Reykjavik artists Melanie Ubaldo, Nermine El Ansari and Wiola Ujazdowska reflect on the performance and exhibition of their works as part of the Inclusive Public Spaces project. What voices are missing from the collective narrative, and how can artists bring these to public awareness?Music: Mt Fox Shop by BoxCat Games https://boxcat.bandcamp.com (CC BY).

    5. Artist Interventions Part 2

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2020 27:42


    Reykjavik artists Melanie Ubaldo, Nermine El Ansari and Wiola Ujazdowska discuss the implications for Iceland of the global conversation on structural racism, belonging, and inclusivity. What is the role of artists, and what interventions are needed to realize equality for all?

    3. Belonging and Institutional Power Structures

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2020 43:29


    How do we make the Icelandic cultural scene more inclusive? Who’s bodies are not seen in cultural spaces and who’s voices are not being heard? Daría Sól Andrews and Helen Cova discuss representation within cultural institutions and the lack of diversity. Critical questions are not an attempt to shame or attack institutions. They are a necessary process towards a more equitable allocation of resources and power.

    2. Structural Racism and Privilege

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2020 34:35


    Does everyone have a racial identity? Chanel Björk Sturludóttir discusses the impact of structural racism on society and the importance of mirroring oneself in one's environment. She talks about whiteness as a subtle norm that is almost unrecognizable in everyday life. Experiences of others automatically become insignificant, if they don’t conform to this norm. Any talk of a post-racial society, where everyone is "colorblind", would silence experiences of being othered. Chanel shares her critical thinking on race as a social construct as well as her encounters with structural racism in Iceland, a force which transcends both the good or bad intentions of individuals.Music: Mt Fox Shop by BoxCat Games https://boxcat.bandcamp.com (CC BY).

    1. Cultural Narratives

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2020 30:55


    How do we construct and deconstruct the stories that surround us and direct us in everyday life? Ewa Marcinek and Anna Wojtyńska describe how cultural narratives explain the lives we live and create our image of the world. They discuss the importance of storytelling in understanding and negotiating the meaning of our shared realities. Ewa proposes gossip as an effective negotiation strategy in countering master narratives.Music: Mt Fox Shop by BoxCat Games https://boxcat.bandcamp.com (CC BY).

    Introducing Inclusive Public Spaces

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2020 2:24


    Are our public spaces inclusive? Who has the power to take up space? Who has a voice? Artists and activists discuss questions on belonging, visibility and representation within the cultural sphere of Reykjavik and beyond. Presented by Reykjavik City Library. Music: Mt Fox Shop by BoxCat Games https://boxcat.bandcamp.com (CC BY).

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