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The BEST Indie Music Artists & Singers from around the world: EDM, Indie Rock, Indie Pop, Hip Hop, R & B, Rap, Reggae, Jazz, Country, Folk, & more...Hosted by DTongAdvertising & Sponsorship: http://goo.gl/ioP6HwGuaranteed Song Play & Promotion: http://goo.gl/4aD98wBROUGHT TO YOU BY:'Bentley Gets Lost' by Kathryn L Bryanhttps://amzn.to/3pZ3DpVThe College Wealth Podcasthttp://spoti.fi/37LBMmVGet What You Really Want - ebookhttp://bit.ly/3q0i255https://www.go9trowireless.comhttps://www.forexizbae.comGet Free and Stay Freehttps://amzn.to/3bJNnEcOf Feathers and Fangs by D.R. Longhaulhttps://amzn.to/2NNupEHCar Dogs w/ John Lederhttp://apple.co/3r2FoIFPrepps: https://bit.ly/2NMAilzFlint Charge: Modular PowerbankWhat Happened To Neil Frost? by ER Willshttps://amzn.to/37ZcNMRhttps://elysiumproject.tvhttps://www.reddit.com/user/NanostoxWavve Soundwave For Podcasts & Music Artistshttps://wavve.co?ref=johntongThe Fiverr Life podcasthttps://spoti.fi/30OnzPPAlso New Music from:Murchy3 'Global Night'Neebu 'Party and the Dansion'Frankie Wright 'Hey Babe'The Vic C Project 'Walk Away' Attlus w/ a Back2backVan Go Go 'Both Of Us'Van Mango 'All We Have'Antihoney 'Dove'The Fuzes w/ a Back2backJ.A.Y. 'Ways'x22 Band 'Yourself From You'Ok To Daydream 'Miss Tomorrow'We’re All Stranded 'Tight Hangs'Prisoner Six 'Making Bumper Clips'Catch the show on iTunes, Spotify, iHeartRadio, PlayerFM, Periscope, Google Play, TuneIn, Stitcher, Soundcloud, & www.DTongRadio.com
Series 5 Episode 3 Ollie O'Neill - We talk about Ollie's forthcoming debut full collection 'What We Are Given' out on Write Bloody UK, we also talk about Ollie's debut pamphlet 'Ways of Coping' out on Out-Spoken, misogyny, Borderline Personality Disorder, romantic love and much more! Poetry recital from Ollie O'Neill. Follow us on Instagram: @peoplespoetrypodcast Twitter: @people_poetry Facebook: People's Poetry Podcast Submissions/ letters to peoplespoetrypodcast@hotmail.com www.peoplespoetrypodcast.com Episode links: Ollie O'Neill Instagram: @ollieoneill Twitter: @olliecmoneill www.ollieoneill.co.uk
In podcast Boeken in de Boardroom #8 gaat Paul van Liempt in gesprek met Emilie Gordenker, directeur van het Van Gogh Museum. De van oorsprong Amerikaanse heeft een internationale carrière (New York, Edinburgh, Londen)in de kunstwereld en heeft meteen de taak het wereldmerk door de crisis heen te loodsen. Hoe kijkt ze naar de korte en lange termijn als er nog maar 10% van het normale bezoek (zo'n 2 miljoen per jaar) overblijft in de anderhalvemetersamenleving? Wat is haar stijl van leidinggeven en welke stempel wil zij drukken op het museum? Gordenker praat over de kunstklassieker 'Ways of Seeing' van John Berger over het belang van context, dialoog, debat, provocatie, reproductie (digitalisering) en persoonlijke manieren van kijken naar kunst. Luister naar dit levendige gesprek met de rustig ogende en sympathieke Emilie Gordenker.
This week, the New Sincerity gals are joined by artist and pal, Georgina Hawitt, to talk about following an artistic career path, expressing creativity, learning to take criticism, and vulnerability in art! So grab a coffee, an adult colouring book (hopefully one with a weirdly specific theme, like 'Tropical Birds', or 'Ways of Saying 'Thank you'') and get ready to talk about creativity!
Höstens första avsnitt av Orionpodden gästas av Adam Potrykus, Helena Bunker och Lina Karlmark från 10-års jubilerande Stockholm Fringe Festival som nästa vecka intar Stockholm och Orionteatern. Världsartisten Peaches, den beryktade norska teaterföreställningen 'Ways of Seeing', performanceverket 'The Progressive Nano Futuristic Psychadelic Anti-Show' samt en föreställning om knölar är bara några av punkterna i årets specialupplaga 'STOFF•X' som uteslutande skapats av kvinnor, icke-binära och transartister.
The defeat of Abdulla Yameen to the Maldivian Democratic Party candidate Ibrahim Mohamed Solih in the 2018 presidential elections was seen as a watershed moment for the political future of the Maldives. Following the MDP’s resounding victory in the April 2019 parliamentary elections, hopes for democratic reforms and justice for past atrocities rose still higher. But is the new government in Male living up to its democratic pledges? In this episode of Himal Interviews, our Editor Aunohita Mojumdar is in conversation with Mushfiq Mohamed, a senior legal officer at the Maldives Democracy Network. Mohamed talks about the new government’s efforts at reform, the perils of political expediency, and the need for systemic political transformation amid post-election euphoria. Go to www.himalmag.com for more on politics and culture in Southasia. ---------------------------------------------------- Intro and outro music derived from 'Ways of Rahjan' by Ask Again from Free Music Archive.
Catch up on this conversation between Peter Blake and the Director of London Original Print Fair, Helen Rosslyn. They discuss Blake’s new project 'Ways of Making', which investigates the diversity and range of processes at the disposal of an artist. Recognised as one of the founders of British Pop Art, painter and printmaker Sir Peter Blake is renowned for his connection with the music industry, having created iconic album covers for the Beatles, Paul Weller, The Who, and Oasis.
In late May 2019, Pakistan’s security forces fired at a procession of activists in Khar Qamar area of North Waziristan, which killed several protestors. The procession was part of the Pashtun Tahafuz Movement (or the Movement for the Protection of Pashtuns). Also known as the PTM, the movement has been seeking accountability for extrajudicial killings and disappearances during the ‘war on terror’ in Pakistan, and also demanded the removal of land mines. What are the roots of the PTM and why is the Pakistani state suppressing a non-violent movement for human rights? In this week’s Himal Interviews, we talk to Sarah Eleazar and Sher Ali Khan, who did a longform reportage on the PTM movement, titled ‘Anatomy of a political moment’, for us last year. (The story has been nominated for True Story Award 2019.) In this conversation with our Editor Aunohita Mojumdar, they update us on the government’s recent crackdown on the movement, the impact of the global ‘war on terror’ on the Pashtun community, and the censorship and misinformation about PTM in Pakistan’s media. Go to www.himalmag.com for more on politics and culture in Southasia. ---------------------------------------------------- Intro and outro music derived from 'Ways of Rahjan' by Ask Again from Free Music Archive.
Among the many political fallouts of the Easter attacks in Sri Lanka was the renewal of debates on the need for robust anti-terrorism laws. The government has sped up deliberations on a proposed law, Counter Terrorism Act (CTA), which seeks to replace the older, and notoriously draconian, Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA). But how necessary is a new anti-terror law? Will it reign in the excesses of the previous legislation? And how likely is the government to implement the law without bias? In this episode of Himal Interviews, our Deputy Associate Editor Shubhanga Pandey talks to human-rights researcher and lawyer Gehan Gunatilleke to examine these questions. Gunatilleke describes the problems of the proposed law, the Sri Lankan state’s dubious record in prosecuting cases of mob violence, and the dangers of anti-fake-news laws. Go to www.himalmag.com for more on politics and culture in Southasia. ---------------------------------------------------- Intro and outro music derived from 'Ways of Rahjan' by Ask Again from Free Music Archive.
Pakistan’s media has of late made news for all the wrong reasons: from state censorship to journalists being laid off in large numbers. Despite a growth in the number of media establishments in the last several years, the state has found new ways to silence independent journalism and manage public perception. In this episode of Himal Interviews, we talk to Omar Waraich, who reported from Pakistan for TIME magazine and the Independent daily for nearly a decade, and is currently Amnesty International’s Deputy Regional Director for South Asia. In this conversation with our editor Aunohita Mojumdar, Waraich talks about the transformation of Pakistani journalism, the military’s encroachment in traditional and social media, and the wrong lessons the Pakistani establishment learnt from Indian journalism. Go to www.himalmag.com for more on politics and culture in Southasia. ---------------------------------------------------- Intro and outro music derived from 'Ways of Rahjan' by Ask Again from Free Music Archive.
The Easter Sunday attacks on 21 April 2019 in Sri Lanka, which killed over 250 people, have shocked the country and left people fearful and uncertain. While some details about the conspiracy behind the coordinated bombings of churches and hotels have come out, much remains unclear. Political infighting within the government has added to the lack of credible information, compromising the general public’s ability to arrive at a clear understanding of the situation. Several instances of anti-Muslim violence this week has also led to fears of a communal conflagration. Himal Southasian’s Editor Aunohita Mojumdar spoke with Jayadeva Uyangoda, a Colombo-based political scientist, columnist and the emeritus professor of political science at the University of Colombo, to make sense of the difficult situation. Go to www.himalmag.com for more on politics and culture in Southasia. ---------------------------------------------------- Intro and outro music derived from 'Ways of Rahjan' by Ask Again from Free Music Archive.
As India heads towards the last phase of its month-long general elections, the results of the polls are being keenly anticipated not just by its citizens but also by many others in Southasia. Close links between the peoples – and politicians – of India and its regional neighbours means that the political landscape of the region’s largest country has considerable impact on its neighbourhood. Given worrying developments, such as the rise of majoritarian politics, not just in India but in several Southasian countries, the electoral outcome could affect the fate of their shared challenges as well. Himal Southasian’s editor Aunohita Mojumdar spoke to celebrated photographer, journalist and activist Shahidul Alam about what the Indian elections mean to Southasia in general and Bangladesh in particular. Alam, who was incarcerated for over 100 hundred days by the Bangladesh government under the repressive Information and Communication Technology Act, and is now out on bail, reflects on the shifting perception of India in Bangladesh, new challenges to democracies in the region, and the need for Southasian solidarity. Go to www.himalmag.com for more on politics and culture in Southasia. ---------------------------------------------------- Intro and outro music derived from 'Ways of Rahjan' by Ask Again from Free Music Archive.
Thank you for listening to this talk, produced by the Art Gallery of South Australia. In this Tuesday Talk, Julie Robinson, Senior Curator, Prints, Drawings and Photographs, discusses the work of Fred Williams in the exhibition 'Ways of Seeing: Recent acquisitions from the collection'. For further information visit www.agsa.sa.gov.au/whats-on/exhibi…gill-guardians/ photo: Saul Steed
Thank you for listening to this talk, produced by the Art Gallery of South Australia. In celebration of International Women’s Day (8 March 2019), Maria Zagala, Associate Curator of Prints, Drawings and Photographs discusses the recent acquisition by Helen Frankenthaler in the exhibition, 'Ways of Seeing'. For further information visit www.agsa.sa.gov.au Photo: Sven Kovac
Thank you for listening to this talk, produced by the Art Gallery of South Australia. Maria Zagala, Associate Curator, Prints, Drawings & Photographs highlights new acquisitions in 'Ways of Seeing'. For further information visit www.agsa.sa.gov.au image: installation view: 'Ways of Seeing: Recent acquisitions from the collection', Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, 2019; photo: Saul Steed.
Have we got NEWS for you! Channel 4's Krishnan Guru-Murthy orders his dream meal this week. Ed and James introduce the newsreader to a popular fast food, James realises he's been mispronouncing a drink and Ed learns how to wash a paella pan.Recorded and edited by Ben Williams for Plosive Productions.Artwork by Paul Gilbey (photography) and Amy Browne (illustrations)Krishnan Guru-Murthy's podcast 'Ways to Change the World' is on Apple Podcasts, Acast, Spotify and all the others.Ed Gamble is on tour. See his website for full details.James Acaster is on tour. See his website for full details.James’s TV show ‘Hypothetical’ is on Dave, Wednesdays, 10pm.Watch Ed and James's YouTube series 'Just Puddings'. Watch here. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The December 2018 general election in Bangladesh was marred by violence and allegations of vote rigging by the ruling Awami League, which won over 80 percent of the seats in the Parliament. With virtually no opposition in the house, and given the recent crackdown on the streets and the new draconian Digital Security Act, the future of democratic governance in the country looks tenuous. In this episode of Himal Interviews, we met up with Khushi Kabir, a social activist and feminist who has been working on grassroots democracy in Bangladesh for over four decades. She spoke to our Editor Aunohita Mojumdar on the irregularities in the December polls, the state of political and civic opposition, and the crisis of Bangladeshi democracy. Go to www.himalmag.com for more on politics and culture in Southasia. ---------------------------------------------------- Intro and outro music derived from 'Ways of Rahjan' by Ask Again from Free Music Archive.
The legacy of theoretical physicist Abdus Salam (1926-1996) is controversial in his home country Pakistan. Remembered by some as the Nobel-prize winning scientist and a pioneer of Pakistan’s nuclear programme, Salam was also rejected for being a member of the community of Ahmedi Muslims, who have been persecuted for their faith. Officially declared non-Muslims by the Pakistani state, Ahmedis have faced violent attacks and risk imprisonment if they claim to be Muslims. In our latest episode of Himal Interviews, we spoke to filmmaker Zakir Thaver who joined us from Karachi. Along with his friend Omar Vandal, Thaver co-produced a recent feature-length documentary on Abdus Salam and his legacy – both in the field of the sciences, as well as the world of politics. More than a decade in the making, Salam: The First ****** Nobel Laureate – the title is a reference to the obliteration of the word Muslim from Salam’s headstone at his grave – was screened in Colombo in December 2018. In this interview, he spoke to our Editor Aunohita Mojumdar on why the documentary cannot be screened in Pakistan, the dichotomy between Salam’s international fame and domestic rejection, and the challenges of getting archival footage from Tennessee to Seoul, and everywhere in between. Go to www.himalmag.com for more on politics and culture in Southasia. ---------------------------------------------------- Intro and outro music derived from 'Ways of Rahjan' by Ask Again from Free Music Archive.
Pervez Hoodbhoy needs little introduction to those who follow Southasia. Born and raised in Karachi, Hoodbhoy studied at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and is an award-winning nuclear physicist based in Lahore. Hoodbhoy is well known for his incisive writings and activism on issues of freedom of speech and secularism. In this podcast, he spoke to our Editor Aunohita Mojumdar about the rightwing politics of the Imran Khan government, religion and nationalism in India and Pakistan, and the fate of the Southasian identity. Go to www.himalmag.com for more on politics and culture in Southasia. ---------------------------------------------------- Intro and outro music derived from 'Ways of Rahjan' by Ask Again from Free Music Archive.
Shradha Ghale’s debut novel The Wayward Daughter has been critically acclaimed by reviewers in Nepal for treading fresh ground. Avoiding the big-ticket events of the country’s contemporary history, Ghale’s novel tells the story of a young girl coming of age in a changing 1990s Kathmandu, revealing the intersections of class, caste and identity in urban Nepal. In our latest episode of Himal Interviews podcast, our Editor Aunohita Mojumdar caught up with Ghale on a sunny terrace in Kathmandu Valley. Ghale spoke about her novel, why her journalism doesn’t overlap with her fiction writing, and the risks of not translating the country to a wider audience. Go to www.himalmag.com for more on politics and culture in Southasia. ---------------------------------------------------- Intro and outro music derived from 'Ways of Rahjan' by Ask Again from Free Music Archive.
Bangladesh is scheduled to have its 11th parliamentary elections on 30 December 2018. In the run up to the polls, we met with the South Asia campaigner for Amnesty International, Saad Hammadi, to talk about the state of human rights in Bangladesh. In this episode of ‘Himal Interviews’, Hammadi speaks to our Editor Aunohita Mojumdar about the Awami League government’s crackdown on peaceful protestors, its lethal ‘war on drugs’, and a new legislation which severely curtails free speech on the internet. Hammadi is a contributor to Himal Southasian and was the Dhaka bureau chief for WION. His writings have appeared in the Guardian, the Washington Post and the Financial Times. Go to www.himalmag.com for more on politics and culture in Southasia. ---------------------------------------------------- Intro and outro music derived from 'Ways of Rahjan' by Ask Again from Free Music Archive.
As artists from all across Southasia gathered for Amnesty’s first ‘Arts for Rights’ festival here in Colombo, we seized the opportunity to talk to some of them. Editor Aunohita Mojumdar was in conversation with Maldivian photographer Dhahau Naseem, whose first-ever exhibition captured intense moments of confrontation between the Maldivian people and the Maldivian state. Her photographs provide a visual documentary of the years of repressive autocracy in the Maldives, which recently voted against the government of Abdulla Yameen. Deputy Associate Editor Shubhanga Pandey spoke with Omaid Sharifi of ArtLords, a collective which has used the streets of Kabul to speak truth to power through murals. ArtLords, whose name is a play on the Afghanistan’s better known ‘warlords’ make the blast walls erected in Kabul their canvas for art and public engagement. Go to www.himalmag.com for more on politics and culture in Southasia. ---------------------------------------------------- Intro and outro music derived from 'Ways of Rahjan' by Ask Again from Free Music Archive.
On 26 September 2018, India’s Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of Aadhaar, the country’s controversial biometric national-identification programme. The ruling has, however, placed limits on its use by private entities, making it illegal for them to mandate it for providing services. Over the years, the project has faced criticism for enabling surveillance and invasions of privacy. In this episode of Himal Interviews, we talk to Reetika Khera – professor of economics at the Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad – who has been studying Aadhaar since its inception in 2009 and argues that the system impedes, rather than enhances, welfare delivery. Author of the forthcoming book Big Data Meets Big Brother, Khera speaks to our Deputy Associate Editor Shubhanga Pandey about the Supreme Court judgment, how Aadhaar is disguised as a welfare programme, and how it enables both state and corporate surveillance. Go to www.himalmag.com for more on politics and culture in Southasia. ---------------------------------------------------- Intro and outro music derived from 'Ways of Rahjan' by Ask Again from Free Music Archive.
On 18 September 2018, the United Nations Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on Myanmar released its full findings detailing evidence of Myanmar army’s crimes against humanity. Building on its report of 27 August, detailing the Tatmadaw, the Myanmar military’s involvement in crimes against humanity, the UN report has called for investigation into the crimes that could amount to genocide, and the removal of the military from political and civilian life, and said that democratic transition in Myanmar is at a standstill. The report calls for the investigation and prosecution of Myanmar's army chief, adding that “the Tatmadaw is the greatest impediment to Myanmar’s development as a modern democratic nation.” Ahead of the release of the 400-page report, our editor Aunohita Mojumdar spoke with Radhika Coomaraswamy, one of the three members of the fact-finding mission. Coomaraswamy spoke about the difficulty of investigating without access to the area, the challenges on the road to prosecution, and the disappointment over the spectacular failure of an inspiring movement for democracy. More on the podcast page: himalmag.com/himal-interviews-a…ed-entry-to-india/ Go to www.himalmag.com for more on politics and culture in Southasia. ---------------------------------------------------- Intro and outro music derived from 'Ways of Rahjan' by Ask Again from Free Music Archive.
Glaswegian rapper Loki is this year’s Orwell Prize winner for his book ‘Poverty Safari’. He talks to Krishnan about how he negotiated a difficult childhood and an alcohol problem, how he thinks poverty can be tackled and why the left need to reclaim the idea of personal responsibility. Subscribe to 'Ways to Change the World' for more in-depth interviews every week. Recorded: 30th July. Producers: Sarah Gough, Kieron Bryan, Matthew Lucas.
Once perceived as neutral, journalists are being increasingly targeted deliberately, often in violent attacks. In 2017, 65 journalists were killed, ten of them women. Women journalists face additional challenges, their very presence in public spaces often provoking hostility, and the new threats from cyber-violence impacting them disproportionately. When three well-established media professionals – with Najiba Ayubi of Killid Media from Kabul; Subina Shrestha, a journalist and filmmaker from Kathmandu; and Nupur Basu, an independent journalist and documentary maker from Bengaluru – came to Colombo last week, we in Himal thought it a good opportunity to engage them in the first of a series of new podcasts called The Southasian Conversation. In a freewheeling conversation that crossed borders, we debated, discussed and disputed several topics including how we navigate public spaces, counter cyber-bullying and whether the #MeToo movement has had an impact in our backyards. Go to the podcast page: http://himalmag.com/the-southasian-conversation-women-in-media/ Go to www.himalmag.com for more on politics and culture in Southasia. -------------------------------------- Photo credit: Kevin Harber Sound credit: 'Ways of Rahjan' by Ask Again from Free Music Archive
In the July 2018 edition of Suite (212), Tom Overton talks to Mike Dibb (http://www.mikedibb.co.uk) about a documentary filmmaking career that has spanned more than fifty years. As well as directed John Berger's legendary BBC TV series 'Ways of Seeing' (1972), Dibb has adapted books by Raymond Williams and C.L.R. James, made documentaries about art, music and sport, and is currently making a film about artist Donny Johnson, who has spent almost his entire adult life in the U.S. prison system. SELECTED REFERENCES WORKS BY MIKE DIBB About Time (1983-85) - http://www.mikedibb.co.uk/filmdet.php?filmid=42 A Curious Mind - AS Byatt (1996) - http://www.mikedibb.co.uk/filmdet.php?filmid=61 The Fame and Shame of Salvador Dalí (1997-98) - http://www.mikedibb.co.uk/filmdet.php?filmid=63 The Miles Davis Story (2001) - http://www.mikedibb.co.uk/filmdet.php?filmid=65 Fields of Play (1981-82) - http://www.mikedibb.co.uk/filmdet.php?filmid=36 Seeing Through Drawing (1977-78) - http://www.mikesouthon.biz/portfolio/seeing-through-drawing Ralph Steadman (Arena, 1977-78) - http://www.mikedibb.co.uk/filmdet.php?filmid=26 Studs Terkel's Chicago (1985) - http://mediaburn.org/video/omnibus-studs-terkels-chicago-4/ Ways of Seeing (1972) - http://ubu.com/film/berger_seeing.html Paul Barker (journalist/writer) - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Barker_(writer) WALTER BENJAMIN, 'The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction' (1936) - https://www.marxists.org/reference/subject/philosophy/works/ge/benjamin.htm JOHN BERGER & JEAN MOHR, A Seventh Man: Migrant Workers in Europe (1975) - https://www.versobooks.com/books/533-a-seventh-man Civilisation (TV series, 1968) - https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/feb/04/civilisation-revisited-kenneth-clark-television-landmark-series-art C.L.R. JAMES, Beyond a Boundary (1963) - https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/apr/02/beyond-a-boundary-broke-cricket-barriers Donny Johnson - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donny_Johnson F. R. LEAVIS - http://www.leavissociety.com/life-and-work/index.html Lift to the Scaffold (dir. Louis Malle, 1958) - https://www.newyorker.com/culture/richard-brody/louis-malles-elevator-to-the-gallows-and-its-historic-miles-davis-soundtrack George Melly - https://www.theguardian.com/music/2007/jul/05/1 Malcolm Muggeridge - https://www.nytimes.com/1990/11/15/obituaries/malcolm-muggeridge-writer-dies-at-87.html Orchestra to the Orient (dir. David Attenborough, 1963) - https://genome.ch.bbc.co.uk/bb311d02e65445d0b7a0ef1357feff5e Sukhdev Sandhu on 'Ways of Seeing' - https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2012/sep/07/ways-seeing-berger-tv-programme-british The Stranger (dir. Orson Welles, 1946) - http://archive.boston.com/ae/movies/articles/2010/10/10/reevaluating_orson_welless_near_perfect_stranger/
In this interview, we bring you Onaiza Drabu and Prachi Jha, who talked to us of their literary project, Daak (daak.co.in), and the challenges and joys of exploring poetry from Southasia. More here: http://himalmag.com/podcast-women-poets-daak-vaak/ Go to www.himalmag.com for more on politics and culture in Southasia. ---------------------------------------------------- Intro and outro music derived from 'Ways of Rahjan' by Ask Again from Free Music Archive.
Pakistani writer and researcher Annie Zaman was looking forward to participating in a conference at the Ashoka University in Haryana in July 2018, when the plans were scuppered by India’s Ministry of External Affairs. When the University sought clearance for the participants – as all conference organisers are now required to do in India – the Ministry said it would approve all applicants with the exception of those from Pakistan. Researchers and scholars from 56 of the 57 countries were welcome, but not anyone from Pakistan. The irony is that Zaman was planning to talk about a subject that Prime Minister Narendra Modi himself has seen fit to raise: Balochistan. So what was Zaman planning to say? Since Zaman cannot travel to India to present her paper, Himal Southasian interviewed her on the subject. Go to the podcast page: http://himalmag.com/himal-interviews-annie-zaman-on-being-denied-entry-to-india/ Go to www.himalmag.com for more on politics and culture in Southasia. ---------------------------------------------------- Intro and outro music derived from 'Ways of Rahjan' by Ask Again from Free Music Archive.
Self-care is considered any activity that we do deliberately in order to take care of our mental, emotional, and physical health. It’s a perfectly easy concept but most people overlook it...or feel guilty partaking - which is a damn shame because good self-care is key to improved mood and reduced anxiety and it’s also a key to good relationships! On Episode 7 of the Brain Gangster Podcast, 'Ways to be Awesomely Self'ish', Stacey + Carrie talk about: 17 Easy Ways to Nurture Your Body, Mind + Soul, How to Wear Rings to Super-Boost Your Intentions + 15 Self’ish Things You Can Do in 20 Minutes or Less. Meditation + Wellness Expert, Stacey Turis & Money Maestro, Carrie Tredway host the Brain Gangster Podcast every other week where they discuss Mindful Lifestyle Techniques on topics such as neurodiversity, sex, food, wellness, life, finance, health, love + soul. Listen to the whole podcast for a coupon code for a FREE AUDIO DOWNLOAD of Brain Gangster Beats, "Rise+Shine" off the 'Energy + Motivation' Album. Try brainwave entrainment at BrainGangsterBeats.Com. Visit www.braingangster.com for more info.!
This reading and comment, from the chapter VI 'The Heart of the Matter,' section 'Ways and Means,' and from the subsection 'Only the Posture Changes' to 'The Crust of Lucid Calm,' was given by Ajahn Amaro on 29 January 2018 during the Winter Retreat at Amaravati Buddhist Monastery, UK. The post Chapter VI – Ways and Means (part 2) appeared first on Amaravati Buddhist Monastery.
This reading and comment, from the chapter VI 'The Heart of the Matter,' section 'Ways and Means,' and from the subsection 'Only the Posture Changes' to 'The Crust of Lucid Calm,' was given by Ajahn Amaro on 29 January 2018 during the Winter Retreat at Amaravati Buddhist Monastery, UK. The post Chapter VI – Ways and Means (part 2) appeared first on Amaravati Buddhist Monastery.
This reading and comment, from the chapter VI 'The Heart of the Matter,' section 'Ways and Means,' and from the subsection 'Skilfull Means' to 'No Ideas of Gain,' was given by Ajahn Amaro on 28 January 2018 during the Winter Retreat at Amaravati Buddhist Monastery, UK. The post Chapter VI – Ways and Means (part 1) appeared first on Amaravati Buddhist Monastery.
This reading and comment, from the chapter VI 'The Heart of the Matter,' section 'Ways and Means,' and from the subsection 'Skilfull Means' to 'No Ideas of Gain,' was given by Ajahn Amaro on 28 January 2018 during the Winter Retreat at Amaravati Buddhist Monastery, UK. The post Chapter VI – Ways and Means (part 1) appeared first on Amaravati Buddhist Monastery.
In this episode, I speak with psychiatrist, lecturer, and author Iain McGilchrist. We discuss some of the themes and ideas presented in his book 'The Master and His Emissary: The Divided Brain and the Making of the Western World.' In the very beginning of this interview, Iain lays out a detailed picture of the "divided brain" -- specifically the evolutionary and adaptive perceptual functions of the left and right hemispheres of the brain. We then discuss how the balance, or imbalance, of these relatively different perceptual functions inherent in the functioning of each hemisphere of the brain has manifested in the development and trajectory of human cultures and societies, up to the present moment. More specifically, we discuss how the Western worldview (the value systems that have been cultivated in predominantly Western societies), over the course of its thousands of years of development, began to lean more in more toward a more "left brain" form of organized thinking and cultural development, and how this predominantly "left brain" thinking has lead our civilization, now global in scope, towards the brink of wide-scale ecological devastation, of which we may not survive through. Iain is such an insightful, thoughtful, and compassionate individual, who through studying the evolutionary functions of the left and right hemispheres of the brain, has uncovered a very important piece of the puzzle as to how we have gotten ourselves into the precarious moment we all find ourselves in today. To quote Iain's bio: "He is committed to the idea that the mind and brain can be understood only by seeing them in the broadest possible context, that of the whole of our physical and spiritual existence, and of the wider human culture in which they arise – the culture which helps to mould, and in turn is moulded by, our minds and brains."* Ian is the author of multiple books, including 'Against Criticism,' 'The Master and his Emissary: The Divided Brain and the Making of the Western World,' 'The Divided Brain and the Search for Meaning; Why Are We So Unhappy?,' and 'Ways of Attending.' He is currently working on a book titled 'There Are No Things,' a book of epistemology and metaphysics. Iain and his work will be featured in an upcoming feature-length documentary titled 'The Divided Brain.' *Source: http://iainmcgilchrist.com/iain/ Episode Notes: - A good place to learn about Iain and his work is at his website: http://iainmcgilchrist.com - To learn more about 'The Master and His Emissary,' start here: http://iainmcgilchrist.com/the-master-and-his-emissary/ - Learn more about the documentary film 'The Divided Brain,' featuring Iain and his work, here: http://thedividedbrain.com - Iain was featured in the documentary film 'Tawai: A voice from the forest': https://www.tawai.earth - The songs featured in this episode are "I Love U, Pt. 1" and "I Love U, Pt. 2" by Panthurr from the album I Love U. - Podcast website: https://www.lastborninthewilderness.com - Support the podcast: PATREON: www.patreon.com/lastborninthewilderness ONE-TIME DONATION: www.ko-fi.com/lastborninthewilderness - Follow and listen: SOUNDCLOUD: www.soundcloud.com/lastborninthewilderness ITUNES: www.goo.gl/Fvy4ca GOOGLE PLAY: https://goo.gl/wYgMQc STITCHER: https://goo.gl/eeUBfS - Social Media: FACEBOOK: www.facebook.com/lastborninthewildernesspodcast TWITTER: www.twitter.com/lastbornpodcast INSTAGRAM: www.instagram.com/patterns.of.behavior
Guest host Tom Overton discusses the legacy of writer and translator Anya Berger (1923-2018), and issues around literary translation with Esther Leslie, author of 'Walter Benjamin: Overpowering Conformism', and writer, poet, editor and curator Jen Calleja, who is currently Translator in Residence at the British Library. WORKS REFERENCED Tom Overton on Anya Berger (Frieze) - https://frieze.com/article/life-margins / https://frieze.com/article/anya-berger-1923-2018 Name the Translator campaign - https://www.wordswithoutborders.org/dispatches/article/name-the-translator Theodor W. Adorno SVETLANA ALEXEIVICH, Second-Hand Time (2013, trans. Bela Shayevich) - https://www.the-tls.co.uk/articles/public/from-second-hand-time-by-svetlana-alexievich-1/ Roland Barthes Charles Baudelaire WALTER BENJAMIN, The Storyteller (2016) - https://www.versobooks.com/books/2101-the-storyteller WALTER BENJAMIN, 'The Task of the Translator' (1923) WALTER BENJAMIN, 'The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction' (1936) - https://www.marxists.org/reference/subject/philosophy/works/ge/benjamin.htm John Berger - poetry - https://smokestack-books.co.uk/book.php?book=93 John Berger, 'Ways of Seeing' (TV series, 1972) - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0pDE4VX_9Kk KATE BRIGGS, This Little Art (2017) - http://www.musicandliterature.org/reviews/2018/1/18/kate-briggs-this-little-art AIMÉ CESAIRÉ - Notebook of a Return to My Native Land (1939) - https://archipelagobooks.org/book/return-to-my-native-land/ HANS MAGNUS ENZENBERGER, Short Summer of Anarchy - https://libcom.org/history/brief-summer-anarchy-life-death-durruti-hans-magnus-enzensberger Sigmund Freud Stefan George - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stefan_George Franz Hessel - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franz_Hessel HOMER, The Odyssey (trans. Emily Wilson) - https://www.theguardian.com/books/2017/dec/08/the-odyssey-translated-emily-wilson-review Kleenex/LiLiPUT (Swiss post-punk band) / Marlene Marder ESTHER LESLIE, Walter Benjamin (2007) - https://thecharnelhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/esther-leslie-walter-benjamin.pdf Helen Lowe-Porter (American translator) - http://www.freeburn.biz/the-curious-case-of-helen-lowe-porter/ Thomas Mann Herbert Marcuse Joachim Meyerhoff - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joachim_Meyerhoff MARION POSCHMAN, Pine Islands (2017, trans. Jen Calleja) - http://www.goethe.de/kue/lit/prj/lit/b17/en16515289.htm MARCEL PROUST, À la recherche du temps perdu (1913-27) Gregory Rabassa - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregory_Rabassa Revolutionary History (journal) - https://www.marxists.org/history/etol/revhist/backissu.htm Spare Rib - https://www.theguardian.com/media/2015/may/28/british-library-spare-rib-feminist-magazine-online MICHELLE STEINBECK, My Father was a Man on Land and a Whale in the Water (2016, trans. Jen Calleja) TA First Translation Prize - https://societyofauthors.org/News/News/2018/January/TA-First-Translation-Prize-shortlist LEON TROTSKY, 1905 (1907, trans. Anya Bostock) - https://www.marxists.org/archive/trotsky/1907/1905/index.htm Tristan Tzara Walter Benjamin's Archive: Images, Texts, Signs (2008, trans. Esther Leslie) - https://www.theguardian.com/books/2008/jan/27/society PETER WEISS, The Aesthetics of Resistance (1975-81) - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Aesthetics_of_Resistance WIM WENDERS, The Pixels of Paul Cézanne (2018, trans. Jen Calleja) - https://www.faber.co.uk/catalog/product/view/id/6496/s/9780571336463-the-pixels-of-paul-c-zanne/category/182/ Stefan Zweig
The Autoimmune Hour welcomes Annie Pool, author of ‘Passport to Life: How I Overcame Incurable Cancer Through the Power of Travel.' Annie was diagnosed with incurable endometrial cancer in the fall of 2013. Most people choose to see this disease as a physical problem. She knew instinctively, for her, it was an emotional one. In this episode, Annie shows us how to light a ‘fire' under yourself and take charge of your health and life. Just a few of the intriguing things Annie will share are:How to set your intention on ‘really' living.The first things to fix as you ‘unravel the threads of your life.'Ways to change trauma to deep gratitude.Steps to overcome fear and self-doubt. And the joys of being a polarity responder.Plus much more….As Annie explored the emotional aspect of her diagnosis, she was tormented by the memories of sexual abuse that took place in her early 20's. After her recovery, she confronted her abuser—nearly 30 years later and what she discovered was shocking. She came to realize her abuser had been equally tormented by their shared history and he too had been diagnosed with cancer…. Today, Annie coaches people just like you to break free from the mire of crippling self-doubt to live a life of EXTRAORDINARY. Learn more about Annie and her book at www.AnniePool.com and claim your free gift.Listen to The Autoimmune Hour with Sharon and Annie, Friday, February 16th at 7PM ET and later in podcast at www.LifeInterruptedRadio.com/Reclaim
Bevis Martin & Charlie Youle exploran en su obra 'Ways of Seeing', parte de la exposición 'Traslaciones', los recursos del fabLAB Asturias de LABoral Centro de Arte y Creación Industrial, buscando la confrontación entre las nuevas tecnologías y los formatos tradicionales de representación, no sin cierta ironía hacia la historia del arte: Su trabajo explora formas y modelos y ha sido realizado a partir de piezas procedentes de diferentes museos de Gijón. La exposición 'Traslaciones busca abrir un canal de comunicación de ida y vuelta entre Nantes y Gijón. Se muestra en dos sedes, el Centro de Cultura Antiguo Instituto de Gijón (hasta el 15 de septiembre) y LABoral Centro de Arte y Creación Industrial (hasta el 29 de septiembre).