POPULARITY
It's time for us to outsmart America. It's time for us to continue to advance.From mastering financial literacy and building generational wealth to prioritizing mental health and embracing both formal and self-education, Dr. Gabe offers actionable tips to help individuals and families thrive and create lasting legacies.Need relationship advice? Text Dr. Gabe. Text bandwidth to 94000 to stay up-to-date on all things Bandwidth.Gabriel Powell MerchUse the code BAND10 for 10% off.WebsiteSupport the Bandwidth PodcastCash App $bandwidthpodcastConnect with Bandwidth Facebook | Instagram | TikTok | Twitter Connect with Dr. GabeInstagram | YouTube | WebsiteIf you are interested in advertising on this podcast or having Dr. Gabe as a guest on your Podcast, Radio Show, or TV Show, reach out to info@gabrielpowell.co
In this episode of the "The Truth in This Art" podcast, host Rob Lee converses with Cory Lee Stowers, a cultural anthropologist, visual artist, and curator. They tackle Cory's background in graffiti and his role in the DC hip-hop scene. Stowers discusses his creative influences and the significance of preserving artistic legacies. He shares the challenges of leading organizations like Art B.L.O.C. DC and DC Murals, emphasizing the need for sustainable funding and aligned partnerships. This episode explores the evolution of mural art, the use of technology to create interactive murals and the cultural impact of public murals. Cory also touches on the historical debate over African American visual identity at Howard University and the importance of impactful community murals.Episode Highlight:Painted Beginnings (00:01:30): Cory takes us back to his roots, painting a vivid picture of his early life and how he was drawn into the vibrant graffiti and hip-hop culture of Washington DC.Artistic Inspirations (00:04:00): Remembering the past, Stowers shares heartfelt stories about the people and experiences that have sculpted his artistic perspective and continue to influence his creative journey.The Artistic Grind (00:10:00): Rob and Cory engage in a candid discussion about the grit behind the glamour, exploring the obstacles and triumphs that come with bringing ambitious art projects to life.Mural Dreamscape (00:20:00): With an eye on the future, Cory outlines his visionary plans for transforming DC Murals into a social enterprise that not only beautifies but also benefits the community.The Funding Puzzle (00:22:00): The conversation takes a pragmatic turn as Stowers addresses the intricate challenge of weaving together funding and partnerships to support his artistic endeavors.Creative Alchemy (00:20:30): Cory offers a glimpse into his creative sanctum, revealing how he approaches the art-making process and fosters meaningful connections with the community through his work.Murals That Speak (00:30:00): The power of murals to tell the untold stories is brought to the forefront, highlighting their significance in preserving and sharing cultural narratives.Art in the Digital Age (00:35:00): Reflecting on the intersection of art and technology, Cory discusses how modern advancements are revolutionizing the way murals are created.Key Takeaways:1. Graffiti and hip-hop culture have played a significant role in shaping the artistic landscape of urban environments like DC.2. The preservation of artistic legacies is crucial for cultural continuity and understanding the historical context of art forms.3. Sustainable funding and strong partnerships are essential for the success and longevity of arts organizations.4. Public murals are not just art, they are powerful tools for cultural expression and community engagement.Website and Social Media Links:coryleestowers.comX: @RockCreekLeeInstagram: rockcreekleeLinkedIn: Cory Lee StowersHey everyone, if you were as inspired by Cory Lee Stowers' stories and insights as I was, let's show some love! Head over to his website and follow his journey on social media to keep up with the incredible work he's doing in the art world. And if you enjoyed our deep dive today on "The Truth in This Art," please take a moment to rate and review this episode. Your feedback means the world to us and helps others find these meaningful conversations. Plus, if you're feeling generous and want to support the podcast further, consider joining our Patreon community. Every bit of support helps us continue to bring these important stories to light. Thanks for listening, and let's keep the conversation going! This program is supported (in part) by a grant from the Robert W. Deutsch Foundation. If you have a story about art, culture, or community, share it with us at rob@thetruthinthisart.com for a chance to be featured on 'The Truth In This Art' podcast.Follow The Truth In This Art on Twitter, Threads, IG, and Facebook @truthinthisart Original music by Daniel Alexis Music with additional music from Chipzard.Episode illustration by Alley Kid Art.About "The Truth In This Art""The Truth In This Art," hosted by Rob Lee, is a podcast that explores the essence of creativity and its community impact, amplifying artists' voices and their profound stories.Connect with me:Website | Twitter | Instagram Support the show:Merch from Redbubble | Make a Donation ★ Support this podcast ★
The guests in this episode became friends through a common commitment to activism and social justice. Dr. Cleve V. Tinsley IV and Rev. Dr. Matt Russell became best friends both by cultivating their common ground and exploring the very real differences between their perspectives and experiences. They share how their friendship has profoundly shaped their work, their personal growth, and their lives as Christian men. Their conversation, very real and full of laughter, feels like an experience of the holy, showing us how sanctified friendships are a work of the Spirit bringing us together, especially for such a time as this. It's well worth just taking the time to be fully immersed in this wonderful conversation.Find the poem from the podcast here.Quotations"Matt enables me to be creative because he's one of the few persons in the world who would understand my decisions and commitment to my integrity of conscience."- Dr. Cleve V. Tinsley IV We discuss:Matt and Cleve discuss how they met and became friends through their shared passion for social justice and activism. (5:27)The importance of building friendships across divides and the challenges of understanding different experiences and perspectives. (26:01)The speakers discuss how their friendship changed them and impacted their personal growth, creativity, and ability to thrive. (33:30)Exploring the challenges and importance of forming meaningful friendships between Christian men. (41:33)Exploring the concept of holiness and the need for the church to redefine it, emphasizing the importance of relational and shared resourcing. (49:18)About Dr. Cleve V. Tinsley IV is assistant professor of history and political science in the School of Arts and Sciences at Virginia Union University (VUU), where he has also been appointed the inaugural executive director of the Center for African-American History and Culture (CAAHC).Dr. Tinsley is quickly emerging as a noted interpreter of religion and Black freedom movements, recently commenting on the role of religion in light of recent uprisings for Black lives for the Berkley Center for Religion, Peace and World Affairs at Georgetown University. He is the co-author of Embodiment and Black Religion: Rethinking the Body in African-American Religious Experience and is working on his first monograph, tentatively entitled Making Black Lives Matter: Religion and Race in the Struggle for African-American Identity.Rev. Dr. Matt Russell is an academic, activist, pastor, professor, and teacher. He is on staff at Chapelwood United Methodist Church in Houston and is co-founder and co-managing director of Project Curate, which works with religious, academic, and community organizations by curating and bringing together different voices and traditions to realize a radical vision of a more just and equitable world. He is also co-founder and executive director of Iconoclast Artists, a program that empowers young artists throughout the community. Show NotesDr. Cleve V. Tinsley IV is assistant professor of history and political science in the School of Arts and...
In this episode, Dr. Hettie V. Williams is in discussion about Martin Luther King, Jr. with Dr. Maurice O. Wallace. Williams is Director of the Trotter Institute at UMass Boston and Wallace is Professor of English at Rutgers University-New Brunswick, author of Constructing the Black Masculine: Identity and Ideality in African American Men's Literature and Culture, 1775-1995, and coeditor of Pictures of Progress: Early Photography and the Making of African American Identity. Williams and Wallace discuss his latest book King's Vibrato: Modernism, Blackness, and the Sonic Life of Martin Luther King, Jr. (Duke University Press, 2022) in which he explores the history of sound in the Black experience through an analysis of King's vibrato. In this text, Wallace conjoins history and critical theory to discuss the “modernist soundscapes” that shaped King's voice and expression. He further argues that King's vibrato was produced out of a series of elements including ecclesiastical architecture, instrumentation (the organ), the audience, song, and technology. For more about Wallace click here Maurice O. Wallace and to order his book click on this link King's Vibrato: Modernism, Blackness, and the Sonic Life of Martin Luther King, Jr.
The fear of Black Consciousness is, in part, what Afro-Jewish philosopher Lewis Gordon means when we continually fail to deal with the legacy of our history, and address questions like the place for guilt.
The fear of Black Consciousness is, in part, what Afro-Jewish philosopher Lewis Gordon means when we continually fail to deal with the legacy of our history, and address questions like the place for guilt.
The fear of Black Consciousness is, in part, what Afro-Jewish philosopher Lewis Gordon means when we continually fail to deal with the legacy of our history, and address questions like the place for guilt.
The fear of Black Consciousness is, in part, what Afro-Jewish philosopher Lewis Gordon means when we continually fail to deal with the legacy of our history, and address questions like the place for guilt.
Should the sins of the past be visited upon us? The Abrahamic faiths talk about guilt, atonement and redemption. Indigenous Australians have long called for truth-telling, a reckoning with our past as a way to justice and healing. But collective guilt today is a hot button topic — is the idea a helpful or harmful one? Peter Kurti from the Centre for Independent Studies explores this in his recent paper.
How do you grind through the day to day in a system that is designed against you? That is precisely the question at play in Fenton Johnson's poem Tired. Johnson was a figure of the Harlem Renaissance and this week's episode examines the movement and it's impact on African American Identity. Johnson's poem is the beleaguered cry of a man who has had enough from the society around him. It is a cry that is still resonates with listeners today.You can find a copy of the poem here: https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/150665/tiredThe show notes for today's episode, with full references can be found here: https://wordsthatburnpodcast.com/You can get in touch with me on instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wordsthatburnpodcast/The music in this weeks episode is Blur by Kai Engel and is used under creative commons license. Enjoy his music here: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Kai_Engel Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
This podcast highlights the Black/African American Identity presentation by Dennis Spencer, MD, Ph.D., and Carmin Powell, MD featured in the BNGAP Mid-Year Pre-Faculty Development and Summary Report conference in September 2020. Host: Nicholas Brutus, BNGAP National CoordinatorPurchase Book our book "Succeeding in Academic Medicine": https://www.amazon.com/Succeeding-Academic-Medicine-Students-Residents/dp/3030332667Music Credit-NIDRED - Cinematic InspirationRoyalty-Free Music Portfolio: http://goo.gl/uGD6rr
Rendering Unconscious welcomes Professor Sheldon George to the podcast! You can support the podcast at our Patreon. Your support is greatly appreciated! https://www.patreon.com/vanessa23carl Sheldon George is Professor of English and Chair of the English department at Simmons University in Boston, Massachusetts. His scholarship centers most directly on Lacanian psychoanalytic theory and applies cultural and literary theory to analyses of American and African-American literature and culture. He is author of Trauma and Race: A Lacanian Study of African American Racial Identity and coeditor, with Jean Wyatt, of Reading Contemporary Black British and African American Women Writers: Race, Ethics, Narrative Form. He is currently completing a collection coedited with Derek Hook for Routledge press that is titled Lacan and Race: Racism, Identity and Psychoanalytic Theory. https://www.simmons.edu/academics/faculty/sheldon-george This episode is also available to view on YouTube: https://youtu.be/gEyWM56YUR0 Rendering Unconscious Podcast is hosted by Dr. Vanessa Sinclair, who interviews psychoanalysts, psychologists, scholars, creative arts therapists, writers, poets, philosophers, artists & other intellectuals about their process, world events, the current state of mental health care, politics, culture, the arts & more. http://www.renderingunconscious.org/about/ Rendering Unconscious is also a book and e-book! Rendering Unconscious: Psychoanalytic Perspectives, Politics and Poetry (Trapart Books, 2019) https://store.trapart.net/details/00000 Vanessa Sinclair, Psy.D. is a psychoanalyst based Stockholm, who sees clients internationally, specializing in offering quality psychoanalytic treatment remotely and online. Her books include Switching Mirrors (2016), The Fenris Wolf vol 9 (2017) co-edited with Carl Abrahamsson, On Psychoanalysis and Violence: Contemporary Lacanian Perspectives (2018) co-edited with Manya Steinkoler, and Scansion in Psychoanalysis and Art: the Cut in Creation forthcoming from Routledge 2020. Dr. Sinclair is a founding member of Das Unbehagen: A Free Association for Psychoanalysis. http://www.drvanessasinclair.net The track at the end of the episode is “Inside you is outside me (remixed)” from the album "The larval stage of a bookworm (remixed)" by Carl Abrahamsson, remixed by Serena Stucke. Available from Highbrow Lowlife on Bandcamp: https://carlabrahamsson.bandcamp.com/album/the-larval-stage-of-a-bookworm-remixed Image from Trauma and Race: A Lacanian Analysis of African-American Identity by Sheldon George, PhD: https://www.baylorpress.com/9781602587342/trauma-and-race/
This episode explores African American identity in light of the nomination of Kamala Harris. It offers a nuanced definition of the term African American and delves into how the AA experience is influenced by the African Diaspora
Dave and Chris Ying and joined by Jeffrey Ogbar, professor at the University of Connecticut, historian, and author of ‘Black Power: Radical Politics and African American Identity.’ They trace the Black Power movement and its various influences, including Asian American advocacy, to the present-day discourse on race relations and racial justice.
I am so excited to share this episode with you. This is a conversation between the highly esteemed Dr. William Cross and I. We discuss the current state of unrest across the United States. Dr. Cross is a renown psychologist and doctoral graduate of Princeton University. He is most noted for his development of the Nigrescense Theory in 1971, as well as his book "Shades of Black: Diversity in African American Identity." He has a profound perspective on the current Black Lives Movement, given his theory was developed during the era of the Civil Rights Movement shortly after the death of Dr. Martin Luther King. So please sit back, and enjoy a conversation that will lead to insight and broaden your perspective on current events in society. You can order "Shades of Black: Diversity in African American Identity" at: https://www.amazon.com/Shades-Black-Diversity-American-Identity/dp/087722949X/ref=sr_1_2?dchild=1&keywords=Shades+of+Black&qid=1592998654&sr=8-2 Be on the look out for his next book, coming in 2021!!!
Vince Bantu, assistant professor of church history and Black Church studies, talks about the varied dynamics and histories of African American communities around the United States, Black experience in the American church, and his own journey of reclaiming identity through African history and Christianity. (As Dr. Labberton and Dr. Bantu speak briefly about Juneteenth, FULLER studio has chosen to release this episode outside of its regular schedule, for this very significant day.) For more resources for a deeply formed spiritual life, visit Fuller.edu/Studio.
The Whitney Art Controversy, Disney’s Influence, and Positive Sexuality Dr. Carmen Higginbotham, Professor of American Art at the University of Virginia, Depression Era scholar, with expertise in the Visual Culture of Hollywood & Disney, and African American Identity in Art.… Read More
IN THIS EPISODE:Developing Racial Identity with Guests Rudy Lucas and Christine SchmidtShow NotesGuests Christine Schmidt and Rudy Lucas join co-hosts Patty Olwell and Sue Marriott in a wide-ranging discussion on racial identity just after the election. Privileged white people talking about race can be awkward – we discuss how our natural sense of safety is part of our privilege and letting ourselves step out and get uncomfortable is necessary to even begin to dig in and get the compassion, understanding and necessary context to be able to be useful in these times. The safety bubble has popped and it could not be more obvious given the current political climate of division that a shaking and awakening is necessary. What is Racial IdentityRudy and Christine walk us through some of the steps necessary to look at aspects of racial identity, both white and black. We discuss immunity by color, invisibility, access, race avoidance, colorism, recommended study and literature, history and context, and we barely scratched the surface with this conversation. This quote stands out because of it’s clarity and it’s importance! In response to question about reverse racism, Rudy responded: “There is no such thing as reverse racism, because the determining factor is access to power. Oppressed populations never have been known to have any kind of power sufficient to have their feelings thoughts and wishes codified into the law….” And he concluded –“People can be guilty of prejudice, discrimination, judgement… but racist they cannot be in the absence of power. “ Rudy Lucas Racism must have the weight of history and institutional power under it to exist. Which is why those of us with history and the laws on our side can’t complain now that we are uncomfortable and see it as equal to an oppressed person’s suffering. The conversation ranged and covered many topics but Christine and Rudy recommend as next steps that you view these two videos: Fusion Video- How Microagressions Are Like Mosquito Bites (http://fusion.net/video/354460/how-microaggressions-are-like-mosquito-bites/) Jay Smooth- How to Tell Someone They Sound Racist (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0Ti-gkJiXc) RESOURCES: (https://www.therapistuncensored.com/resources/) Additional resources for this episode: Janet Helms- Black and White Racial Identity: Theory Research and Practice (http://amzn.to/2kD5VKM) Peggy McIntosh- White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack (https://docs.google.com/document/d/1GEHaNWcaSVhIx1yzw2VZEYQB3rASl8GosfiiiKCLxdU/edit) Paula Rothenburg- White Privilege: Essential Reading on the Other Side of Racism (http://amzn.to/2khAvN3) Janet Helms and Donelda Cook- Using Race and Culture in Counseling and Psychotherapy (http://amzn.to/2kIkiRj) Jay Smooth (https://www.youtube.com/user/illdoc1) – cultural commentator check him out! Highly recommended. Alice Walker- Anything We Love Can Be Saved (http://amzn.to/2kIWpFd) Alice Walke Hard Times Require Furious Dancing (http://amzn.to/2kIk2SF) William E. Cross- Shades of Black: Diversity in African-American Identity (https://www.amazon.com/Shades-Black-Diversity-American-Identity/dp/087722949X/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1485972869&sr=1-2&keywords=shades+of+black) William E. Cross-documented his personal experience in scholarly publications such as The Negro to Black Conversion Experience in 1971 Alice Walker: Definition of Colorism: In search of our mothers’ gardens: womanist prose (https://www.amazon.com/Alice-Walker/e/B000APW6SE/ref=sr_tc_2_0?qid=1483544688&sr=1-2-ent) . Kenneth and Mamie Clark: Doll Study (http://www.naacpldf.org/brown-at-60-the-doll-test) Authors to read:James Baldwin, Ta-Nehisi Coates, Howard Zinn, Michelle Alexander, Carol Anderson, Robin DiAngelo, Maya... Support this podcast
Mark Anthony Neal is join in the studio by Duke's Professor Maurice Wallace to talk about his new book, Pictures and Progress: Early Photography and the Making of African American Identity.
Dr. Eddie Glaude Jr., Chair of the Center for African American Studies at Princeton, shares his pragmatic view of African American Identity in today's climate.
Dr. Eddie Glaude Jr., Chair of the Center for African American Studies at Princeton, shares his pragmatic view of African American Identity in today's climate.