Podcast appearances and mentions of Catherine Porter

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Best podcasts about Catherine Porter

Latest podcast episodes about Catherine Porter

PBS NewsHour - Segments
Scale and brutality of French rape case sparks nationwide conversation

PBS NewsHour - Segments

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2024 5:18


In France, a panel of judges found dozens of men guilty of raping a woman whose then-husband had drugged her unconscious over a decade. The scale and brutality of the abuse prompted thousands to take to the streets and sparked a nationwide conversation about consent. Ali Rogin discussed more with Catherine Porter of The New York Times. A warning: the following conversation is graphic. PBS News is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders

PBS NewsHour - World
Scale and brutality of French rape case sparks nationwide conversation

PBS NewsHour - World

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2024 5:18


In France, a panel of judges found dozens of men guilty of raping a woman whose then-husband had drugged her unconscious over a decade. The scale and brutality of the abuse prompted thousands to take to the streets and sparked a nationwide conversation about consent. Ali Rogin discussed more with Catherine Porter of The New York Times. A warning: the following conversation is graphic. PBS News is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders

The Daily
France's Horrifying Rape Trial Has a Feminist Hero

The Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2024 29:43


Warning: This episode contains graphic descriptions of sexual violence.After months of testimony, verdicts are expected as soon as this week in a rape trial that has both horrified and captivated the people of France.Catherine Porter, who has covered the trial, discusses the woman at the center of the case and how, with a single decision, she has turned the power dynamics of the #MeToo era on their head.Guest: Catherine Porter, an international correspondent for The New York Times based in Paris.Background reading: France's horrifying rape trial has a feminist hero.Dominique Pelicot says he invited men to rape his wife, whom he had drugged. The French media call them “Mr. Every Man” because they come from such ordinary backgrounds.For more information on today's episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday. Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

Highlights from Newstalk Breakfast
Gisèle Pelicot gave her final statement in court

Highlights from Newstalk Breakfast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2024 3:58


Gisèle Pelicot, the woman at the centre of France's mass rape trial, said that it was time for a "macho" society to change its attitude on rape, as she gave her final statement in court. To discuss the trial is Catherine Porter, International Correspondent in Avignon for The New York Times.

Newstalk Breakfast Highlights
Gisèle Pelicot gave her final statement in court

Newstalk Breakfast Highlights

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2024 3:58


Gisèle Pelicot, the woman at the centre of France's mass rape trial, said that it was time for a "macho" society to change its attitude on rape, as she gave her final statement in court. To discuss the trial is Catherine Porter, International Correspondent in Avignon for The New York Times.

Pioneers and Pathfinders
Understanding the Legal and Commercial Challenges of Disinformation and Deepfakes

Pioneers and Pathfinders

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2024 51:41


This week, we are replaying the latest installment in our virtual roundtable series, titled “Understanding the Legal and Commercial Challenges of Disinformation and Deepfakes.” For those who may not be familiar, a deepfake is a type of synthetic media where images, videos, or audio may seem real, but have been manipulated or generated with artificial intelligence. While some synthetic or manipulated media have legitimate applications, the ability of deepfakes to exploit and spread disinformation poses various commercial and legal threats, which organizations must be prepared to address. Our panel included Catherine Porter, Chief Business Officer of Prove; Hon. Paul W. Grimm (Ret.), professor of the practice of law and director of the Bolch Judicial Institute at Duke Law School; and Puya Partow-Navid, partner at Seyfarth. We discussed a variety of topics, including the biggest risks of deepfakes that organizations must tackle for consumers, the impact of deepfakes on courtroom and evidentiary rules, the legal frameworks in place to protect against deepfakes and disinformation, and technological solutions and best practices for businesses.

Future Histories
S03E23 - Andreas Malm on Overshooting into Climate Breakdown

Future Histories

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2024 100:26


Andreas Malm on "Overshoot: How the World Surrendered to Climate Breakdown", his new book project with Wim Carton (Verso, 2024).   Information on the presentation of the Democratic Planning Research Platform (at INDEP event): https://www.indep.network/events/   Shownotes Malm, A., & Carton, W. (2024). Overshoot: How the world surrendered to climate breakdown. Verso Books. https://www.versobooks.com/products/3131-overshoot Malm, A. (2020). Corona, climate, chronic emergency: War communism in the twenty-first century. Verso Books. https://www.versobooks.com/products/2726-corona-climate-chronic-emergency Malm, A. (2016). Fossil capital: The rise of steam power and the roots of global warming. Verso Books. https://www.versobooks.com/products/135-fossil-capital Malm, A. (2021). How to blow up a pipeline. Verso Books. https://www.versobooks.com/products/2649-how-to-blow-up-a-pipeline Andreas Malm at Lund University: https://www.keg.lu.se/en/andreas-malm Remarque Institute: https://as.nyu.edu/research-centers/remarque.html International Network for Democratic Economic Planning (INDEP): https://www.indep.network/ Presentation of Democratic Planning Research Platform (at INDEP event): https://www.indep.network/events/ Verso Needs Your Support: https://www.versobooks.com/blogs/news/comrades-verso-needs-your-support Christophers, B. (2024). The Price is Wrong: Why Capitalism Won't Save the Planet. Verso Books: https://www.versobooks.com/products/3069-the-price-is-wrong Cédric Durand at the New Institute: https://thenew.institute/en/people/cedric-durand Stranded asset (Wiki): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stranded_asset Staab, P. (2022). Anpassung: Leitmotiv der nächsten Gesellschaft. Suhrkamp Verlag: https://www.suhrkamp.de/buch/philipp-staab-anpassung-t-9783518127797 David Keith: https://keith.seas.harvard.edu/people/david-keith Ende Gelände: https://www.ende-gelaende.org/ Tadzio Müller on just collapse: https://justcollapse.org/2023/11/20/dr-tadzio-mueller-on-justcollapse/ ‘No bassaran: (battle)field notes about a few revolutionary days in France' by Jana Tsoneva: https://www.crossbordertalks.eu/2023/04/06/no-bassaran/ ‘French Police Guard Water as Seasonal Drought Intensifies' by Catherine Porter: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/11/27/world/europe/france-climate-change-water-wars.html Les Soulèvements de la Terre: https://lessoulevementsdelaterre.org/en-eu/blog   Further Future Histories Episodes on related topics:   S02E55 | Kohei Saito on Degrowth Communism: https://www.futurehistories.today/episoden-blog/s02/e55-kohei-saito-on-degrowth-communism/ S03E03 | Planning for Entropy on Sociometabolic Planning: https://www.futurehistories.today/episoden-blog/s03/e03-planning-for-entropy-on-sociometabolic-planning/ S02E27 | Nick Dyer-Witheford on Biocommunism: https://www.futurehistories.today/episoden-blog/s02/e27-nick-dyer-witheford-on-biocommunism/ S03E08 | Simon Schaupp zu Stoffwechselpolitik: (German) https://www.futurehistories.today/episoden-blog/s03/e08-simon-schaupp-zu-stoffwechselpolitik/ S02E47 | Matt Huber on Building Socialism, Climate Change & Class War: https://www.futurehistories.today/episoden-blog/s02/e47-matt-huber-on-building-socialism-climate-change-class-war/ S03E05 | Daniela Russ zu Energie(wirtschaft) und produktivistischer Ökologie: (German) https://www.futurehistories.today/episoden-blog/s03/e16-daniela-russ-zu-energie-wirtschaft-und-produktivistischer-oekologie/   Future Histories Contact & Support If you like Future Histories please consider supporting Future Histories on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/join/FutureHistories Contact: office@futurehistories.today Twitter: https://twitter.com/FutureHpodcast Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/futurehistories.bsky.social Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/futurehpodcast/ Mastodon: https://mstdn.social/@FutureHistories All episodes: www.futurehistories.today English only website: https://futurehistories-international.com/    #AndreasMalm, #FutureHistories, #JanGroos, #ClimateChange, #FossilCapitalism, #EnvironmentalActivism, #EcologicalCrisis, #ClimatePolitics, #EcoSocialism, #EnergyTransition, #ClimateResistance, #ClimateJustice, #ClimateAction, #CapitalismAndEcology, #EnvironmentalDegradation, #PoliticalEcology, #ClimateMovements, #RadicalEnvironmentalism, #Anthropocene, #Capitalocene, #ClimateCrisis, #IPCC, #ClimateRevolution, #Geoengineering, #DirectAirCapture, #CarbonRemoval, #ClimateMitigation, #NegativeEmissions, #TechnoFixes, #ClimateScience, #CarbonCaptureAndStorage, #ClimateEngineering, #EnvironmentalTechnology, #verso, #overshoot, #futurehistoriesinternational, #FutureHistoriesInternational

Um pulo em Paris
Julgamento de 50 homens acusados de estupros de idosa francesa atrai jornalistas do mundo todo

Um pulo em Paris

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2024 18:35


Há três semanas, a cidade de Avignon, no sul da França, foi invadida por jornalistas do mundo inteiro. O chamado “processo de Mazan”, sobre múltiplos estupros organizados pelo marido da vítima, Gisèle Pelicot, sedada durante os atos, suscita forte interesse da imprensa internacional. Daniella Franco, de Paris“A França confronta o horror do caso de estupro e sedação” é a manchete de um suplemento especial do jornal americano New York Times. Como o célebre diário, outros grandes veículos, como o britânico The Guardian, o espanhol El País, e a revista alemã Der Spiegel, enviaram repórteres para acompanhar o julgamento.A intensa e diária cobertura das mídias internacionais intriga até mesmo a imprensa francesa. A emissora BFMTV entrevistou jornalistas estrangeiros que acompanham o julgamento que evocam não apenas os fatos chocantes do “processo de Mazan”, mas também a coragem da vítima, Gisèle Pelicot, de 72 anos, e o intenso debate que o caso suscita sobre a luta contra a cultura do estupro.No total, 36 mídias foram credenciadas para fazer a cobertura dentro do tribunal de Vaucluse, em Avignon. Dezenas de outros repórteres sem autorização de acompanhar os bastidores do julgamento se posicionam nos arredores do local, na expectativa de obter uma declaração, um vídeo ou uma foto da francesa que se tornou um símbolo contra as agressões sexuais às mulheres.Nas agências de fotografias internacionais, Gisèle aparece sempre cercada por dezenas de microfones. Com uma expressão segura e um andar calmo, ela encara as câmeras em algumas ocasiões, concede entrevista ao lado de seus advogados e agradece o apoio de militantes incansáveis que a aguardam durante as longas horas de audiência.Para o jornal Libération, parte da fascinação da mídia estrangeira com o caso é alimentada pela figura da septuagenária, “uma mulher admirável que muitos não hesitam em classificar de heroína”. Já o diário americano The Washington Post explica, em uma matéria, que não tem o hábito de revelar os nomes das vítimas de crimes sexuais, mas “nesse caso preciso, ela pediu para ser identificada com o seu sobrenome de casada, Gisèle Pelicot”. Além disso, reitera, “a vítima pediu que o processo ocorresse em audiência pública porque ela queria que o mundo soubesse o que lhe aconteceu”.“É preciso perguntar aos jornalistas ausentes porque não vieram”, diz Catherine Porter, repórter do The New York Times ao ser questionada pela rádio francesa RMC sobre o interesse internacional sobre o caso. Já para o jornalista espanhol Enric Bonet, o julgamento “mexe com o nosso interior” e “mobiliza a sociedade”.Fatos chocantes“Tudo nesse caso fascina as mídias”, observa o jornal francês Libération. Para o diário, o principal interesse se dá pelo choque com os fatos: um idoso que drogou sua esposa durante dez anos, após quatro décadas de casamento, para estuprá-la e oferecê-la ser violentada inconsciente por dezenas de desconhecidos.Muito além de retratar os atos de Dominique Pelicot e as dezenas de outros acusados, a imprensa internacional ainda convida à reflexão. A revista alemã Der Spiegel refuta a utilização da palavra “monstro” para se referir ao ex-marido de Gisèle. “Seria bem mais preocupante admitir que os estupradores estão todos grudados no tecido social contínuo da misoginia banalizada”, publica.Já o diário El País convida os leitores a considerar a simplicidade da origem do caso: um marido que estupra a esposa. Por causa das perdas de memória resultantes da ingestão de altas e frequentes doses de ansiolíticos, Gisèle chegou a cogitar que estava sofrendo de Alzheimer ou que poderia ter um tumor no cérebro. “Mas se tratava de algo ainda mais sinistro: um marido”, diz o jornal espanhol.Relembre o caso“O processo de Mazan” - em referência à cidade no sul da França onde Gisèle e Dominique Pelicot viviam e os estupros ocorriam - teve início em 2 de setembro. A previsão é que ele dure até 20 de dezembro, tamanha a gravidade e complexidade do caso. O julgamento ocorre no tribunal de Vaucluse, em Avignon.No total, 50 homens estão sendo julgados – entre eles, o ex-marido de Gisèle, Dominique Pelicot, de 71 anos – e outros 49 homens que foram recrutados por ele para estuprar a sua então esposa. A francesa era sedada com altas doses de ansiolítico, chegou a procurar médicos por problemas de memória, por contrair doenças sexualmente transmissíveis e dores nas partes íntimas, mas jamais suspeitou dos estupros.A polícia francesa contabilizou cerca de 200 estupros, que ocorreram de julho de 2011 a outubro de 2020. Destes, 92 foram cometidos por 50 homens que puderam ser reconhecidos e são julgados atualmente. Outros 29 potenciais estupradores não puderam ser identificados.Um acusado, Jean-Pierre M, de 63 anos, está sendo julgado nesse mesmo processo por estupro de sua esposa. O sexagenário conheceu Dominique Pelicot em um site pornográfico que o instruiu sobre o modus operandi da sedação e estupros de Gisèle. Ambos são acusados de dopar e violar a esposa de Jean-Pierre em ao menos 12 ocasiões.A principal vítima do processo Mazan, Gisèle Pelicot depôs na primeira semana do julgamento e voltou a falar na quarta-feira (18), quando foi interrogada pela defesa do ex-marido. Os advogados usam o argumento de que a vítima estaria consciente durante “os atos sexuais”, uma alegação que a septuagenária considera “humilhante”.Dominique Pelicot, principal acusado, testemunhou pela primeira nessa semana e admitiu ser um “estuprador”, “como todos os outros” no tribunal. Sua defesa tem a estratégia de tentar dividir a responsabilidade dos atos com os outros acusados.Nessa semana também tiveram início os depoimentos dos co-acusados no caso. O primeiro deles, Lionel, de 44 anos, reconheceu jamais ter obtido o consentimento de Gisèle, mas afirma não ter consciência de ter praticado um estupro.Os homens julgados têm idades que vão dos 26 aos 73 anos, pertencem a classes sociais variadas e executam diversas profissões – jardineiro, bombeiro, pedreiro, enfermeiro, engenheiros, aposentados, militares e um é jornalista. A maioria deles não tem antecedentes criminais, boa parte é casado e tem filhos.Todos os acusados podem ser condenados a até 20 anos de prisão.

Women of Substance Music Podcast
#1604 Music by Catherine M Thompson, Stephanie Phillips, Jackie Morris, Liz Miller, Suki Rae, Karie Hillery, Catherine Porter, Kal Cahoone, Leisah Woldoff, Louise Wisechild

Women of Substance Music Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2024 43:35


To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit www.WOSPodcast.comThis show includes the following songs:Catherine M Thompson - Put Down The Guns FOLLOW ON SPOTIFYStephanie Phillips - The Last Word FOLLOW ON SPOTIFYJackie Morris - Crazy Eddie Got a Gun FOLLOW ON YOUTUBELiz Miller - AR-15 FOLLOW ON YOUTUBESuki Rae - Shame, Shame, Shame FOLLOW ON SPOTIFYKarie Hillery - Peace Instead FOLLOW ON SPOTIFYCatherine Porter - We Want Peace FOLLOW ON SPOTIFYKal Cahoone - It Takes a Carpenter FOLLOW ON SPOTIFYLeisah Woldoff - What's Gonna Be FOLLOW ON SOUNDCLOUDLouise Wisechild - Make Peace Be Real FOLLOW ON SPOTIFYFor Music Biz Resources Visit www.FEMusician.com and www.ProfitableMusician.comVisit our Sponsor Becky Boyland at beckyboyland.comVisit our Sponsor Catherine M Thompson at catherinemthompson.comVisit our Sponsor Miss Queue at missqueueband.comVisit our Sponsor ROYO at profitablemusician.com/royoVisit www.wosradio.com for more details and to submit music to our review board for consideration.Visit our resources for Indie Artists: https://www.wosradio.com/resources

RTÉ - News at One Podcast
New digital archive of first ordnance survey maps

RTÉ - News at One Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2024 4:18


Dr Catherine Porter, Associate Professor of Geography at UL and principal investigator on the OS200 Project explains

The Front Page
Is Paris ready for the 2024 Olympics - and which Kiwi athletes are hoping for gold?

The Front Page

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2024 21:14


The biggest sporting event of the year kicks off this month.  The 2024 Paris Olympics are only a few weeks away, and nearly 200 Kiwi athletes will be heading to the City of Love for their shot at Olympic glory. Today on The Front Page, New York Times international correspondent Catherine Porter joins from Paris to discuss how the city is preparing for the event in the midst of an election, security concerns – and a costly river cleanup. And then Newstalk ZB sports host Jason Pine digs into the Kiwi athletes to watch out for, and our own controversy around selection.  Follow The Front Page on iHeartRadio, Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. You can read more about this and other stories in the New Zealand Herald, online at nzherald.co.nz, or tune in to news bulletins across the NZME network. Host: Chelsea DanielsSound Engineer: Paddy FoxProducer: Ethan SillsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Konflikt
Så blev Haiti en kollapsad stat

Konflikt

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2024 55:44


Haiti har varit instabilt i åratal, men läget nu beskrivs som värre än på väldigt länge. Hur blev det så här och hur hänger dagens akuta kris ihop med landets koloniala historia? Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. Medverkande: Élise Joseph, haitisk psykolog vid FN:s migrationsorgan IOM, Monique Clesca, haitisk journalist i Port-au-Prince, Ulrika Richardsson, FN:s koordinator för humanitärt bistånd och utvecklingsbistånd i Haiti, Marlene Daut, professor på Yale-universitet i Connecticut, Catherine Porter, journalist på New York Times, baserad i Paris, Jean-Marc Ayrault, tidigare fransk premiärminister och utrikesminister, i dag chef för en stiftelse för minnet av slaveriets grymheter, Åsa Odin Ekman, biståndsarbetare vid IOM på plats i Haiti, Fathon, boende i Port-au-Prince, Robert Zephir och Mona Zephir, svensk-haitier i Bagarmossen i Stockholm, Marie Fequiere, svensk-haitier i Hässelby, Rachell Berry, ordförande i Haitikommittén i Sverige mflProgramledare: Fernando Ariasfernando.arias@sr.seTekniker: Jacob GustavssonReporter: Rouzbeh DjalaieProducent: Anja Sahlberganja.sahlberg@sr.se

People I (Mostly) Admire
127. Rajiv Shah Never Wastes a Crisis

People I (Mostly) Admire

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2024 57:23


After Haiti's devastating earthquake, Rajiv Shah headed the largest humanitarian effort in U.S. history. As chief economist of the Gates Foundation he tried to immunize almost a billion children. He tells Steve why it's important to take big gambles, follow the data, and own up to your mistakes.SOURCE:Rajiv Shah, president of the Rockefeller Foundation. RESOURCES:Big Bets: How Large-Scale Change Really Happens, by Rajiv Shah (2023)."The Root of Haiti's Misery: Reparations to Enslavers," by Catherine Porter, Constant Méheut, Matt Apuzzo, and Selam Gebrekidan (The New York Times, 2022)."Testing Is Our Way Out," by Paul Romer and Rajiv Shah (The Wall Street Journal, 2020)."How to Get Millions of People to Take Coronavirus Tests and Stay Home if They're Positive," by Steven Levitt, Paul Romer, and Jeff Severts (USA Today, 2020)."Haiti In Ruins: A Look Back At The 2010 Earthquake," by The Picture Show (2020)."Vaccine for a Global Childhood Illness Passes Last Big Hurdle," (The New York Times, 1997). EXTRAS:"Dambisa Moyo Says Foreign Aid Can't Solve Problems, but Maybe Corporations Can," by People I (Mostly) Admire (2021)."Moncef Slaoui: 'It's Unfortunate That It Takes a Crisis for This to Happen,'" by People I (Mostly) Admire (2020).

On faisait comment avant ?
Notre pain quotidien - épisode 1

On faisait comment avant ?

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2024 24:08


"J'vais chercher l'pain !" Y-a-t-il plus français que ce refrain ? Le petit détour quotidien par la boulangerie ou le supermarché reste une tradition bien ancrée dans notre quotidien. Le pain, on le consomme à toutes les sauces : en sandwich, en croutons, grillé ou perdu, pain de mie ou pain complet. Mais à la différence de nos ancêtre, nous n'avons pas besoin de ce pain pour survivre. Car encore au 19e, le pain, c'était la base, le socle de toute notre alimentation, à la campagne comme en ville. Et ce pain disait beaucoup. Blanc, noir ou pain bis : dis moi de quelle couleur est ta mie, et je te dirai qui tu es. Pour refaire une petite histoire du pain, nous avons invité un historien de référence. L'Historien même ! C ar le sort a voulu qu'un Américain s'intéresse vraiment le premier au sujet, et qu'il en vienne à apprendre aux Français à mieux connaître leur histoire. Depuis, Steven Kaplan a écrit des articles et des livres sur ce sujet qui le passionne. Citons par exemple "Pour le pain", paru chez Fayard en 2020 ou "Transmettre, Soumettre, Socialiser : Essai sur l'apprentissage de Colbert à la Grande Guerre", paru également chez Fayard en 2023. En voici une liste, la plus exhaustive possible : Bread, Politics and Political Economy in the Reign of Louis XV. 2 volumes. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1976. Second edition, London: Anthem, 2016 Le Pain, le peuple et le roi. Paris: Librairie Académique Perrin, 1986. Translation of Bread, Politics. The Bagarre: Galiani's "Lost" Parody. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1979. The Famine Plot Persuasion in Eighteenth Century France, in Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, Vol. 72, part 3 (1982). Le Complot de famine: histoire d'une rumeur au XVIIIe siecle. Paris: Cahiers des Annales, Armand Colin, 1982. Modified version of The Famine Plot. Reappraisals and New Perspectives in European Intellectual History (ed.in collaboration with D. LaCapra). Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1982. Understanding Popular Culture in Early Modern Europe, Collection of Essays edited by Steven L. Kaplan. Berlin, Paris, and New York: Mouton Publishers, 1983. Provisioning Paris: Merchants and Millers in the Grain and Flour Trade During the Eighteenth Century. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1984. Les Ventres de Paris: pouvoir et approvisionnement dans La France d'Ancien Règime. Paris: Fayard, 1988. Translation of Provisioning Paris. Work in France: Representations, Meaning, Practice, and Organization. Edited by Steven L. Kaplan and Cynthia Koepp. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1986 (includes a long essay by Kaplan entitled "Social Classification and Representation in the Corporate World of Eighteenth-Century France: Turgot's 'Carnival.'") Adieu 89, Paris: Fayard, 1993. Farewell, Revolution: Disputed Legacies, France, 1789/1989. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1995. Farewell, Revolution: The Historians' Feud, France, 1789/1989. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1995. Le Meilleur Pain du monde. Les Boulangers de Paris au dix-huitième siécle. Paris: Fayard, 1996. The Bakers of Paris and the Bread Question, 1700-1775 Durham: Duke University Press, 1996. Food and Gender: Identity and Power. Edited by Carole M. Counihan and Steven L. Kaplan. Amsterdam and New York: Harwood Academic Publisher, 1998. La Fin des corporations. Paris: Fayard, 2001. Le Retour du bon pain: Une histoire contemporaine du pain, de ses techniques, et de ses hommes. Paris, Perrin, 2002. France, Malade du Corporatisme? XVIII-XX siecles. Co.-ed. with P. Minard. Paris: Belin, 2004 (I wrote two chapters and co-drafted introduction). Cherchez le pain: Guide des Meilleures Boulangeries de Paris. Paris: Plon, 2004. Good Bread is Back: A Contemporary History of French Bread, The Way it is Made, and the People Who Make It. Trans. Catherine Porter. Durham and London: Duke University Press, 2006. On faisait comment avant est un podcast original de France Télévisions. Réalisation : Laetitia Harper Musique originale : Antonin Fajon

All National Provisioner Podcasts
Episode 163: Consumer Trends Report 2023: Making convenience and value easy

All National Provisioner Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2023 29:38


Stephanie Lind, Catherine Porter, and Mark Di Domenico of market research firm Elohi Strategic Advisors discuss consumer trends, value-added protein opportunities, and more.

LE MAQUIS
CONFÉRENCE : HAÏTI, PREMIÈRE EXPÉRIENCE D'UNE RÉVOLUTION

LE MAQUIS

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2023 127:57


Vous écoutez, le Maquis, un podcast de l'AMECAS (Amicale des étudiants africains caribéens et sympathisants) affiliée à l'Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne. Cet épisode est une retransmission de la captation d'une conférence de l'AMECAS qui a eu lieu le 19 novembre 2022, à l'université de Paris 1 panthéon Sorbonne dans l'amphithéâtre Bachelard de 14 h à 17 h. Cette conférence était intitulée « Haïti, première expérience d'une révolution africaine ». Et elle portait sur la société haïtienne, présentée souvent comme « la première république noire » (hors du continent africain). Panéliste : Jean-Marie Théodat, maître de conférence en géographie à l'université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne. Références : Haïti-France, les chaînes de la dette. Le rapport Mackau (1825) par Marcel Dorigny, Jean-Marie Théodat et Jean-Claude Bruffarts Des décombres et des hommes : chroniques de la vie quotidienne en Haïti après le 12 janvier 2010, par Jean-Marie Théodat Comment (et pourquoi) nous avons calculé les sommes qu'Haïti a versées à la France, de Constant Méheut, 25 Mai 2022, New York Times Plongée dans la Double Dette d'Haïti, de Emmett Lindner, 22 Mai 2022, New York Times 6 infos à retenir sur les réparations versées par Haïti à la France, de Eric Nagourney, Publié le 20 mai 2022, Mise à jour le 25 mai 2022, New York Times La rançon : Comment une banque française a fait main basse sur Haïti, de Constant Méheut, Catherine Porter, Selam Gebrekidan et Matt Apuzzo, Publié le 20 mai 2022, Mise à jour le 24 mai 2022, New-York Times La rançon : Envahissez Haïti, exhorte Wall Street. Les États-Unis s'exécutent, de Constant Méheut, Catherine Porter, Selam Gebrekidan et Matt Apuzzo, Publié le 20 mai 2022, Mise à jour le 24 mai 2022, New-York Times La rançon : À la racine des malheurs d'Haïti: des réparations aux esclavagistes, de Constant Méheut, Catherine Porter, Selam Gebrekidan et Matt Apuzzo, Publié le 20 mai 2022, Mise à jour le 24 mai 2022, New-York Times La rançon : Comment la France a riposté aux demandes de réparations d'Haïti, de Constant Méheut, Catherine Porter, Selam Gebrekidan et Matt Apuzzo, Publié le 20 mai 2022, Mise à jour le 24 mai 2022, New-York Times La Rançon : Les Milliards Envolés, de Lazaro Gamio, Constant Méheut, Catherine Porter, Selam Gebrekidan, Allison McCann, Matt Apuzzo, Publié le 20 Mai 2022, New-York Times Pour continuer la conversation, vous pouvez nous retrouver sur tous nos réseaux sociaux et via le hashtag #Lemaquis. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/amecas/message

All Of It
Civic Unrest In France

All Of It

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2023 12:04


This Bastille Day, the spirit of unrest that underlies the holiday is particularly resonant, as many French people have taken to the streets over the past few weeks after the police killing of a 17-year old citizen of North African descent. Catherine Porter, international correspondent for the New York Times based in Paris, explains the inciting incident as well as the protests, and the domestic politics at play in France today.

Robert McLean's Podcast
Climate News: France's war-time coasts under assault again, this time from climate change; Nature outpacing our climate predictions; 'Peacock in the Pacific' - Australia's bid to host COP31

Robert McLean's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2023 14:39


Catherine Porter (pictured) journeys along the D-Day coasts and see evidence of another assault - "D-Day's Historic Beaches Face a New Onslaught: Rising Seas"; "Is climate change outpacing our ability to predict extreme heatwaves?"; "After “difficult experience” at Cop27, Mexico leads anti-harassment push in Bonn"; "Blockade Australia climate protests cause traffic chaos in Brisbane and Melbourne"; "Peacock in the Pacific: Inside Australia's bid to host COP31"; "Video: Canary hits the airwaves to chat about hydrogen fuel-cell buses"; "A profitable fuel-cell company finally emerges amid industrywide losses"; "‘Unheard of' marine heatwave off UK and Irish coasts poses serious threat"; "Vertical take-off: Energy grid to get $16 billion renewables upgrade"; "1 killed and almost 2 dozen injured in overnight storms in Mississippi, officials say"; "Climate protesters suspend themselves above major roads in two capital cities"; "Woodside presses go on $10b Trion Mexican oil project"; "‘Call to action': One thing Aussies not prepared for"; "Australians far less aware of biodiversity loss than climate crisis, research finds"; "7 of the Greenest Small Towns in America"; "Wildfires 101: Everything You Need to Know"; "Himalayan Glacier Loss Speeding Up, New Report Finds"; "Managing pine plantations in a climate crisis"; "Global average sea and air temperatures are spiking in 2023, before El Niño has fully arrived. We should be very concerned"; "Dutton's climate ‘stunt' sacrifices tax cut promise: Labor"; "‘Unprecedented': Experts raise alarm over record temperatures"; "Trillions in Oil and Farm Subsidies Are Causing “Environmental Havoc”"; "Southern Green Hydrogen poses $12b+ cost to society - report"; "‘Bullshit ambush': Gas levy urgently passed on Budget night"; "Wind Power's Explosive Growth Is Blowing Past Green Energy Goals"; "Reviving the Lost Waterways of India's ‘City of Lakes'"; "‘A Cultural Shift Toward Living With Fire'"; "Global Forest Watch goes to India"; NGT restrains PMC from cutting trees for riverfront work till July 31"; "There's No Uber or Lyft. There Is a Communal Tesla."; "Vertical take-off: Energy grid to get $16 billion renewables upgrade"; ‘Just the start': Andrew Forrest aims to take on Chinese battery producers with UK investment"; The government can't explain how net zero will change your life, so I will". --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/robert-mclean/message

Psychoanalysis On and Off the Couch
Freud's Nephew and the Creation of 'Buzz' around Psychoanalysis with Joseph Malherek, Ph.D. (Raleigh, North Carolina)

Psychoanalysis On and Off the Couch

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2023 40:41


"He [Bernays] proposed to his uncle that he'd do a translation of this book that had been given to him and Freud, perhaps without thinking too much about it,  approved the idea.  Bernays went about hiring a translator who was a psychology Ph.D. student that he found at Columbia University and he got Stanley Hall to write an introduction for what was published in 1920 as ‘A General Introduction to Psychoanalysis'. Now, shortly after this happened,  Freud had second thoughts about authorizing Bernays to translate his lectures, particularly as he had been working with his trusted colleague Ernest Jones on translations.  But by the time Freud wired Bernays to try to stop this publication, Bernays said that it was already too late and that the advertisements had already been placed and the publication was proceeding. Bernays assured Freud that it would be all right and he also assured him that he would get fame and glory and also substantial recompense for the publication. Freud was not too happy about this, nor was Ernest Jones, and when they finally  received the translation that Bernays had done they were particularly upset."    Episode Description: We begin by describing the complicated bloodline between Freud and Edward Bernays - Bernays' mother was Freud's sister, and his father was the brother of Freud's wife. We then consider Bernays' role as the founder of the field of public relations. This has led many to inaccurately see him as a manipulator of the masses through the use of his uncle's theories. In fact, Bernays served as the pro-bono literary agent for Freud's books in the US which contributed to his popularization and to providing vital financial support during the years of Austria's hyperinflation. We also discuss Bernays' role in the American pro-democracy movement, which was designed to counter the influence of Nazi propaganda in the years before WWII. We close with Joseph's describing his interest in this subject and his wish to "set the record straight" about Edward Bernays.   Our Guest: Joseph Malherek is a historian who holds a Ph.D. in American Studies from George Washington University in Washington, D.C. He was the Junior Botstiber Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study at Central European University, and he has been a Fulbright Visiting Professor of Austrian-American Studies at the University of Vienna. He has published widely on the topics of transatlantic migration, twentieth-century intellectual history, and the history of capitalism and consumer culture. His book, Free-Market Socialists: European Émigrés Who Made Capitalist Culture in America, 1918–1968, was recently published by Central European University Press.   Linked Paper: https://www.euppublishing.com/doi/abs/10.3366/pah.2023.0452?journalCode=pah   Recommended Readings: Freud's American Nephew: Edward Bernays and the Selling of Psychoanalysis.  Psychoanalysis and History 25, no. 1 (2023): 59–78.   Bernays, Edward L. (1923) Crystallizing Public Opinion. New York: Boni and Liveright.   Bernays, Edward L. (1965) Biography of an Idea: Memoirs of Public Relations Counsel Edward L. Bernays. New York: Simon and Schuster.   Freud, Sigmund. (1920) A General Introduction to Psychoanalysis. New York: Horace Liveright.   Gay, Peter. (1988) Freud: A Life for Our Time. New York: W.W. Norton.   Lippmann, Walter. (1922) Public Opinion. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company.   Roudinesco, Élisabeth. (2016) Freud: In His Time and Ours. Translated by Catherine Porter. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press  

Front Burner
Revolt as France forces more work before retirement

Front Burner

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2023 20:37


Thousands of protesters hit the streets of Paris with renewed anger this week, as an unpopular raise to France's retirement age became law. President Emmanuel Macron's government announced plans to shift the age from 62 to 64 in January. Since then, demonstrations across France have included strikes from rail workers and garbage collectors, leading to piles of trash growing in Paris. On Monday, his government survived a resulting no-confidence motion by only nine votes. Today, New York Times correspondent Catherine Porter joins us to explain France's unique identity of work-life balance, and the globally relevant reasons Macron risked his future to delay the country's retirement. For transcripts of this series, please visit: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts

Creativity in Captivity
CIC: 1st Annual Christmas Cluster

Creativity in Captivity

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2022 36:27


The 1st Annual Christmas Cluster is a holiday salute to creativity with many special guest showcasing some seasonal treats. Music, poetry and comedy are on tap to make spirits bright for the week of Christmas. Enjoy music from the Jo Ann Daugherty Trio, Maia Sharp, Tony Haselden, Broadway Barbara, Catherine Porter & Seth Barrish, a poem from Alandra Markman, seasonal stand up comedy from your host Pat Hazell and a visit with Earlene Hoople from The Early Bird Morning Show. Grab a mug of holiday hooch and get ready for a cool yule.

The Non-Prophets
The Non-Prophets 21.47 11-20-2022 with Jason Sherwood, August, and Cindy Plaza

The Non-Prophets

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2022 74:43


The Non-Prophets, Episode 21.47 airing Sunday, November 20, 2022 featuring Jason Sherwood, August, and Cindy PlazaThis week you can join Jason Sherwood with an amazing panel of August and Cindy Plaza!I know I say all the panels are amazing every week, but here's the thing: THEY ALL ARE!!! So check us out this Sunday at 3:00 PM Central. Let's get into it.First up, Texas churches broke the law, and the law… didn't seem to care. Uhh oh. Seems at least two different churches supported different candidates in this latest election. If only there was some kind of law that prevented that from happening. Maybe some Texas Senator could amend the tax code so that non-profit organizations couldn't do that. Oh wait, that is a thing that happened. So did anything happen? Did those churches lose their tax exempt status? Well you will just have to tune in to find out, but you can guess...Now over to the land of fine wine, fine food, and now racist nationalists? Seems a politician got into a little hot water for suggesting a boat of migrants go… well it was racist so you can guess which continent he wanted them to go to. We explore a little of the history of how they got here and hope that France can throw out their far right nationalists before very uncomfortable salutes become commonplace there.Ever hear that the more education you have the less likely you are to believe in a god? So have we, but it seems so very religious news/research sources have a very different take on that. They also have the numbers to prove it! So are Atheists big old dummies or is it possible these sites have a narrative they want to spin? Check out these sites, but make sure you do your own research. Cindy did!Lastly, we follow one man's journey from being a Hindu Nationalist to becoming a humanist. It is a tale of misinformation, hatred, and tragedy. We wonder if the reasons he became a humanist are ones that can stand the test of time and wish him the best even if there were any kind of back slide.That will do it for The Non-Prophets this week. Hope you have enjoyed all the studio shows this week and we will be back next week with another amazing panel and show!Segment 1: Texas churches violated tax law ahead of Tuesday's election, experts say, The Texas Tribune and Propublica, BY Jeremy Schwartz, Jessica Priest AND Perla Trevio, November 6, 2022 http://bit.ly/3EL0If9http://bit.ly/3UOv9XfSegment 2: In France, an Outburst Is a Setback for the Far Right, The New York Times, by Catherine Porter and Constant Méheut, November 10, 2022http://bit.ly/3Xk0rXJSegment 3: Does education ‘cure' people of faith? The data says no, Religious News Service, By Ryan Burge, November 10, 2022 http://bit.ly/3TRMnSiIn America, Does More Education Equal Less Religion?, Pew Research Center, Report, April 26, 2017http://bit.ly/3hX6dOJSegment 4: One man's journey from a Hindu nationalist to a humanist, The World, By Priyadarshini Sen, November 10, 2022http://bit.ly/3TR6gZYDon't like ads? Consider becoming a patron for commercial-free episodes: http://tiny.cc/patreonnp We welcome your comments on the thread for this show. ► http://tiny.cc/fbnp► Contact us with questions or news stories at: nonprophets@atheist-community.org

Utajua Hujui
Killed In the Crade (PT II)

Utajua Hujui

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2022 89:36


Part II is here! And this time, Americans are involved. Digressions include: We Are the World (For Haiti), Teenage Boys, the Scramble for Africa and Fence Sitting Sources Amy Goodman, Westenley Alcenat, Juan González, Gerald Horne, Kim Ives, Debt, Coups & Colonialism in Haiti: France & U.S. Urged to Pay Reparations for Destroying Nation (2021) Bob Corbett, Review of "FROM DESSALINES TO DUVALIER" by David Nicholls and "HAITI IN THE WORLD ECONOMY: CLASS, RACE, AND UNDERDEVELOPMENT SINCE 1700" by Alex Dupuy, Webster University, (1990) Catherine Porter, Constant Méheut, Matt Apuzzo and Selam Gebrekidan, The Ransom – The Root of Haiti's Misery: Reparations to Enslavers, The New York Times (2022) Colin Mckey, The Economic Consequences of The Haitian Revolution (2016) Constant Méheut and Selam Gebrekidan, A magnet for exploitation: Haiti over the centuries, The New York Times (2021) Daphney Pascal, Crisis in Haiti: The American Occupation 1915-1934, (2010) Elizabeth Abbott, The Ghosts of Duvalier, Foreign Policy (2011) Eric Nagourney, 6 Takeaways About Haiti's Reparations to France, The New York Times (2021) Fran Quigley, From cradle to grave, United States protected Jean-Claude Duvalier, IndyStar (2014) Greg Rosalsky, 'The Greatest Heist In History': How Haiti Was Forced To Pay Reparations For Freedom, NPR, (2021) Hossein Azadi and Eric Vanhaute, Mutual Effects of Land Distribution and Economic Development: Evidence, Land Journal (2019) Khalil Gibran Muhammad, The Barbaric History of Sugar in America, The New York Times (2019) Matt Apuzzo, Constant Méheut, Selam Gebrekidan and Catherine Porter, How a French Bank Captured Haiti – The Ransom, The New York Times (2022) Merima Ali, Odd-Helge Fjeldstad, Abdulaziz B. Shif, Did British colonial rule in Africa foster a legacy of corruption among local elites?, London School of Economics (2020) Patrick Scheld, Who Really Controls Haiti's Destiny? An examination of Haiti's Historical Underdevelopment, Endless Poverty, and the Role played by Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs), (2018) Paul Cohen, On the Relationship Between Journalism and History: Thoughts on The New York Times Haiti Ransom Project, Age of Revolutions (2022) Rocio Cara Labrador and Diana Roy, Haiti's Troubled Path to Development, Council on Foreign Relation (2021) Siri Schubert, Haiti: The Long Road to Recovery, FrontLine World - PBS (n.d.) University of Missouri – St Louis, A New Institutional Economics Analysis of Duvalierism (n.d.)

Utajua Hujui
Killed in the Cradle: The Story of Haiti

Utajua Hujui

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2022 87:03


What happened to Haiti? And was it inevitable? Join Aileen and Kariithi as they discuss who fucked with Haiti, and how they benefitted while Haitians suffered unequivocally. Digressions include: Mike Posner, Sauti Sol and Hades Sources Amy Goodman, Westenley Alcenat, Juan González, Gerald Horne, Kim Ives, Debt, Coups & Colonialism in Haiti: France & U.S. Urged to Pay Reparations for Destroying Nation (2021) Bob Corbett, Review of FROM DESSALINES TO DUVALIER by David Nicholls and HAITI IN THE WORLD ECONOMY: CLASS, RACE, AND UNDERDEVELOPMENT SINCE 1700 by Alex Dupuy, Webster University, (1990) Catherine Porter, Constant Méheut, Matt Apuzzo and Selam Gebrekidan, The Ransom – The Root of Haiti's Misery: Reparations to Enslavers, The New York Times (2022) Colin Mckey, The Economic Consequences of The Haitian Revolution (2016) Constant Méheut and Selam Gebrekidan, A magnet for exploitation: Haiti over the centuries, The New York Times (2021) Daphney Pascal, Crisis in Haiti: The American Occupation 1915-1934, (2010) Elizabeth Abbott, The Ghosts of Duvalier, Foreign Policy (2011) Eric Nagourney, 6 Takeaways About Haiti's Reparations to France, The New York Times (2021) Fran Quigley, From cradle to grave, United States protected Jean-Claude Duvalier, IndyStar (2014) Greg Rosalsky, 'The Greatest Heist In History': How Haiti Was Forced To Pay Reparations For Freedom, NPR, (2021) Hossein Azadi and Eric Vanhaute, Mutual Effects of Land Distribution and Economic Development: Evidence, Land Journal (2019) Khalil Gibran Muhammad, The Barbaric History of Sugar in America, The New York Times (2019) Matt Apuzzo, Constant Méheut, Selam Gebrekidan and Catherine Porter, How a French Bank Captured Haiti – The Ransom, The New York Times (2022) Merima Ali, Odd-Helge Fjeldstad, Abdulaziz B. Shif, Did British colonial rule in Africa foster a legacy of corruption among local elites?, London School of Economics (2020) Patrick Scheld, Who Really Controls Haiti's Destiny? An examination of Haiti's Historical Underdevelopment, Endless Poverty, and the Role played by Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs), (2018) Paul Cohen, On the Relationship Between Journalism and History: Thoughts on The New York Times Haiti Ransom Project, Age of Revolutions (2022) Rocio Cara Labrador and Diana Roy, Haiti's Troubled Path to Development, Council on Foreign Relation (2021) Siri Schubert, Haiti: The Long Road to Recovery, FrontLine World - PBS (n.d.) University of Missouri – St Louis, A New Institutional Economics Analysis of Duvalierism (n.d.)

Fintech Nexus
USA 2022 Keynote: NFTs and Creator Monetization

Fintech Nexus

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2022 20:28


This recording is from Fintech Nexus USA (formerly known as LendIt Fintech USA) held at the Javits Center in New York City on May 25-26, 2022. It is from our Keynote stage and is titled NFTs and Creator Monetization. Speaking at this session is Catherine Porter, Meta with Moderator: Adam Chernichaw, Allen & Overy LLP.

The Tanya Acker Show
Haitians Won Their Freedom. Then They Had To Pay.

The Tanya Acker Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2022 33:17


Tanya talks to Catherine Porter, Toronto Bureau Chief of the New York Times and co-author of The Ransom: The Root of Haiti's Misery - Reparations to Enslavers (New York Times, 5/20/22).

The Brian Lehrer Show
How France Indebted Haiti, Twice

The Brian Lehrer Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2022 25:07


Catherine Porter, international correspondent for the New York Times, and Selam Gebrekidan, investigative reporter for The New York Times based in London, discuss what happened when France demanded reparations from formerly enslaved Haitians to their French slaveholders and how it has impacted Haiti's economy to this day.

PBS NewsHour - Segments
Hundreds of years after Haiti paid to be free from slavery the costs are still being felt

PBS NewsHour - Segments

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2022 4:34


Haiti is one of the poorest nations in the Western Hemisphere, yet the reasons for that are often overlooked. The New York Times recently conducted an unprecedented investigation into those root causes, which includes revelations about Haiti's former colonizer: France. The Times' Catherine Porter, who led the team that uncovered the story, joins Ali Rogin to discuss. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders

PBS NewsHour - World
Hundreds of years after Haiti paid to be free from slavery the costs are still being felt

PBS NewsHour - World

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2022 4:34


Haiti is one of the poorest nations in the Western Hemisphere, yet the reasons for that are often overlooked. The New York Times recently conducted an unprecedented investigation into those root causes, which includes revelations about Haiti's former colonizer: France. The Times' Catherine Porter, who led the team that uncovered the story, joins Ali Rogin to discuss. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders

The Conversation Weekly
The Aboriginal Tent Embassy – 50 years of ongoing protest for Indigenous sovereignty in Australia

The Conversation Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2022 49:01


The Aboriginal Tent Embassy – a site of First Nations protest in Canberra, Australia – marks its 50th anniversary this year. In this episode, Carissa Lee, First Nations and public policy editor at The Conversation in Australia, explores its history and hears how the ongoing protest has influenced a new generation of Indigenous activism.Featuring Bronwyn Carlson, professor of Indigenous studies and director of the Centre for Global Indigenous Futures at Macquarie University in Australia; Lynda-June Coe, a PhD candidate at Macquarie University and her Aunty Jenny Munro, a member of the Aboriginal Tent Embassy protest site in Canberra.Plus, new research into how the COVID-19 pandemic is affecting the lives of young people born into poverty around the world – and their job prospects. We talk to Catherine Porter, director of the Young Lives study at the University of Oxford. (Listen from 33m46s)This episode of the The Conversation Weekly is supported by the UK/Australia Season Patrons Board, the British Council and the Australian Government as part of the UK/Australia Season, which centres on the theme Who Are We Now? The season's programme reflects on the two countries' shared history, explores their current relationship, and imagines their future together.The Conversation Weekly is produced by Mend Mariwany and Gemma Ware, with reporting from the Aboriginal Tent Embassy in Canberra by Ellen Duffy. Sound design is by Eloise Stevens and our theme music is by Neeta Sarl. Full credits for this episode available here.Further readingA short history of the Aboriginal Tent Embassy – an indelible reminder of unceded sovereigntyWho are the ‘Original Sovereigns' who were camped out at Old Parliament House and what are their aims?Whose sovereignty is really being fought for? What happens when First Nations People are dragged into extremist protestsHunger, lost income and increased anxiety: how coronavirus lockdowns put huge pressure on young people around the world See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Care Package to Japan
Finding Rest through the Ancient Paths with Catherine Porter

Care Package to Japan

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2022 43:51


Today, we will be chatting with Catherine Porter. Catherine is a missionary in the northern region of Japan. She is a lover of Jesus, Japan, music, books, and chocolate brownies. Cat shares how knowing God's deep love for her propelled her to live a life surrendered to Jesus in this episode. Her yielded heart to Jesus is why she became a full-time missionary in Japan. This podcast exists to showcase how much God loves Japan through different stories of people. It is like God sending a care package to the ones He loves in Japan! If you would like to share your experience with us, please email carepackagetojapan@gmail.com, and we would love to have you on the podcast as well! Let's all continue to pray and praise God for the beautiful country of Japan. Pray for Japan

Women of Substance Music Podcast
#1333 Music by Kiah, Alison Reynolds, Nocturnal Red, Catherine Porter, October Brigade, Trisha & Thara, Debbie Myers (writer Jeff Ashbaker), Cassidy Ladden (writers Marv Conan & Lee Kweller), Maini Sorri, JuiceThaBlackBeethoven

Women of Substance Music Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2022 46:04


To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Kiah - Around The World  Alison Reynolds - Rocking Chair  Nocturnal Red - My Love Will Come To You  Catherine Porter - Wildflower  October Brigade - Gun for Hire  Trisha & Thara - You Used to Be  Debbie Myers (writer Jeff Ashbaker) - My Garden Of Life  Cassidy Ladden (writers Marv Conan & Lee Kweller) - My World My Time  Maini Sorri - Tomorrow  JuiceThaBlackBeethoven - Make Me Shake (radio version)  For Music Biz Resources Visit and Visit our Sponsor Juice The Black Beethoven at Visit our Sponsor SJ Jananiy at Visit our Sponsor Bandzoogle at:

Women of Substance Music Podcast
#1333 Music by Kiah, Alison Reynolds, Nocturnal Red, Catherine Porter, October Brigade, Trisha & Thara, Debbie Myers (writer Jeff Ashbaker), Cassidy Ladden (writers Marv Conan & Lee Kweller), Maini Sorri, JuiceThaBlackBeethoven

Women of Substance Music Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2022 46:04


To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Kiah - Around The World  Alison Reynolds - Rocking Chair  Nocturnal Red - My Love Will Come To You  Catherine Porter - Wildflower  October Brigade - Gun for Hire  Trisha & Thara - You Used to Be  Debbie Myers (writer Jeff Ashbaker) - My Garden Of Life  Cassidy Ladden (writers Marv Conan & Lee Kweller) - My World My Time  Maini Sorri - Tomorrow  JuiceThaBlackBeethoven - Make Me Shake (radio version)  For Music Biz Resources Visit and Visit our Sponsor Juice The Black Beethoven at Visit our Sponsor SJ Jananiy at Visit our Sponsor Bandzoogle at:

Women of Substance Music Podcast
#1316 Music by Annie Calder, Wendy Becker and Jeff Saxon, Catherine Porter, Nicole de Coteau, Silverson Songs, Katherine Moller, Bluestone Sisters, Gracious Me, Anna Maria Mendieta, Ed & Carol Nicodemi, Peggy Duquesnel, Maini Sorri, Dawn Rix

Women of Substance Music Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2021 54:40


To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Annie Calder - Whatta Bummer Bein' Single At Christmastime  Wendy Becker and Jeff Saxon - Spirit of the Season   Catherine Porter - We Want Peace  Nicole de Coteau - Around the World It's Christmas  Silverson Songs - Let's Get Merry  Katherine Moller - Greensleeves-Greensleeves & Pudding Pies  Bluestone Sisters - I Keep Christmas in My Pocket feat. Lillias White  Gracious Me - The Naughty List  Anna Maria Mendieta - Concert Variations on Adeste Fidelis  Ed & Carol Nicodemi - The Disheveled Snowman  Peggy Duquesnel - All I Ask for Christmas  Maini Sorri - Silent Night  Dawn Rix - Home With Him  For Music Biz Resources Visit and Visit our Sponsor Pocahontas Reese at Visit our Sponsor Laini Risto at Visit our Sponsor Ed & Carol Nicodemi at Visit our Sponsor Silverson Songs at Visit our Sponsor Bandzoogle at:

Women of Substance Music Podcast
#1316 Music by Annie Calder, Wendy Becker and Jeff Saxon, Catherine Porter, Nicole de Coteau, Silverson Songs, Katherine Moller, Bluestone Sisters, Gracious Me, Anna Maria Mendieta, Ed & Carol Nicodemi, Peggy Duquesnel, Maini Sorri, Dawn Rix

Women of Substance Music Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2021 54:38


To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Annie Calder - Whatta Bummer Bein' Single At Christmastime  Wendy Becker and Jeff Saxon - Spirit of the Season   Catherine Porter - We Want Peace  Nicole de Coteau - Around the World It's Christmas  Silverson Songs - Let's Get Merry  Katherine Moller - Greensleeves-Greensleeves & Pudding Pies  Bluestone Sisters - I Keep Christmas in My Pocket feat. Lillias White  Gracious Me - The Naughty List  Anna Maria Mendieta - Concert Variations on Adeste Fidelis  Ed & Carol Nicodemi - The Disheveled Snowman  Peggy Duquesnel - All I Ask for Christmas  Maini Sorri - Silent Night  Dawn Rix - Home With Him  For Music Biz Resources Visit and Visit our Sponsor Pocahontas Reese at Visit our Sponsor Laini Risto at Visit our Sponsor Ed & Carol Nicodemi at Visit our Sponsor Silverson Songs at Visit our Sponsor Bandzoogle at:

Women of Substance Music Podcast
#1306 Music by Cassidy Ladden (songwriters Marv Conan & Lee Kweller), Adventures With Alice, Kew Mason, Audra Raulyns (writer Steven McDonald), LAKOTAH, Swift Timmy, New Middle Class, Mary McGuinness, Giana, Livia & the Rosebuds

Women of Substance Music Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2021 45:49


To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Cassidy Ladden (songwriters Marv Conan & Lee Kweller) - Tears at a Movie   Adventures With Alice - Driving Route 288 feat. Catherine Porter  Kew Mason - Neverland  Audra Raulyns (writer Steven McDonald) - Do You Hear The Call   LAKOTAH - Silver Eyes  Swift Timmy - If You Wait Too Long  New Middle Class - Ten Rooms in the House of Love  Mary McGuinness - Til I Can Make It On My Own  Giana - Waves   Livia & the Rosebuds - Homesick  For Music Biz Resources Visit and Visit our Sponsor LAKOTAH at Visit our Sponsor Lyn-Sey at Visit our Sponsor Sahana Naresh at Visit our Sponsor Bandzoogle at:

The Brian Lehrer Show
Update to the Assassination of Haiti's President

The Brian Lehrer Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2021 36:46


A little under a week after the assassination of President Moïse, Haitian police have made several arrests. Catherine Porter, Toronto Bureau Chief for the New York Times and and author of the memoir A Girl Named Lovely (Simon & Schuster, 2019) about her experience in Haiti after the 2010 Earthquake, and Marlene L. Daut, Ph.D., professor in and Associate Director of the Carter G. Woodson Institute for African American and African Studies at the University of Virginia, join to update us on the ongoing investigations and break down the history that got us here.

Brian Lehrer: A Daily Politics Podcast
What We Know About Haiti's Assassinated President, And What We Still Don't

Brian Lehrer: A Daily Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2021 21:27


Twenty-three former members of Colombia's military have been arrested as suspects in the assassination of Haiti's president, including one with former ties to U.S. law enforcement. On Today's Show:Catherine Porter, Toronto Bureau Chief for the New York Times and and author of the memoir A Girl Named Lovely (Simon & Schuster, 2019) about her experience in Haiti after the 2010 Earthquake, and Marlene L. Daut, Ph.D., professor in and Associate Director of the Carter G. Woodson Institute for African American and African Studies at the University of Virginia, join to update us on the ongoing investigations and break down the history that got us here.

Amended
Episode 6: Walking in Two Worlds

Amended

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2021 48:31


When the 19th Amendment was ratified in 1920, a large number of Native American women still could not vote. The U.S. government did not recognize them as citizens. And if having U.S. citizenship required them to renounce tribal sovereignty, many Native women didn’t want it. But early-twentieth-century writer, composer, and activist Zitkála-Šá was determined to fight for both. In this episode, host Laura Free speaks with digital artist Marlena Myles (Spirit Lake Dakota) whose art is inspired by Dakota imagery and history, and by Zitkála-Šá’s legacy. Dr. Cathleen Cahill, author of Recasting the Vote: How Women of Color Transformed the Suffrage Movement, returns to help tell the story of Zitkála-Šá’s struggle for a “layered” U.S. citizenship that included the acknowledgment of Native American sovereignty. This final episode of the Amended series demonstrates once again how those who have been marginalized within U.S. democracy have worked, and continue to work, to hold the nation accountable for its promise of liberty and equality for all.  For a transcript and more about this series, visit amendedpodcast.com. Visit the Amended store to get an Amended podcast mug, shirt, bag, phone case, and more.  Our Team Laura Free, Host & Writer Reva Goldberg, Producer, Editor & Co-Writer Scarlett Rebman, Project Director & Episode Co-Writer Vanessa Manko  Sara Ogger  Michael Washburn Episode 6 Guests and Collaborators: Dr. Cathleen Cahill and digital artist Marlena Myles  Consulting Engineer: Logan Romjue  Art by Simonair Yoho Music: “Cinnamon” by Tufawon, Sun Dance Opera clips from a documentary by Palisander Verlag, Michael-John Hancock, Emily Sprague, Pictures of the Floating World (CC), Yusuke Tsutsumi (CC), Meydän (CC), and Live Footage. Sound library: Freesound.org The work of Susan Rose Dominguez, Karen Hansen, and Tadeusz Lewandowski helped us immensely in framing our story.  Amended is produced with major funding from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, and with support from Baird Foundation, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Phil Lewis & Catherine Porter, and C. Evan Stewart.  Copyright Humanities New York 2021

Amended
Bonus: "Freedom Summer" from Scene on Radio

Amended

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2021 72:24


In the summer of 1964, about a thousand young Americans, black and white, came together in Mississippi to place themselves in the path of white supremacist power and violence. They issued a bold pro-democracy challenge to the nation and the Democratic Party.  This week Amended host Laura Free introduces “Freedom Summer,” a special episode from a podcast called Scene on Radio, one of the sources of inspiration for Amended. Season 4 of Scene on Radio was called “The Land that Never Was.” It looks at the nation’s history from its beginnings to the present to understand the deep-rooted challenges that American democracy has never solved. “Freedom Summer” highlights an important chapter in the struggle for equal voting rights.  Visit amendedpodcast.com for a transcript of the episode. Subscribe to Scene on Radio wherever you get your podcasts.   “Freedom Summer” Credits: Produced by John Biewen, with series collaborator Chenjerai Kumanyika. Interviews with John Lewis, Bob Moses, Unita Blackwell, Hollis Watkins, Dorie Ladner, and many others. The series editor is Loretta Williams. Freedom song recordings courtesy of Smithsonian Folkways. Other music by Algiers, John Erik Kaada, Eric Neveux, and Lucas Biewen. Music consulting and production help from Joe Augustine of Narrative Music. This episode was adapted from the 1994 documentary Oh Freedom Over Me, produced by John Biewen with consulting producer Kate Cavett. It was a Minnesota Public Radio production from American Public Media. Scene on Radio is a project of the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University.  Original air date: April 1, 2020 The Amended Team: Production Company: Humanities New York Laura Free, Host & Writer Reva Goldberg, Producer, Editor & Co-Writer Scarlett Rebman, Project Director Vanessa Manko Sara Ogger  Michael Washburn Art by Simonair Yoho For this bonus episode of Amended: Music: Live Footage and Pictures of The Floating World Amended is produced with major funding from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, and with support from Baird Foundation, Susan Strauss, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Phil Lewis & Catherine Porter, and C. Evan Stewart.

Amended
Bonus: "The Creative Team Behind Amended" from Amended in Action

Amended

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2021 15:45


This bonus episode takes listeners behind-the-scenes of Amended. “Amended in Action” is a radio series hosted by Michael Riecke that expands on the themes of Amended and amplifies contemporary women’s voices. Michael’s a reporter for WRVO and assistant professor of broadcasting and mass communication at SUNY Oswego. For a recent broadcast, Michael interviewed Laura Free, Amended host and writer, and Reva Goldberg, producer, editor and co-writer, about what it’s like to make the podcast. Visit amendedpodcast.com for more information about the series.  “Amended in Action” Credits: “Amended in Action” is produced and hosted by Michael Riecke. It was originally broadcast on WRVO Public Media with Amended Episode 2. Music by Fesliyan Studios. The Amended Team: Production Company: Humanities New York Laura Free, Host & Writer Reva Goldberg, Producer, Editor & Co-Writer Scarlett Rebman, Project Director Vanessa Manko Sara Ogger  Michael Washburn Art by Simonair Yoho For this bonus episode of Amended: Music: Live Footage Amended is produced with major funding from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, and with support from Baird Foundation, Susan Strauss, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Phil Lewis & Catherine Porter, and C. Evan Stewart.

Women of Substance Music Podcast
#1236 Music by Adventures with Alice, Roma Rose, Caitlin Cannon, Katherine Lynn feat. Paula Trammell Harris, Krista O'Connell, Jam Sandwich, Jillian Matundan, Pivotal Awakening, Tracy Eckstrand, Randomseed Band (writer Mary Steiferman)

Women of Substance Music Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2021 46:53


To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Adventures with Alice - Universe Of Total Strangers feat. Catherine Porter  Roma Rose - In My Head  Caitlin Cannon - Deliver  Katherine Lynn feat. Paula Trammell Harris - Be The Change  Krista O'Connell - Fool Me Once  Jam Sandwich - New Orleans (Radio Edit)  Jillian Matundan - Signs Pointing South  Pivotal Awakening - Believe  Tracy Eckstrand - Our Ordinary Days  Randomseed Band (writer Mary Steiferman) - Imagine That  For Music Biz Resources Visit and Visit our Sponsor Jillian Matundan at Visit our Sponsor Adventures With Alice Band at Visit our Sponsor Lyndol Descant at Visit our Sponsor Bandzoogle at:

Amended
Episode 5: The Submerged Half

Amended

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2021 42:40


In 1912, Mabel Lee, a teenaged immigrant from China, led a New York City suffrage parade on horseback. Ineligible for U.S. citizenship due to anti-Chinese immigration policy, Mabel nonetheless spoke out for American women’s political equality. She envisioned a world where all women had the right to vote—and she wanted white suffragists to pay attention to the discrimination and racism faced by Chinese American women.  In this episode, producer Reva Goldberg travels to Chinatown to meet with Reverend Bayer Lee, who honors Mabel’s legacy as the pastor of the church community that Mabel and her parents dedicated themselves to building. Host Laura Free speaks with Dr. Cathleen Cahill, author of Recasting the Vote: How Women of Color Transformed the Suffrage Movement, to learn about Mabel’s political goals for women and for China. In the end, it’s clear that Mabel Lee forged a bold life according to her values. For a transcript and more about this series, visit amendedpodcast.com. Visit the Amended store to get an Amended podcast mug, shirt, bag, phone case, and more.  Our Team Laura Free, Host & Writer Reva Goldberg, Producer, Editor & Co-Writer Scarlett Rebman, Project Director  Nicholas MacDonald Joseph Murphy Sara Ogger  Michael Washburn Episode 5 Guests and Collaborators: Dr. Cathleen Cahill and Dr. Bayer Lee Consulting Engineer: Logan Romjue  Art by Simonair Yoho Music by Michael-John Hancock, Emily Sprague, Pictures of the Floating World (CC), Yusuke Tsutsumi (CC), Meydän (CC), and Live Footage. The work of Mary Chapman, Louise Edwards, Grace Li, and Timothy Tseng helped us immensely in framing our story. Special thanks to Connie Shemo, who consulted on this episode.  Amended is produced with major funding from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, and with support from Baird Foundation, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Phil Lewis & Catherine Porter, and C. Evan Stewart.  Copyright Humanities New York 2021

Amended
Episode 4: Embers and Activism

Amended

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2020 47:35


On March 25, 1911, a fire swept through the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in New York City, claiming the lives of 146 workers. Most of the victims were young immigrant women from Eastern and Southern Europe. In the wake of the fire, a group of women labor activists fought to ensure that the tragedy led to concrete change.  In this episode, host Laura Free speaks with Dr. Annelise Orleck, author of Common Sense and a Little Fire, to learn about the women who agitated for better working conditions before and after the Triangle Fire. Rose Schneiderman, Pauline Newman, and Clara Lemlich had a shared vision for a more equitable society. Together, they organized unions, led strikes, and fought for labor legislation, combating sexist and classist attitudes every step of the way. To exercise their full political power, they needed to make an impact not just on the picket lines but also at the ballot box. They needed the right to vote. For a transcript and more about this series, visit amendedpodcast.com. Visit the Amended store to get an Amended podcast mug, shirt, bag, phone case, and more.  Our Team Laura Free, Host & Writer Reva Goldberg, Producer, Editor & Co-Writer Scarlett Rebman, Project Director & Episode 4 Co-Writer Nicholas MacDonald Joseph Murphy Sara Ogger  Michael Washburn Episode 4 Guest and Collaborator: Dr. Annelise Orleck Consulting Engineer: Logan Romjue  Art by Simonair Yoho Music by Michael-John Hancock, Live Footage, Emily Sprague, Pictures of the Floating World (CC), Yusuke Tsutsumi (CC) and Meydän (CC). Archival footage courtesy of the NYC Municipal Archives, WNYC, and the Kheel Center at Cornell University. Special thanks to Janette Gayle, Susan Goodier, and Karen Pastorello whose scholarship helped frame the episode, and also to Davor Mondom, who consulted on this episode. Amended is produced with major funding from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, and with support from Baird Foundation, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Phil Lewis & Catherine Porter, and C. Evan Stewart. We received special support for this episode from Susan Strauss and Karen Gantz.  Copyright Humanities New York 2020

PARC Media
Avital Ronell on COVID-19, Death, Despair, and the Warrior Spirit

PARC Media

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2020 82:55


Avital Ronell (b. 1952) is the Jacques Derrida Chair and professor of philosophy at The European Graduate School / EGS, as well as University Professor of the Humanities and Professor of German, Comparative Literature, and English at New York University. Her research and theoretical contributions extend across the fields of literary studies, philosophy, feminist theory, technology and media, psychoanalysis, deconstruction, ethics, and performance art. Among Avital Ronell’s significant works are: Dictations: On Haunted Writing (1986), Crack Wars: Literature, Addiction, Mania (1992), Stupidity (2001), The Test Drive (2005), The ÜberReader: Selected Works of Avital Ronell (ed. Diane Davis, 2007), Fighting Theory (with Anne Dufourmantelle, trans. Catherine Porter, 2010), Schriften zur Literatur: Essays von Goethe bis Kafka (trans. Marc Blankenburg, 2012), and Loser Sons: Politics and Authority (2012). Become a Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/PARCMEDIA Follow Us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/Vince_EmanueleFollow Us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/1713FranklinSt/Follow Us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/parcmedia/?... #PARCMedia is a news and media project founded by two USMC veterans, Sergio Kochergin & Vince Emanuele. They give a working-class take on issues surrounding politics, ecology, community organizing, war, culture, and philosophy.

HopeFM & The Bizhear Podcast
Hope FM Best Bits - Catherine Porter

HopeFM & The Bizhear Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2020 37:31


Catherine Porter is a WEC worker and professional harpist. Working in Japan, she has a vision to use music to bring healing and God's love. She has spent some time ministering to the survivors of the 2011 tsunami. Catherine shares her story and music on Hope FM's Community Now FIRST BROADCAST: 21/10/20

The Treasury Career Corner
The Challenges of Returning to Work After a Career Break with Catherine Porter

The Treasury Career Corner

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2020 35:41


In this episode of the Treasury Career Corner podcast, I’m joined by Catherine Porter, the former EMEA Treasury Director at CBRE. Catherine shares stories from past roles and the struggles of returning to work after maternity leave. Catherine also offers some great career advice for treasurers and anyone who is thinking about pursuing a career in finance. With broader and deeper capabilities than any other company, CBRE is the leading full-service real estate services and investment organisation in the world. CBRE Group, Inc. is the world’s largest commercial real estate services and investment firm, with 2019 revenues of $23.9 billion and more than 100,000 employees (excluding affiliate offices). CBRE has been included on the Fortune 500 since 2008, ranking #128 in 2020. It has also been voted the industry’s top brand by the Lipsey Company for 19 consecutive years and has been named one of Fortune’s “Most Admired Companies” for eight years in a row, including being ranked number one in the real estate sector in 2020, for the second consecutive year. CBRE offers a broad range of integrated services, including facilities, transaction and project management, property management, investment management, appraisal and valuation, property leasing, strategic consulting, property sales, mortgage services and development services. Catherine started out in audit and after qualifying as a Chartered Accountant moved into broad finance roles and also worked in continental Europe for several years, mostly in Germany. She 'discovered' treasury when she stopped for a career break and is now a Fellow of the Association of Corporate Treasurers (ACT). Catherine currently chairs the Membership Advisory Panel at the ACT.   On the podcast we discussed… Catherine's early career Why it’s important to take some ‘edgier opportunities’ when you’re young Essential skills that every treasurer needs to be successful The struggles of being a returning mother trying to find a new role in treasury Why Catherine considers her role as Head of Treasury at Cancer Research UK to be her big break Important exams and courses to help build your treasury career How to improve your communication skills Catherine discusses where she sees her career going next Why you need to complete your education and continue to work hard Connect with Catherine on LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/catherineportersummaryprofile1/?originalSubdomain=uk). Learn more about the Treasury Skills Wheel (http://www.treasuryskillswheel.com/) Are you interested in pursuing a career within Treasury? Whether you’ve recently graduated, or you want to search for new job opportunities to help develop your treasury career, The Treasury Recruitment Company can help you in your search for the perfect job. send us your CV (https://treasuryrecruitment.com/jobs) and let us help you in your next career move! If you’re enjoying the show please rate and review us on whatever podcast app you listen to us on, for Apple Podcasts click here (http://www.treasurycareercorner.com/itunes/)! 

Amended
Bonus: “Civic Action: Voting, Part 1” from Civics 101

Amended

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2020 29:07


Suffragists fought hard for the vote. They also knew that gaining access to the ballot was not the end of the struggle for political representation. This week Amended host Laura Free introduces a special episode from Civics 101, a podcast about how democracy works, to help us understand what a vote really means. The United States is a representative democracy. The idea is that we’re a government by the people (we vote officials into office) and for the people (the officials in office are supposed to represent our interests). But Civics 101 hosts Hannah McCarthy and Nick Capodice learn that it’s not so straightforward around here. Our guides to American voting are Nazita Lajevardi, author of Outsides at Home, Kim Wehle, author of What You Need to Know About Voting and Why, and Andrea Hailey, CEO of vote.org.  Visit amendedpodcast.com for a transcript of this episode and additional resources. Listen to Civic Action: Voting, Part 2 here (or wherever you get your podcasts).  Civics 101 Credits: This episode of Civics 101 was produced by Hannah McCarthy with Nick Capodice. The staff includes Jackie Fulton and Felix Poon. Erica Janik is the Executive Producer. Maureen McMurray is the Head of Content Development. Music in this episode by Silicon Transmitter, Patrick Patrikios, Jesse Gallagher, Astron and The Mini Vandals. Voting and educational resources available at civics101podcast.org. Civics 101 is supported in part by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and is a production of NHPR, New Hampshire Public Radio. The Amended Team: Production Company: Humanities New York Laura Free, Host & Writer Reva Goldberg, Producer, Editor & Co-Writer Scarlett Rebman, Project Director Kordell K. Hammond Nicholas MacDonald Joseph Murphy Sara Ogger  Antonio Pontón-Núñez Michael Washburn Art by Simonair Yoho For this bonus episode of Amended: Audio Editor and Mixer: Logan Romjue  Music: Michael-John Hancock, Live Footage and Emily Sprague Amended is produced with major funding from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, and with support from Baird Foundation, Susan Strauss, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Phil Lewis & Catherine Porter, and C. Evan Stewart. Copyright Humanities New York 2020

Amended
Bonus: “Truth Is of No Color” from And Nothing Less

Amended

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2020 35:14


The scope of women’s political history is so vast that it can’t be covered by one podcast. This week Amended host Laura Free introduces a special episode from And Nothing Less, a seven-part series from the Women’s Suffrage Centennial Commission and PRX. This episode is more than a story about women’s rights. It’s a story about civil rights. And women like Ida B. Wells and Mary Church Terrell understood that the suffrage fight was as much about race as it was gender. Hosts Rosario Dawson and Retta speak with some great guests you’ll recognize from Amended—like Martha Jones and Lisa Tetrault—and some you haven’t met yet—like Michelle Duster, great-great granddaughter of Ida B. Wells, and historians Alison Parker and Marjorie Spruill. Visit amendedpodcast.com for a transcript of this episode. Visit the National Park Service website for a Listener Companion to this episode of And Nothing Less.  And Nothing Less Credits: And Nothing Less was envisioned by WSCC Executive Director Anna Laymon, with support from Communications Director Kelsey Millay. Executive Producer: Genevieve Sponsler. Producer and Audio Engineer: Samantha Gattsek. Writer and Producer: Robin Linn. Original Music: Erica Huang. Additional Support: Ray Pang, Jocelyn Gonzales, Jason Saldanha, John Barth. Marketing Support: Ma’ayan Plaut, Dave Cotrone, Anissa Pierre. Booker: Amy Walsh. Logo: Stephanie Marsellos. Original Airdate: August 19, 2020 The Amended Team: Production Company: Humanities New York Laura Free, Host & Writer Reva Goldberg, Producer, Editor & Co-Writer Scarlett Rebman, Project Director Kordell K. Hammond Nicholas MacDonald Joseph Murphy Sara Ogger  Antonio Pontón-Núñez Michael Washburn Audio Editor and Mixer (for Amended): Logan Romjue  Art by Simonair Yoho Music (for Amended): Michael-John Hancock and Live Footage Amended is produced with major funding from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, and with support from Baird Foundation, Susan Strauss, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Phil Lewis & Catherine Porter, and C. Evan Stewart. Copyright Humanities New York 2020

Amended
Episode 3: Of Rights and Wrongs

Amended

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2020 42:12


After the Civil War, many abolitionists and women's rights activists saw an opportunity to team up and advance equality for all.  African American author and orator Frances Ellen Watkins Harper was hopeful, too. But she also knew that politics and prejudice could shatter this tentative alliance, with devastating consequences. She wasn’t about to let that happen without a fight. To help tell Frances’s story, host Laura Free meets up with Sharia Benn, a writer, researcher and theater artist who has spent a decade portraying Frances for public audiences. Laura also spends time with historian Bettye Collier-Thomas in Bettye’s extensive personal archive. Bettye’s research has helped recover Harper’s forgotten contributions to the abolitionist, suffrage, and temperance causes. In this exceptionally emotional episode, Sharia and Bettye paint a vivid portrait of a woman whose vision of liberation resonates deeply today—and whose spirit is still with those who continue the pursuit of justice and equality. For a transcript and more about this series, visit amendedpodcast.com  Our Team Laura Free, Host & Writer Reva Goldberg, Producer, Editor & Co-Writer Scarlett Rebman, Project Director Kordell K. Hammond Nicholas MacDonald Joseph Murphy Sara Ogger  Antonio Pontón-Núñez Michael Washburn Consulting Engineer: Logan Romjue  Art by Simonair Yoho Music by Michael-John Hancock. Additional music by Emily Sprague and Pictures of a Floating World (CC). Sound effects this episode courtesy of freesound.org Thanks to this episode’s guests and collaborators, Sharia Benn and Bettye Collier-Thomas. Special thanks to Alison Parker and Manisha Sinha, whose scholarship we relied on to help tell the story of Frances Ellen Watkins Harper. Amended is produced with major funding from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, and with support from Baird Foundation, Susan Strauss, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Phil Lewis & Catherine Porter, and C. Evan Stewart. Copyright Humanities New York 2020

Amended
Episode 2: Any Woman

Amended

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2020 45:43


The right to vote was only one of many demands that women made prior to the Civil War. Zooming in on another priority, the right to bodily autonomy, changes our understanding of who was at the forefront of the struggle for women’s rights. Host Laura Free, a historian of women and politics, travels to Baltimore, Maryland, to spend a day with legal historian Martha S. Jones. They visit the Homewood Museum, a 19th century mansion once owned by a family of enslavers, to grapple with its legacy of slavery and sexual violence through the story of one enslaved resident, Charity Castle. Then Martha tells the stories of Celia (whose last name is unknown) and Harriet Jacobs, two other enslaved women who courageously fought for control of their own bodies within legal systems that denied them that right. Although few today know their names, Martha makes the case that all three women were part of the “vanguard” of women’s rights activism. For a transcript and more about this series, visit amendedpodcast.com  Our Team Laura Free, Host & Writer Reva Goldberg, Producer, Editor & Co-Writer Scarlett Rebman, Project Director Kordell K. Hammond Nicholas MacDonald Joseph Murphy Sara Ogger  Antonio Pontón-Núñez Michael Washburn Consulting Engineer: Logan Romjue  Art by Simonair Yoho Music by Michael-John Hancock. Additional music by Pictures of a Floating World (CC). A special thanks to Amy Mulvihill and the Homewood Museum at Johns Hopkins University. Additional thanks to this episode’s advisors for their feedback: Carol Faulkner, Dominique Jean-Louis, Martha S. Jones, Alison Parker, and Kishauna Soljour. Amended is produced with major funding from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, and with support from Baird Foundation, Susan Strauss, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Phil Lewis & Catherine Porter, and C. Evan Stewart. Copyright Humanities New York 2020

Amended
Episode 1: Myths and Sentiments

Amended

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2020 41:13


How do we tell the story of the (unfinished) struggle for women’s voting rights? Who gave us the dominant suffrage narrative? And who gets left out?  Our host is Laura Free, a historian of women and politics. She reflects on the suffrage story she learned as a child, one that centers a few white women. She speaks with historians Bettye Collier-Thomas and Lisa Tetrault about the work they’ve done to show there is much more to the story. Next, Laura travels to Seneca Falls, New York, site of the 1848 women’s rights convention, with guest Judith Wellman. Dr. Wellman describes a movement that was both complex and diverse, and helps us to see an old story in an entirely new light. This episode serves as the prologue to the series, inviting listeners to amend their understanding of women’s suffrage history.  For a transcript and more about this series, visit amendedpodcast.com.  Our Team Laura Free, Host & Writer Reva Goldberg, Producer, Editor & Co-Writer Scarlett Rebman, Project Director Kordell K. Hammond Nicholas MacDonald Joseph Murphy Sara Ogger  Antonio Pontón-Núñez Michael Washburn Consulting Engineer: Logan Romjue  Art by Simonair Yoho Music by Michael John Hancock and Live Footage A special thanks to Stephanie Freese at the Women’s Rights National Historical Park, Greg Cotteral at WEOS Studios in Geneva, NY, and the team at WESA, Pittsburgh.  Additional thanks to episode advisors for their feedback: Carol Faulkner, Dominique Jean-Louis, Martha S. Jones, Alison Parker, and Kishauna Soljour. Amended is produced with major funding from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, and with support from Baird Foundation, Susan Strauss, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Phil Lewis & Catherine Porter, and C. Evan Stewart.

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network: Travel with Rick Steves (January 11, 2020)

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2020 51:21


On the 10th anniversary of the earthquake that devastated Haiti, journalist Catherine Porter tells Rick how the rescue of a 2-year-old girl brought hope to a desperate country — and changed her life, too. Plus, adventure traveler Christopher Solomon tells us what a recent trip to the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge showed him about the forces battling over the largest wilderness refuge in the US. GUESTS - Catherine Porter, Christopher SolomonCommercial free edition of live broadcast from January 11, 2020 on the Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network, online at heartlandnewsfeed.com, Spreaker and other platforms.Listen Live: https://www.heartlandnewsfeed.com/listenliveFollow us on social mediaFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/hlnfradionetworkTwitter: https://www.twitter.com/HLNF_BulletinInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/heartlandnewsfeedMastadon: https://liberdon.com/@heartlandnewsfeedDiscord: https://discord.gg/6b6u6DTSupport us with your financial supportStreamlabs: https://streamlabs.com/heartlandmediaPayPal: https://www.paypal.me/heartlandmediaSquare Cash: https://cash.app/$heartlandnewsfeedPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/heartlandnewsfeedCrypto via 1UpCoin: https://1upcoin.com/donate/heartlandmedia

Travel with Rick Steves
590 Heart of Haiti; Arctic Refuge

Travel with Rick Steves

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2020 52:00


On the 10th anniversary of the earthquake that devastated Haiti, journalist Catherine Porter tells Rick how the rescue of a 2-year-old girl brought hope to a desperate country — and changed her life, too. Plus, adventure traveler Christopher Solomon tells us what a recent trip to the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge showed him about the forces battling over the largest wilderness refuge in the US. For more information on Travel with Rick Steves - including episode descriptions, program archives and related details - visit www.ricksteves.com.

TLT (The Lesbian Talkshow)
Rescue Her Heart by KC Luck - Book Clips

TLT (The Lesbian Talkshow)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2019 13:18


Rescue Her Heart by KC Luck Book Clips  Welcome to Book Clips, the mini podcast where authors and narrators give you a taste of a book with a short snippet.  In this episode we hear the first chapter of the audiobook for Rescue Her Heart by KC Luck narrated by PJ Morgan   Synopsis  Two women. One galaxy. As a decorated Space Ranger in the 8th Galaxy, Captain Natalie (Nat) Reynolds has an exciting, albeit lonely, life. Yet, when Nat answers a distress call from a craft in trouble on a nearby planet, it has the possibility of changing the trajectory of her life forever. Catherine Porter is down on her luck in the worst way. Evicted, almost penniless, she worries all hope is lost until a charismatic stranger flies into her life. Inexplicably drawn to the one woman who can possibly save her, Catherine must face feelings she never considered. Will their stars align and lead them to a happily ever after? Or will their differences tear their hearts apart?   Get This Book On Amazon -> https://amzn.to/33CTsg0 (link works for Amazon US, UK, Germany, and Canada)    Get This Book On Amazon UK -> https://amzn.to/2nTl1CB   Love What We Do? Become a Patron. You will get exclusive content and be helping us grow.   KC Luck Online Website http://www.kc-luck.com Facebook https://www.facebook.com/kc.luckauthor.92 Twitter https://twitter.com/kc_luck_author   Amazon Author Page https://amzn.to/2OSkrzU   Contact The Lesbian Talk Show Website Email   You can find all our Book Clips episodes here    Authors Want to feature your novel on Book Clips? Check out more here

PARDO'S TURN
"I Miss the Mountains" with Catherine Porter

PARDO'S TURN

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2019 18:30


Pardo's Turn is back with the fabulous Catherine Porter! In this episode, we talk about her eclectic performance career, battling cancer, kissing Hugh Jackman, and standing by for Marin Mazzie as Diana in Next to Normal on Broadway.

CANADALAND
Ep. 228 - What's The New York Times Doing In Canada?

CANADALAND

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2018 37:56


More than a year after their expansion into Canada, the New York Times is prospering here. And they're doing it with only three reporters. But what exactly is their goal here? And what does it mean for Canadian news and news consumers? Catherine Porter is the Canadian bureau chief of the New York Times. Support CANADALAND: http://canadalandshow.com/join See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Daily
Thursday, Feb. 15, 2018

The Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2018 21:45


President Trump has called for an overhaul of immigration that replaces a family-based system with a merit-based one. But what counts as merit? We also report on the shooting at a high school in Parkland, Fla., in which at least 17 people died. It was the 18th school shooting in the United States this year. Guests: Caitlin Dickerson, a national immigration reporter for The New York Times; Catherine Porter, Canada bureau chief for The Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily.

Hal Anderson
Mackling & Megarry - Tuesday, July 18th, 2017

Hal Anderson

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2017 96:57


00:00 - City notice of sewer cleaning & inspection comes with a LONG list of suggested instructions for you -- Chris Carroll, manager of Wastewater Services with the City of Winnipeg 12:03 - RCMP news conference regarding armed standoff in Portage la Prairie 18:45 - Sticky wasp trap being pulled from store shelves after Toronto woman discovers seven baby birds stuck to her trap. We're joined by Sherrie Versluis from The Preferred Perch 36:50 - "After a Harrowing Flight From U.S., Refugees Find Asylum in Canada" -- That's the headline from the New York Times, courtesy of reporter Catherine Porter, who came to Winnipeg to tell the story of two men from Ghana who fled the US to Manitoba in February, and lost almost all of their fingers to the cold. 54:49 - Sachit Mehra, Canada Summer Games Ambassador & Volunteer Spokesman - Sachit is excited for the Games, and for Winnipeg as a whole 72:39 - Birds Being Forced to Raise IMPOSTERS, at an alarming rate -- Nicola Koper, Ph.D., Professor, Natural Resources Institute, Univeristy of Manitoba 83:59 - Legendary Criminal Defence Lawyer Hersh Wolch has died at the age of 77 -- Greg Rodin, a colleague & friend 91:53 - Richard Cloutier & Brittany Greenslade tee up THE NEWS

Acoustic Long Island
Shotgun Wedding LIVE at Deepwells

Acoustic Long Island

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2016 42:14


Shotgun Wedding draws from a wellspring of country, Americana, alt-country, rock n’ roll, and the boogie-and-stride piano tradition. With reverent intentions and restless creativity, the five-piece band has boldly settled its own authentic homestead.The group boasts four very individual and accomplished songwriters and lead vocalists, and sumptuous four-voice harmony passages. Shotgun Wedding has garnered favorable comparisons to Asleep At The Wheel, Dan Hicks and The Hot Licks, Little Feat, Zac Brown Band, and Shooter Jennings. The band cites influences as diverse as Johnny Cash, Merle Haggard, Willie Nelson, Speckled Red, Professor Longhair, AC/DC, Jim Campilongo, and Karen Carpenter. Shotgun Wedding is Dennis DelGaudio, guitar/vocals/bandleader; Wade Preston, piano/ vocals; Catherine Porter, vocals; Andy Cichon, bass/vocals; and Chuck Burgi, drums. The quintet has the rare distinction of being fulltime acclaimed musicians with impressive resumes pursuing a passion project out of sheer love of the music, their chemistry as a creative unit, and the deep bond of friendship they share. For more, click here.

Women of Substance Music Podcast
#422 Music by Susan Sheller, Adele Morgan, Rhonda McCullough, Jessica Hicks, Michelle Lockey, Linda McKenzie, Raison D'Etre, Catherine Porter

Women of Substance Music Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2016 35:23


To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Susan Sheller - I'll Remember You Adele Morgan - Strong For You Rhonda McCullough - Freedom Fighter Jessica Hicks - Battle Hymn of the Republic Michelle Lockey - Not Forgotten Linda McKenzie - A Son With A Gun Raison D'Etre - Soldier, Soldier Catherine Porter - I Remember   For Music Biz Resources Visit   Visit our Sponsor: Get music by  Andrea Speaks at: Visit our Sponsor: Get music by Laini & The Wildfire at:

Women of Substance Music Podcast
#422 Music by Susan Sheller, Adele Morgan, Rhonda McCullough, Jessica Hicks, Michelle Lockey, Linda McKenzie, Raison D'Etre, Catherine Porter

Women of Substance Music Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2016 35:23


To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Susan Sheller - I'll Remember You Adele Morgan - Strong For You Rhonda McCullough - Freedom Fighter Jessica Hicks - Battle Hymn of the Republic Michelle Lockey - Not Forgotten Linda McKenzie - A Son With A Gun Raison D'Etre - Soldier, Soldier Catherine Porter - I Remember   For Music Biz Resources Visit   Visit our Sponsor: Get music by  Andrea Speaks at: Visit our Sponsor: Get music by Laini & The Wildfire at:

Women of Substance Music Podcast Volume 1
#422 Music by Susan Sheller, Adele Morgan, Rhonda McCullough, Jessica Hicks, Michelle Lockey, Linda McKenzie, Raison D'Etre, Catherine Porter

Women of Substance Music Podcast Volume 1

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2016 35:23


To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Susan Sheller - I'll Remember You Adele Morgan - Strong For You Rhonda McCullough - Freedom Fighter Jessica Hicks - Battle Hymn of the Republic Michelle Lockey - Not Forgotten Linda McKenzie - A Son With A Gun Raison D'Etre - Soldier, Soldier Catherine Porter - I Remember   For Music Biz Resources Visit   Visit our Sponsor: Get music by  Andrea Speaks at: Visit our Sponsor: Get music by Laini & The Wildfire at:

Women of Substance Music Podcast
#421 Music by Catherine Porter, Carrie Johnson, Deborah Kuhl, Folsom & Friend, Jacqui Stephens, Hattie Lewis Band, Sandy Rapp

Women of Substance Music Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2016 32:03


To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Catherine Porter - We Want Peace Carrie Johnson - 12 Months Deborah Kuhl - My Boy Home Folsom & Friend - Welcome Home, Soldier Jacqui Stephens - Freedom Hattie Lewis Band - Army Wife Sandy Rapp - Flag & The Rainbow Carrie Wade - American Boys For Music Biz Resources Visit Visit our Sponsor: Get music by Folsom & Friends at Visit our Sponsor: Get music by Debra Hadraba at:

Women of Substance Music Podcast
#421 Music by Catherine Porter, Carrie Johnson, Deborah Kuhl, Folsom & Friend, Jacqui Stephens, Hattie Lewis Band, Sandy Rapp

Women of Substance Music Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2016 32:03


To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Catherine Porter - We Want Peace Carrie Johnson - 12 Months Deborah Kuhl - My Boy Home Folsom & Friend - Welcome Home, Soldier Jacqui Stephens - Freedom Hattie Lewis Band - Army Wife Sandy Rapp - Flag & The Rainbow Carrie Wade - American Boys For Music Biz Resources Visit Visit our Sponsor: Get music by Folsom & Friends at Visit our Sponsor: Get music by Debra Hadraba at:

Women of Substance Music Podcast Volume 1
#421 Music by Catherine Porter, Carrie Johnson, Deborah Kuhl, Folsom & Friend, Jacqui Stephens, Hattie Lewis Band, Sandy Rapp

Women of Substance Music Podcast Volume 1

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2016 32:03


To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Catherine Porter - We Want Peace Carrie Johnson - 12 Months Deborah Kuhl - My Boy Home Folsom & Friend - Welcome Home, Soldier Jacqui Stephens - Freedom Hattie Lewis Band - Army Wife Sandy Rapp - Flag & The Rainbow Carrie Wade - American Boys For Music Biz Resources Visit Visit our Sponsor: Get music by Folsom & Friends at Visit our Sponsor: Get music by Debra Hadraba at:

CANADALAND
SHORT CUTS #33 - Man In Blue Suit/Ezra Wants Attention

CANADALAND

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2015 22:30


InfoNews Kelowna's managing editor Marshall Jones on Stephen Harper's pointless photo op and Ezra Levant's feud with Catherine Porter.Support CANADALAND: https://canadaland.com/joinSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

House is a Journey
2014 Jan Deep In China The Xin Nian Kuai Le Session (新年快乐)

House is a Journey

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2014 79:51


Deep in China The Xin Nian Kuai Le Session (新年快乐)   Taking the opportunity in the middle of my Deep in China Sessions to dedicate this one to my Chinese friends and wish them a Happy New Year!   Sticking to the Deep theme with a more progressive colour, although I did include a couple of tracks the Deep purists might hang me for. I stepped up the beat in this one just a tad as well.   Playlist:   1999 Five Fathoms (Kevin Yost Everything and a Groove Mix Ben Watt Edit) . EBTG 2013 Back To Love (Original Mix). Beckwith feat. Catherine Porter 2009 September (Original Mix). Danny Howells 2013 Sometime (Original Mix).  David Kassi Boggie 2Nite (Boogie Luv Vs Spiritcatcher ). Unknown. 2013 C O O L Ben Pearce Remix.  Le Youth 2013 Fading Nights feat Anna Naklab_Artenvielfalt Remix.  Parra for Cuva, Anna Naklab 2013 Breathe (Abicah Breathin Dub). Jonathan Meyer feat. Billie Jean 2013 Chains_(Original Mix. Audiowhores 2013 Cause I Feel (Original Mix).  Hubertus van Reisinger 2013 Facts (Original Vibe). Audiowhores, feat. Stee Downes      2013 Let the Music Play (Rhemi Remix). DJ Angelo 2012 The Cure & The Cause, Break 4 Love (Cube Boys Mash-up Xtian Edit). Fish Go Deep feat. Tracey K, David Vendetta vs. Keith Thompson 2006 The Cure & the Cause (Original Mix). Fish Go Deep feat. Tracy K              Highlights:   “Five Fathoms” the Kevin Yost remix of the EBTG anthem.. Nothing more to say.. If anything listening to Ben Watt learning his skills on Sundays at Lazy Dogs in North London decades ago is what brought me to do this..   September from Danny Howells. I had to truncate the track to stay on the CD format yet I must confess that Danny Howells would be one of the first CD of Deep and Tech I ever bought. I owed him one..   “Boogie 2Nite” Boogie Luv vs Spiritchaser.”. Unfortunately I cannot credit anyone as I have lost the tags to the files.. And some purist might disapprove but I know good Deep House when I hear it and this mash-up is A-class!   C O O L one of  my favourite in this set. Progressive Deep Indie you choose but the production is masterful and the drums are delicate.   “Fading Nights” by Parra for Cuva.. Love this track, love all its remixes and Anna Naklab has a unique way to phrase her lyrics.. Immense production. Pure talent.   “Breathe” from Jonathan Meyer.. Had some tragedy in the set, the work on the synths is beautiful and again great production. The internal build of this track is classical in its structure.   “Chains” from Audiowhores. Deep with swag, what I really love. Audiowhores are on top of their game.   “Cause I Feel “ similar as the previous track with a simple vocal hook, equally as good.   Back to Audiowhores with “Facts” in my top five 2013 tracks regardless of genre. Everything is good, the keys, the bass the very simple percussions, and slamming vocals. THIS IS GOOD!   The Rhemi remix of “Let the Music Play” I know I have dropped it before but it is of the highest quality and the set needed some funk and lightness by this time.   Very happy to have found the Cube Boys Mash-Up of the” Cure and the Cause”. “The Cure & The Cause” is of my top ten house tracks of all time and this mash-up is amazing. DO NOT MISS, I added some beats and changed the key, the talent is all credit to the Cube Boys. As for Tracey K, she may very well be the most perfect pitched vocalist of our generation, pity she is not used enough.   Happy New Year to all the Horses   I may resume the Deep in China Session and slot something a bit different in between.   Hope you like it   Xtian

Kind World
An Ordinary, Beautiful Life

Kind World

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2014 7:02


Shelagh Gordon was another name in the obituaries, an ordinary woman who had died suddenly of a massive brain aneurysm at the age of 55. But something in her obituary stood out to a journalist at the Toronto Star. For weeks, Catherine Porter had been combing the paper, looking to profile an ordinary person through the perspectives of the family and friends he or she had left behind. What emerged was an extraordinary portrait.

Das soziologische Duett
Als die Dinge noch handelten - Dr. Bettina Bildhauer im Gespräch

Das soziologische Duett

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2012 80:10


Dr. Bettina Bildhauer, Reader an der St Andrews University in Grossbritannien, unterhält sich mit Dr. Udo Thiedeke über die Nähe des Mittelalters zu unserem Denken, die Grenze zwischen Subjekten und Objekten und warum wir beim Blick zurück entdecken können, wie die Dinge das Handeln lernten. Shownotes: #00:03:30# Kritik der modernen Vorstellungen von der angeblichen Weltsicht einer "flachen Erde" im Mittelalter. Vgl. z.B. Jeffrey Burton Russell, 1991: Inventing the Flat Earth. Columbus and Modern Historians. New York: Praeger. Jürgen Wolf, 2004: Die Moderne erfindet sich ihr Mittelalter – oder wie aus der ‚mittelalterlichen Erdkugel‘ eine ‚neuzeitliche Erdscheibe‘ wurde (= Colloquia academica Nr. 5), Stuttgart: Steiner. #00:04:10# Zu den Vorstellungen des Soziologen Max Weber zum okzidentalen Sonderweg des Rationalismus. Vgl. z.B. Wolfgang Schluchter, 1980: Rationalismus der Weltbeherrschung. Studien zu Max Weber. Frankfurt/M.: Suhrkamp. Besonders S. 23-38. #00:07:10# Keine universelle Gültigkeit des christlichen Weltbilds im Mittelalter. Vgl. z. B. Robert Bartlett, 2008: The Natural and the Supernatural in the Middle Ages. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. #00:08:57# Zur Trennung von Subjekt und Objekt in der Moderne kann man vielleicht festhalten, dass die mittelalterliche Vorstellung, das Subjektive sei das Sein der Dinge und die Objekte realisierten sich in den Gedanken davon (etwa bei Wilhelm von Ockham) in der Moderne dahingehend überschritten wird, dass das Subjekt als nur noch sich selbst unterworfenes Objekte nur wahrnimmt (Kant) oder sich den Objekten in seiner Umwelt nun gegenüber sieht und diese manipuliert (etwa bei Marx und Engels). #00:11:50# Mittelalterliche Vorstellungen von Menschen als Teil von Netzwerken. Vgl. z. B. Jan-Dirk Müller, 1998: Spielregeln für den Untergang. Die Welt des Nibelungenliedes. Tübingen: Niemeyer oder Jeffrey Jerome Cohen (Hrsg.), Animal, Vegetable, Mineral. Ethics and Objects. Washington, DC: Oliphaunt, Online. #00:13:10# Zur Bedeutung des Blutes im Mittelalter siehe Bettina Bildhauer 2006: Medieval Blood. Cardiff: University of Wales Press; oder Caroline Walker Bynum, 2006: Wonderful Blood. Theology and Practice in Late Medieval Germany and Beyond. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press. #00:15:48# Die Ebstorfer Weltkarte. #00:16:25# Die Gog und Magog. #00:17:00# Zum Frontispiz und Ikonografie des Leviathan vgl. Horst Bredekamp, 2003: Thomas Hobbes, Der Leviathan. Das Urbild des modernen Staates und seine Gegenbilder. 1651 - 2001. Berlin: Akademie Verlag. #00:18:55# Zum Staat als Körper im Policraticus des John of Salisbury vgl. z.B. Jacques Le Goff, 1989. Head or Heart? The Political Use of Body Metaphors in the Middle Ages. In: Michel Feher, Ramona Naddaff und Nadia Tazi (Hrsg.) Fragments for a History of the Human Body, Part 3. New York: Zone Books, S. 12-26. #00:19:12# Herbert Spencer, Gesellschaft als Organismus. Vgl. Spencer, Herbert, 1967: The Evolution of Society. Selections from Herbert Spencer's Principles of Society. Hrsg. Robert L. Carneio. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. #00:21:10# Die Siegfried-Sage als Teil der Nibelungensage und das Nibelungenlied. #00:27:18# Zur französischen Annales-Schule in der Geschichtswissenschaft. #00:31:00# Zahlreiche Ratgeber zur Selbstverbesserung des perfekten höfischen Menschen (Fürstenspiegel), z. B. Thomasin von Zirklaere, Der wälsche Gast #00:34:00# Positives Verständnis der Selbstaufgabe im Mittelalter, besonders in der Mystik, vgl. Kurt Ruh, Geschichte der abendländischen Mystik. 4 Bände. München: Beck, 1990-1999. #00:36:40# Zum Mittelalter als mythischer Vorgeschichte vgl. Arthur Lindley, 1998: The ahistoricism of medieval film. Online. #00:40:00# Zum Ritter als Assemblage vgl. Jeffrey Jerome Cohen, 2003. Medieval Identity Machines. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press. Besonders Kapitel 2 Chevalerie. #00:41:05# Zu den Effigies vgl. Horst Bredekamp, 2001: Vom Wachskörper zur Goldkrone. Die Versprechungen der Effigies. In: Deutsches Historisches Museum et al. (Hrsg.): Preußen 1701. Eine europäische Geschichte. Aust.-Kat. Essay-Bd. Berlin. S. 353-357. #00:43:39# Zu Bruno Latours Kritik der Moderne vgl. Bruno Latour, 1995: Wir sind nie modern gewesen. Versuch einer symmetrischen Anthropologie. Berlin: Akademie Verlag. #00:44:13# Die Turnschuhe, in denen Joschka Fischer den Amtseid als hessischer Umweltminister ablegte, heute im "Haus der Geschichte" in Bonn ausgestellt. #00:44:52# Zur Struktur des Rhizoms von Deleuze und Guattari vgl. Gilles Deleuze und Félix Guattari, 1977: Rhizom. Berlin: Merve. #00:46:50# Subjekt-Objekt-Unterscheidung im Mittelalter weniger ausgeprägt. Vgl. Kellie Robertson, 2008. Medieval Things: Materiality, Historicism and the Premodern Object. Literature Compass 5. Online. #00:48:00# Bücher über die Kraft der Edelsteine z. B. von Albertus Magnus, hier Abdruck eines englischen Druckversion von 1604. Online. #00:50:40# Podcast Episode mit Markus Hilgert "5412 Jahre Vertrauen in Materialität - Prof. Dr. Markus Hilgert im Gespräch" #00:51:37# Zu den anfänglichen Problemen mit der Glaubwürdigkeit von handschriftlichen Texten beim Übergang von der Oralität zur Literalität verweist Walter Ong auf Clanchy, 1979: 24f. Vgl. Michael T. Clanchy, 1979: From Memory to Written Record, England 1066-1307. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. #00:55:40# Zur Behauptung einer Umbruchphase in der Literatur im 13. Jhr. vgl. Christa Bertelsmeier-Kierst und Christopher Young (Hrsg.), 2003: Eine Epoche im Umbruch. Volkssprachliche Literalität 1200-1300. Cambridger Symposium 2001. Tübingen: De Gruyter. #00:56:10# Zur Veränderlichkeit von mittelalterlichen Texten in Manuskripten (statt Erhalten eines "Originals") siehe Forschungen der "New Philology". Vgl. Paul Zumthor,1972: Essai de poétique médiévale. Paris: Seuil. #00:57:20# Informationen zum Codex Manesse in der Universitätsbibliothek Heidelberg. #00:59:40# Zur Macht der Gegenstände im Mittelalter im Sprachgebrauch, siehe Bettina Bildhauer, 2013: Der Gralsroman aus Sicht des Grals: Stil und das Mithandeln der Dinge. In Elizabeth Andersen, Ricarda Bauschke, McLelland (Hrsg.): Stil: Mittelalterliche Literatur zwischen Konvention und Innovation. Berlin: Akademie Verlag oder James A. Schultz, 2006: Courtly Love, the Love of Courtliness, and the History of Sexuality. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. #01:00:05# Zum mittleren Modus und Zigarettenrauchen siehe Bruno Latour, 2010: On the Cult of the Factish Gods, trans. Catherine Porter und Heather MacLean, in: ders.: On the Modern Cult of the Factish Gods. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. S. 1-66. #01:04:50# Zur KI (Künstlichen Intelligenz) oder AI (Artifical Intelligence) Online. #01:05:27# Zu Flussers Überlegungen über ein "neues Mittelalter" vgl. Vilém Flusser, 1993: Die Wiederkunft des Mittelalters. In: ders. Nachgeschichte. Eine korrigierte Geschichtsschreibung. Schriften Bd. 2. Bensheim/Düsseldorf: Bollmann. S. 143-154. Zu Filmen und neuen Medien als Boten eines neuen Mittelalters siehe Bettina Bildhauer, 2009: Vorwand into the passt. Film as a medieval medium. In: Anke Bernau, Bettina Bildhauer (Hrsg.), Medieval Film. Manchester: University of Manchester Press. S. 40-59. #01:06:17# Zum wachsenden wissenschaftlichen Interesse an Materialität siehe etwa: Jan-Hendrik Passoth, 2008: Zum Verstehen von Dingen: die sprachliche Erforschung des Nichtsprachlichen in verschiedenen Disziplinen, in: Karl-Siegbert Rehberg, Dana Giesecke, Thomas Dumke (Hrsg.): Die Natur der Gesellschaft. Verhandlungen des 33. Kongresses der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Soziologie in Kassel 2006. Teilbd. 1 u. 2. Frankfurt/M., New York: Campus. S. 1990-1999. #01:09:10# Ray Kurzweil entwickelt Ideen zur Speicherung des Gedächnisses. Online. #01:10:10# Zur mittelalterlichen "Gehirn-Bibliothek" Mary Carruthers, 2008: The Book of Memory. A Study of Memory in Medieval Culture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. #01:11:10# Zur Erfahrung der Macht der Dinge in der Weimarer Republik und im Weimarer Kino vgl. Thomas Elsaesser, 2000: Weimar Cinema and After. Germany’s Historical Imaginary. London: Routledge; Hermann Kappelhoff, 2000: Jenseits der Wahrnehmung - Das Denken der Bilder: Ein Topos der Weimarer Avantgarde und ein ‘psychoanalytischer Film’ von G. W. Papst. In: Harro Segeberg (Hrsg.): Die Perfektionierung des Scheins. Das Kino der Weimarer Republik im Kontext der Künste. Mediengeschichte des Films 3. München: Fink, S. 299-318 oder Béla Balázs, 2001: Der sichtbare Mensch oder die Kultur des Films. Frankfurt/M.: Suhrkamp. #01:14:10# Zur sog. Schwarmintelligenz vgl. z.B. Constanze Kurz und Udo Thiedeke, 2010: Picknick mit Cyborgs. Ein interdisziplinäres Gespräch über die alltägliche Vernetzung. München: Grin S. 97/99; Ingeborg Breuer, 2012: Schwarmintelligenz im Internet. Modebegriff für neue demokratische Formen. Deutschlandfunk. Studiozeit. Aus Kultur und Sozialwissenschaften. 28.06.2012 Online. #01:17:00# Zu Vilém Flussers Vorstellung vom Übergang von Daten (dem Gegebenen) zu Fakten (dem Gemachten) vgl. Vilém Flusser, 1998: Technik entwerfen. In: Ders.: Vom Subjekt zum Projekt Menschwerdung. Frankfurt/M.: Fischer TB-Verlag. S. 133-146. [alle Links aktuell Oktober/November 2012] Dauer 01:20:10 Folge direkt herunterladen

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IFPRI Podcasts
IFPRI Policy Seminar - May 30, 2012 - Catherine Porter

IFPRI Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2012 14:54


Presentation by Catherine Porter, Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Economics, University of Oxford, at the IFPRI Policy Seminar, Why Poverty Persists: Poverty Dynamics in Asia & Africa, May 30, 2012, Washington DC. (http://www.ifpri.org/event/why-poverty-persists)