Podcasts about Color Line

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Best podcasts about Color Line

Latest podcast episodes about Color Line

Si loin si proche
En quête d'histoire noire à Montréal #2

Si loin si proche

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2025 48:30


À l'occasion du Black History Month ou mois de l'histoires des Noir.e.s, on repart dans la métropole cosmopolite et vibrante du Québec, à la rencontre de l'auteur et artiste afro-québécois Webster, un homme en quête d'histoire(s) et de vérité... Quand on parle d'histoire noire et d'esclavage, le récit national canadien a longtemps fait la part belle au réseau abolitionniste du chemin de fer clandestin et à tous ces esclaves américains en fuite qui, au XIXè siècle, ont trouvé refuge au Canada. On les appelait les « freedom seekers », ceux qui cherchent la liberté. Dans le premier épisode de cette série, on est parti dans les rues de Montréal, à la rencontre de leurs dignes héritiers, « history seekers » cette fois : des hommes et des femmes, afro-canadiens pour la plupart, chercheurs d'histoire qui ont décidé de remettre à sa juste place l'histoire des Noir.e.s au Québec, longtemps reléguée, comme oubliée des mémoires. Le passé esclavagiste a longtemps occupé une place particulière dans l'historiographie québécoise, entre omissions et arrangements avec un passé complexe et une vérité inconfortable. Mais les faits, comme nos chercheurs d'histoire, sont têtus. Pour ce second épisode, on vous propose de creuser le sillon que l'on a suivi en voyage à Montréal dans le premier épisode, avec l'un de ces chercheurs d'histoire, en la personne de Webster, activiste et artiste afroquébécois, qui a initié, dès 2016, des visites guidées dans sa ville Québec, sur les traces de l'histoire noire là-bas. Depuis, il a multiplié les projets, le dernier en date étant la traduction en français qu'il a lui-même mené du livre phare du philosophe américain Charles W. Mills « Le contrat racial ».Webster, de son vrai nom Aly NDiaye, est né d'un père sénégalais et d'une mère québécoise ; et aujourd'hui, il est devenu une voix qui compte, qu'il faut savoir écouter…Et c'est ce que l'on va faire aujourd'hui.Un reportage en deux épisodes de Céline Develay-Mazurelle et Laure Allary, initialement diffusé en février 2024.À vivre, à voir :- Découvrir la programmation éclectique du Mois de l'histoire des Noir.e.s sur le site de Tourisme Montréal- Suivre une visite guidée sur les traces de la présence et l'histoire noire à Montréal : Black Montreal Experience- Aller au Musée Mc Cord Stewart, musée d'histoire sociale de Montréal- Faire un tour à Québec et suivre les visites Qc History X mises en place par l'artiste et conférencier Webster- Découvrir l'ABC's of Canadian Black History imaginé par l'historienne Dorothy Williams. En anglais.- En savoir plus sur la table ronde du Mois de l'histoire des Noir.e.s. Édition 2024- Découvrir le projet en ligne « Je suis Montréal », qui met en avant les communautés invisibilisées dans la société montréalaise.- Quelques statistiques publiques sur les communautés noires au Canada.  À lire : - «L'esclavage et les Noirs à Montréal : 1760-1840» de Franck Mackey. 2013. Éditions Hurtubise - «Black in Montreal 1628-1986: An Urban Demography» de Dorothy W. Williams. En anglais- «Le contrat racial» de Charles W Mills. Traduction française par Webster. 2022. Éditions Mémoire d'encrier- «La pendaison d'Angelique. L'histoire de l'esclavage au Canada et de l'incendie de Montréal» de Afua Cooper. 2007. Éditions De l'Homme  - «North of the Color Line. Migration and Black resistance in Canada. 1870-1955» de Sarah-Jane Mathieu. 2010. Éditions University of North Carolina Press. En anglais- «Le grain de Sable. Olivier le Jeune premier esclave au Canada » de Webster et illustré par ValMo!. 2019. Éditions Septentrion- «Fear of a Black Nation Race, Sex, and Security in Sixties Montreal», de David Austin. 2e Édition. 2023. Éditions AK Press. En anglais- «L'esclavage au Canada». Une synthèse en PDF accessible et pédagogique écrite par Webster - Un entretien avec Marcel Trudel, pionnier de l'histoire de l'esclavage au Québec». Un article de Cap aux Diamants, la revue d'histoire du Québec. 2004- Toutes les ressources sur l'histoire noire dans l'Encyclopédie Canadienne. À écouter :- Résistance : le balado sur les traces de Shadrach Minkins, par Webster. Produit par Radio Canada et disponible sur rfi.fr- Les 3 épisodes de notre voyage sur le chemin de fer clandestin au Canada, en Ontario. Une série Si loin si proche- La série audio « Portraits de Noirs au Canada» par Radio Canada Internationale.

Si loin si proche
En quête d'histoire noire à Montréal #2

Si loin si proche

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2025 48:30


À l'occasion du Black History Month ou mois de l'histoires des Noir.e.s, on repart dans la métropole cosmopolite et vibrante du Québec, à la rencontre de l'auteur et artiste afro-québécois Webster, un homme en quête d'histoire(s) et de vérité... Quand on parle d'histoire noire et d'esclavage, le récit national canadien a longtemps fait la part belle au réseau abolitionniste du chemin de fer clandestin et à tous ces esclaves américains en fuite qui, au XIXè siècle, ont trouvé refuge au Canada. On les appelait les « freedom seekers », ceux qui cherchent la liberté. Dans le premier épisode de cette série, on est parti dans les rues de Montréal, à la rencontre de leurs dignes héritiers, « history seekers » cette fois : des hommes et des femmes, afro-canadiens pour la plupart, chercheurs d'histoire qui ont décidé de remettre à sa juste place l'histoire des Noir.e.s au Québec, longtemps reléguée, comme oubliée des mémoires. Le passé esclavagiste a longtemps occupé une place particulière dans l'historiographie québécoise, entre omissions et arrangements avec un passé complexe et une vérité inconfortable. Mais les faits, comme nos chercheurs d'histoire, sont têtus. Pour ce second épisode, on vous propose de creuser le sillon que l'on a suivi en voyage à Montréal dans le premier épisode, avec l'un de ces chercheurs d'histoire, en la personne de Webster, activiste et artiste afroquébécois, qui a initié, dès 2016, des visites guidées dans sa ville Québec, sur les traces de l'histoire noire là-bas. Depuis, il a multiplié les projets, le dernier en date étant la traduction en français qu'il a lui-même mené du livre phare du philosophe américain Charles W. Mills « Le contrat racial ».Webster, de son vrai nom Aly NDiaye, est né d'un père sénégalais et d'une mère québécoise ; et aujourd'hui, il est devenu une voix qui compte, qu'il faut savoir écouter…Et c'est ce que l'on va faire aujourd'hui.Un reportage en deux épisodes de Céline Develay-Mazurelle et Laure Allary, initialement diffusé en février 2024.À vivre, à voir :- Découvrir la programmation éclectique du Mois de l'histoire des Noir.e.s sur le site de Tourisme Montréal- Suivre une visite guidée sur les traces de la présence et l'histoire noire à Montréal : Black Montreal Experience- Aller au Musée Mc Cord Stewart, musée d'histoire sociale de Montréal- Faire un tour à Québec et suivre les visites Qc History X mises en place par l'artiste et conférencier Webster- Découvrir l'ABC's of Canadian Black History imaginé par l'historienne Dorothy Williams. En anglais.- En savoir plus sur la table ronde du Mois de l'histoire des Noir.e.s. Édition 2024- Découvrir le projet en ligne « Je suis Montréal », qui met en avant les communautés invisibilisées dans la société montréalaise.- Quelques statistiques publiques sur les communautés noires au Canada.  À lire : - «L'esclavage et les Noirs à Montréal : 1760-1840» de Franck Mackey. 2013. Éditions Hurtubise - «Black in Montreal 1628-1986: An Urban Demography» de Dorothy W. Williams. En anglais- «Le contrat racial» de Charles W Mills. Traduction française par Webster. 2022. Éditions Mémoire d'encrier- «La pendaison d'Angelique. L'histoire de l'esclavage au Canada et de l'incendie de Montréal» de Afua Cooper. 2007. Éditions De l'Homme  - «North of the Color Line. Migration and Black resistance in Canada. 1870-1955» de Sarah-Jane Mathieu. 2010. Éditions University of North Carolina Press. En anglais- «Le grain de Sable. Olivier le Jeune premier esclave au Canada » de Webster et illustré par ValMo!. 2019. Éditions Septentrion- «Fear of a Black Nation Race, Sex, and Security in Sixties Montreal», de David Austin. 2e Édition. 2023. Éditions AK Press. En anglais- «L'esclavage au Canada». Une synthèse en PDF accessible et pédagogique écrite par Webster - Un entretien avec Marcel Trudel, pionnier de l'histoire de l'esclavage au Québec». Un article de Cap aux Diamants, la revue d'histoire du Québec. 2004- Toutes les ressources sur l'histoire noire dans l'Encyclopédie Canadienne. À écouter :- Résistance : le balado sur les traces de Shadrach Minkins, par Webster. Produit par Radio Canada et disponible sur rfi.fr- Les 3 épisodes de notre voyage sur le chemin de fer clandestin au Canada, en Ontario. Une série Si loin si proche- La série audio « Portraits de Noirs au Canada» par Radio Canada Internationale.

Si loin si proche
En quête d'histoire noire à Montréal #1

Si loin si proche

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2025 48:30


À l'occasion du Black History Month ou mois de l'histoire des Noir.e.s, on repart dans la métropole cosmopolite et vibrante du Québec ; là où des hommes et des femmes se sont mis en marche pour révéler et partager l'histoire noire de la ville et de la province.  Quand on parle d'histoire noire et d'esclavage, le récit national canadien a longtemps fait la part belle au réseau abolitionniste du chemin de fer clandestin et à tous ces esclaves américains en fuite qui, au XIXe siècle, ont trouvé refuge au Canada. On les appelait les « freedom seekers », ceux qui cherchent la liberté. Dans ce premier épisode, on vous propose d'aller à Montréal, à la rencontre de leurs dignes héritiers, « history seekers » cette fois : des hommes et des femmes, Afro-Canadiens pour la plupart, chercheurs d'histoire qui ont décidé de remettre à sa juste place l'histoire des Noirs au Québec.Le passé esclavagiste a longtemps occupé une place particulière dans l'historiographie québécoise, entre omissions et arrangements avec un passé complexe et une vérité inconfortable. Mais les faits, comme nos chercheurs d'histoire, sont têtus. Et désormais, dans les rues du vieux Montréal ou de la Petite Bourgogne, fief historique de la communauté noire surnommé la « Harlem du Nord », on croise des visiteurs emmenés par un guide, tous en quête d'histoire noire. Dans la ville, des institutions culturelles s'interrogent aussi sur leurs pratiques ; cherchant à décoloniser leurs approches et à faire plus de place aux communautés historiquement marginalisées, en tête les Autochtones et les Noirs. Révéler la présence noire dans une ville où plus de la moitié des Afro-Québécois a décidé de vivre, c'est une façon de faire le lien entre passé et présent de la ville, d'interroger le sort réservé, hier comme aujourd'hui, aux communautés noires, de faire la lumière sur les angles morts d'un récit national qui a longtemps occulté son passé d'esclavage et de ségrégation comme ses continuités. C'est enfin l'occasion de croiser des figures de la résistance noire particulièrement inspirantes. Un reportage en deux épisodes de Céline Develay-Mazurelle et Laure Allary, initialement diffusé en février 2024.Avec :- Rito Joseph, guide conférencier à l'initiative des visites « Black Montreal Experience »- Aly Ndiaye alias Webster, auteur, rappeur, conférencier et activiste afro-québécois - Dorothy Williams, historienne de référence sur la présence noire à Montréal, en particulier dans le quartier dit de la Petite Bourgogne - Les équipes en visite du Musée McCord Stewart, musée d'histoire sociale de Montréal- Franck Mackey, historien spécialiste de l'esclavage des Noirs à Montréal.   À vivre, à voir : - Découvrir la programmation éclectique du Mois de l'histoire des Noir.e.s sur le site de Tourisme Montréal- Suivre une visite guidée sur les traces de la présence et l'histoire noire à Montréal : Black Montreal Experience- Aller au Musée Mc Cord Stewart, musée d'histoire sociale de Montréal- Faire un tour à Québec et suivre les visites Qc History X mises en place par l'artiste et conférencier Webster- Découvrir l'ABC's of Canadian Black History imaginé par l'historienne Dorothy Williams. En anglais et en français. - En savoir plus sur la table ronde du Mois de l'histoire des Noir.e.s. Édition 2024- Découvrir le projet en ligne « Je suis Montréal », qui met en avant les communautés invisibilisées dans la société montréalaise. - Quelques statistiques publiques sur les communautés noires au Canada.  À lire : - « L'esclavage et les noirs à Montréal : 1760-1840 » de Franck Mackey. 2013. Éditions Hurtubise. - « Black in Montreal 1628-1986: An Urban Demography » de Dorothy W. Williams. En anglais.- « Le contrat racial » de Charles W Mills. Traduction française par Webster. 2022. Éditions Mémoire d'encrier.- « La pendaison d'Angelique. L'histoire de l'esclavage au Canada et de l'incendie de Montréal » de Afua Cooper. 2007. Éditions De l'Homme.  - « North of the Color Line. Migration and Black resistance in Canada. 1870-1955 » de Sarah-Jane Mathieu. 2010. Editions University of North Carolina Press. En anglais- « Le grain de Sable. Olivier le Jeune premier esclave au Canada » de Webster et illustré par ValMo!. 2019. Éditions Septentrion.- « Fear of a Black Nation Race, Sex, and Security in Sixties Montreal, de David Austin. 2e Édition. 2023. Éditions AK Press. En anglais- « L'esclavage au Canada ». Une synthèse en PDF accessible et pédagogique écrite par Webster - Un entretien avec Marcel Trudel, pionnier de l'histoire de l'esclavage au Québec. Un article de Cap aux Diamants, la revue d'histoire du Québec. 2004- Toutes les ressources sur l'histoire noire dans l'Encyclopédie Canadienne. À écouter :- Résistance : le balado sur les traces de Shadrach Minkins, par Webster. Produit par Radio Canada et disponible sur rfi.fr- Les 3 épisodes de notre voyage sur le chemin de fer clandestin au Canada, en Ontario. Une série Si loin si proche- La série audio « Portraits de Noirs au Canada » par Radio Canada Internationale.

Si loin si proche
En quête d'histoire noire à Montréal #1

Si loin si proche

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2025 48:30


À l'occasion du Black History Month ou mois de l'histoire des Noir.e.s, on repart dans la métropole cosmopolite et vibrante du Québec ; là où des hommes et des femmes se sont mis en marche pour révéler et partager l'histoire noire de la ville et de la province.  Quand on parle d'histoire noire et d'esclavage, le récit national canadien a longtemps fait la part belle au réseau abolitionniste du chemin de fer clandestin et à tous ces esclaves américains en fuite qui, au XIXe siècle, ont trouvé refuge au Canada. On les appelait les « freedom seekers », ceux qui cherchent la liberté. Dans ce premier épisode, on vous propose d'aller à Montréal, à la rencontre de leurs dignes héritiers, « history seekers » cette fois : des hommes et des femmes, Afro-Canadiens pour la plupart, chercheurs d'histoire qui ont décidé de remettre à sa juste place l'histoire des Noirs au Québec.Le passé esclavagiste a longtemps occupé une place particulière dans l'historiographie québécoise, entre omissions et arrangements avec un passé complexe et une vérité inconfortable. Mais les faits, comme nos chercheurs d'histoire, sont têtus. Et désormais, dans les rues du vieux Montréal ou de la Petite Bourgogne, fief historique de la communauté noire surnommé la « Harlem du Nord », on croise des visiteurs emmenés par un guide, tous en quête d'histoire noire. Dans la ville, des institutions culturelles s'interrogent aussi sur leurs pratiques ; cherchant à décoloniser leurs approches et à faire plus de place aux communautés historiquement marginalisées, en tête les Autochtones et les Noirs. Révéler la présence noire dans une ville où plus de la moitié des Afro-Québécois a décidé de vivre, c'est une façon de faire le lien entre passé et présent de la ville, d'interroger le sort réservé, hier comme aujourd'hui, aux communautés noires, de faire la lumière sur les angles morts d'un récit national qui a longtemps occulté son passé d'esclavage et de ségrégation comme ses continuités. C'est enfin l'occasion de croiser des figures de la résistance noire particulièrement inspirantes. Un reportage en deux épisodes de Céline Develay-Mazurelle et Laure Allary, initialement diffusé en février 2024.Avec :- Rito Joseph, guide conférencier à l'initiative des visites « Black Montreal Experience »- Aly Ndiaye alias Webster, auteur, rappeur, conférencier et activiste afro-québécois - Dorothy Williams, historienne de référence sur la présence noire à Montréal, en particulier dans le quartier dit de la Petite Bourgogne - Les équipes en visite du Musée McCord Stewart, musée d'histoire sociale de Montréal- Franck Mackey, historien spécialiste de l'esclavage des Noirs à Montréal.   À vivre, à voir : - Découvrir la programmation éclectique du Mois de l'histoire des Noir.e.s sur le site de Tourisme Montréal- Suivre une visite guidée sur les traces de la présence et l'histoire noire à Montréal : Black Montreal Experience- Aller au Musée Mc Cord Stewart, musée d'histoire sociale de Montréal- Faire un tour à Québec et suivre les visites Qc History X mises en place par l'artiste et conférencier Webster- Découvrir l'ABC's of Canadian Black History imaginé par l'historienne Dorothy Williams. En anglais et en français. - En savoir plus sur la table ronde du Mois de l'histoire des Noir.e.s. Édition 2024- Découvrir le projet en ligne « Je suis Montréal », qui met en avant les communautés invisibilisées dans la société montréalaise. - Quelques statistiques publiques sur les communautés noires au Canada.  À lire : - « L'esclavage et les noirs à Montréal : 1760-1840 » de Franck Mackey. 2013. Éditions Hurtubise. - « Black in Montreal 1628-1986: An Urban Demography » de Dorothy W. Williams. En anglais.- « Le contrat racial » de Charles W Mills. Traduction française par Webster. 2022. Éditions Mémoire d'encrier.- « La pendaison d'Angelique. L'histoire de l'esclavage au Canada et de l'incendie de Montréal » de Afua Cooper. 2007. Éditions De l'Homme.  - « North of the Color Line. Migration and Black resistance in Canada. 1870-1955 » de Sarah-Jane Mathieu. 2010. Editions University of North Carolina Press. En anglais- « Le grain de Sable. Olivier le Jeune premier esclave au Canada » de Webster et illustré par ValMo!. 2019. Éditions Septentrion.- « Fear of a Black Nation Race, Sex, and Security in Sixties Montreal, de David Austin. 2e Édition. 2023. Éditions AK Press. En anglais- « L'esclavage au Canada ». Une synthèse en PDF accessible et pédagogique écrite par Webster - Un entretien avec Marcel Trudel, pionnier de l'histoire de l'esclavage au Québec. Un article de Cap aux Diamants, la revue d'histoire du Québec. 2004- Toutes les ressources sur l'histoire noire dans l'Encyclopédie Canadienne. À écouter :- Résistance : le balado sur les traces de Shadrach Minkins, par Webster. Produit par Radio Canada et disponible sur rfi.fr- Les 3 épisodes de notre voyage sur le chemin de fer clandestin au Canada, en Ontario. Une série Si loin si proche- La série audio « Portraits de Noirs au Canada » par Radio Canada Internationale.

Hoodrat to Headwrap: A Decolonized Podcast
New DEI, Same Ol' Ethnostate: Desperation, Extermination and Imitation

Hoodrat to Headwrap: A Decolonized Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2025 106:37


Alt episode titles : Hegemony, Iniquity, Occlusion Dehumanization, Erasure, Indoctrination We've been here before, we've never left. The place where a z*on*st and a n*zi can exist inside the same washed up, shock jock recycled racist tech magnate bureaucrat, use the quintessential anti-semitic gesture on national television and be defended by the head of a million dollar anti-semitism watchdog org that mostly just targets Black people. Yes, even here: a place where neo n*zis came up short in Lincoln Heights, the first all-Black, self-governing city north of the Mason-Dixon Line, and got ran out, they shit took, their flag burned. Happy Black History, Present, Futures Monf and 365 days of the year in my anita baker voice. Sending you all our tender love no matter where you are, what you are going through, whether it's genuine fear from a place of privilege, comfort from having felt a false sense of safety in the promise of a democractic administration or a delayed reaction to living under a Herrenvolk democracy, join us for the first episode of the year in our attempt to ease the collective anxiety with a little, gentle, reality check and reminder of where you are and more importantly, who you are, from the Federal Act-Rite Administration (with love). "Racism and racially structured discrimination have not been deviations from the norm; they have been the norm"---Charles W. Mills "White supremacy forced white americans into rationalizations so fantastical that they approached the pathological."--James Baldwin Everything's going to be okay. Know Your Rights, Resources about ICE: https://baltimorebeat.com/know-your-rights-in-english-spanish-and-french/ https://maketheroadny.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/KYR_FLYER_ENGLISH-single.pdf Cincinnati Stand Up, Dialing in from the Resistance: https://www.clevelandjewishnews.com/news/local_news/cincinnati-residents-burn-swastika-flags-of-neo-nazi-demonstrators/article_73b5e730-e95c-11ef-9e39-372cfa716541.html Excerpt from Queering the Color Line by Siobhan B. Somerville Consider becoming a patron to support this podcast: www.patreon.com/ihartericka or make a one-time donation via Venmo (@Ericka-Hart, Paypal: ericka@ihartericka.com). Thank you!

The Brian Lehrer Show
100 Years of 100 Things: The 'Color Line'

The Brian Lehrer Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2025 23:25


As our centennial series continues, Martha S. Jones, legal and cultural historian at Johns Hopkins University and the author of the forthcoming, The Trouble of Color: An American Family Memoir (Basic Books, 2025), shares her family's long history along America's "jagged color line" and what that's meant for her, her family and the society at large.

WHMP Radio
GTMO atty John Chandler: the prison's 23rd anniversary & the recent transfers

WHMP Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2025 20:51


1/10/25: MTA Pres Max Page: being at the White House w/ President Biden. Bill & Buz on Trump's cases. Donnabelle Casis w/ Amherst Coll student curators Mel Arthur & Angie Camarena: "RePresenting: Art Beyond the Color Line.” Kyiv School of Econ students: Asta Motrenko, Oleksandra Horusieva, Marharyta Nechytailo, Karyna Lutsenko. GTMO atty John Chandler: the prison's 23rd anniversary & the recent transfers

WHMP Radio
Kyiv Econ students: Asta Motrenko, Oleksandra Horusieva, Marharyta Nechytailo, Karyna Lutsenko

WHMP Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2025 23:30


1/10/25: MTA Pres Max Page: being at the White House w/ President Biden. Bill & Buz on Trump's cases. Donnabelle Casis w/ Amherst Coll student curators Mel Arthur & Angie Camarena: "RePresenting: Art Beyond the Color Line.” Kyiv School of Econ students: Asta Motrenko, Oleksandra Horusieva, Marharyta Nechytailo, Karyna Lutsenko. GTMO atty John Chandler: the prison's 23rd anniversary & the recent transfers

WHMP Radio
MTA Pres Max Page: being at the White House w/ President Biden

WHMP Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2025 22:20


1/10/25: MTA Pres Max Page: being at the White House w/ President Biden. Bill & Buz on Trump's cases. Donnabelle Casis w/ Amherst Coll student curators Mel Arthur & Angie Camarena: "RePresenting: Art Beyond the Color Line.” Kyiv School of Econ students: Asta Motrenko, Oleksandra Horusieva, Marharyta Nechytailo, Karyna Lutsenko. GTMO atty John Chandler: the prison's 23rd anniversary & the recent transfers

WHMP Radio
Bill & Buz on Trump's cases

WHMP Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2025 10:25


1/10/25: MTA Pres Max Page: being at the White House w/ President Biden. Bill & Buz on Trump's cases. Donnabelle Casis w/ Amherst Coll student curators Mel Arthur & Angie Camarena: "RePresenting: Art Beyond the Color Line.” Kyiv School of Econ students: Asta Motrenko, Oleksandra Horusieva, Marharyta Nechytailo, Karyna Lutsenko. GTMO atty John Chandler: the prison's 23rd anniversary & the recent transfers

WHMP Radio
Amherst Coll students Mel Arthur & Angie Camarena: "RePresenting: Art Beyond the Color Line.”

WHMP Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2025 11:38


1/10/25: MTA Pres Max Page: being at the White House w/ President Biden. Bill & Buz on Trump's cases. Donnabelle Casis w/ Amherst Coll student curators Mel Arthur & Angie Camarena: "RePresenting: Art Beyond the Color Line.” Kyiv School of Econ students: Asta Motrenko, Oleksandra Horusieva, Marharyta Nechytailo, Karyna Lutsenko. GTMO atty John Chandler: the prison's 23rd anniversary & the recent transfers

Elchkuss - Schweden entdecken
#199 Fähren nach Schweden 2025

Elchkuss - Schweden entdecken

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2024 34:13


Planst du bereits den nächsten Urlaub in Schweden? Dann taucht häufig die Frage auf, welche Fähre man denn am besten nimmt. Es gibt viele Fährverbindungen nach Schweden. Welche ist die passende, die günstige, die praktische, die komfortable, die mit dem größten Urlaubsfeeling? Je nachdem, welche dieser Kategorien für dich wichtig sind, wird die Entscheidung anders ausfallen. Ich stelle dir die wichtigsten Fähren nach Schweden vor, inklusive der Preise für das Jahr 2025. Du willst Elchkuss unterstützen? Dann besuche uns bei Steady: https://steadyhq.com/de/elchkuss-schweden-entdecken/about Falls bei dir die Shownotes nicht angezeigt werden, dann findest du sie auf jeden Fall bei Podigee: https://elchkuss.podigee.io/

Haymarket Originals: Fragile Juggernaut

Episode 15 of Fragile Juggernaut is the second of our trio of regional episodes, landing this time in the South. Ben, Emma, and Tim are joined by the celebrated historian Robin D.G. Kelley to discuss the patterns of Southern development, the rich organizational ecology of the region, the strategic misfires of the CIO, and the political and social bases of fascism in America. Fragile Juggernaut is a Haymarket Originals podcast exploring the history, politics, and strategic lessons of the Congress of Industrial Organizations and the rank and file insurgency that produced it. Support Fragile Juggernaut on Patreon and receive our exclusive bimonthly newsletter, full of additional insights, reading recommendations, and archival materials we've amassed along the way.Buy Class Struggle and the Color Line, 20% Off: https://www.haymarketbooks.org/books/946-class-struggle-and-the-color-lineSupport us on patreon: https://www.patreon.com/FragileJuggernaut/posts

ArtScene with Erika Funke
William Kashatus; August 5 2024

ArtScene with Erika Funke

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2024 32:18


Dr. William Kashatus speaking about his study titled, "Jackie & Campy: The Untold Story of Their Rocky Relationship & the Breaking of Baseball's Color Line," issued in 2015 by the University of Nebraska Press. WVIA-TV will broadcast a new documentary on the Negro Leagues titled, "Never Drop the Ball," on Thursday, August 8, 2024, at 7 pm. For more information www.wvia.org/ The interview was originally recorded in 2015.

Rhody Radio: RI Library Radio Online
05 - If These Walls Could Talk - The Elms

Rhody Radio: RI Library Radio Online

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2024 45:41


Host Lauren visits the Preservation Society of Newport County and interviews Chief Curator Leslie B. Jones about the mansion known as The Elms.  If These Walls Could Talk is a series of podcast episodes where we learn about the historic house museums of Rhode Island. Overdueing It is a project funded by the Rhode Island Office of Library and Information Services and is produced by library staff around the state. We are proud to be a resident partner of the Rhode Island Center for the Book. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed are the speakers' own and do not represent those of the Overdueing It podcast, its sponsor organizations, or any participants' place of employment. The content of Overdueing It episodes are the property of the individual creators, with permission for Overdueing it to share the content on their podcast feed in perpetuity. Any of the content from the Overdueing podcast cannot be reproduced without express written permission.  Our logo was designed by Sarah Bouvier and our theme music is by Neura-Flow. Books Passing Strange: A Gilded Age Tale of Love and Deception Across the Color Line by Martha A. Sandweiss The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain James by Percival Everett The First Tycoon: The Epic Life of Cornelius Vanderbilt by T.J. Stiles Media American Fiction (2024) The Gilded Age: Season One The Gilded Age: Season Two – Streaming on HBO Max, coming to libraries on DVD in fall 2024 Downton Abbey: Season Four (Episode 9) Other @overdueingitpod on instagram overdueingit.org More info about The Elms

Down Time with Cranston Public Library
05 - If These Walls Could Talk - The Elms

Down Time with Cranston Public Library

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2024 45:41


Host Lauren visits the Preservation Society of Newport County and interviews Chief Curator Leslie B. Jones about the mansion known as The Elms.  If These Walls Could Talk is a series of podcast episodes where we learn about the historic house museums of Rhode Island. Overdueing It is a project funded by the Rhode Island Office of Library and Information Services and is produced by library staff around the state. We are proud to be a resident partner of the Rhode Island Center for the Book. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed are the speakers' own and do not represent those of the Overdueing It podcast, its sponsor organizations, or any participants' place of employment. The content of Overdueing It episodes are the property of the individual creators, with permission for Overdueing it to share the content on their podcast feed in perpetuity. Any of the content from the Overdueing podcast cannot be reproduced without express written permission.  Our logo was designed by Sarah Bouvier and our theme music is by Neura-Flow. Books Passing Strange: A Gilded Age Tale of Love and Deception Across the Color Line by Martha A. Sandweiss The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain James by Percival Everett The First Tycoon: The Epic Life of Cornelius Vanderbilt by T.J. Stiles Media American Fiction (2024) The Gilded Age: Season One The Gilded Age: Season Two – Streaming on HBO Max, coming to libraries on DVD in fall 2024 Downton Abbey: Season Four (Episode 9) Other @overdueingitpod on instagram overdueingit.org More info about The Elms

The Gilded Age and Progressive Era

The intersections of race and class or work and power has tantalizing effects on our understanding of history. It can reshape our appreciation of socio-cultural norms and the way we define the Gilded Age. Joseph Jewell's latest book White Man's Work: Race and Middle-Class Mobility into the Progressive Era takes the reader through the changing social structures caused by industrialization and Reconstruction, and the attendant anxieties these changes wrought among White communities.Essential Reading:Joseph O. Jewell, White Man's Work: Race and Middle-Class Mobility into the Progressive Era (2024).Recommended Reading:Arnoldo De León, The Tejano Community, 1836-1900 (1982).Evelyn Nakano Glenn, Unequal Freedom: How Race and Gender Shaped American Citizenship and Labor (2004).Erika Lee, At America's Gates: Chinese Immigration during the Exclusion Era, 1882-1943 (2003).Raúl A. Ramos, Beyond the Alamo: Forging Mexican Ethnicity in San Antonio, 1821-1861 (2008).Philip F. Rubio, There's Always Work at the Post Office: African American Postal Workers and the Fight for Jobs, Justice, and Equality (2010).Eric S. Yellin, Racism in the Nation's Service: Government Workers and the Color Line in Woodrow Wilson's America (2013). Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Teach the Babies w/ Dr. David J. Johns
Navigating The Color Line

Teach the Babies w/ Dr. David J. Johns

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2024 33:09


Becky Pringle is an educator with more than thirty years of classroom experience. In 2020, she was duly elected president of the National Education Association, the nation's largest labor union. This episode explores the responsibilities that teachers and leaders have for improving schools and defending democracy, the power and importance of labor unions, and the responsibility that caring and concerned adults have for supporting students and schools.Freedom to Learn Pledgehttps://www.nea.org/advocating-for-change/action-center/take-action/demand-freedom-learnMake Your Pan to Votehttps://educationvotes.nea.org/take-action/vote-plan/

My Racist Friend
Episode 4.09: Here To Help - A Tribute to Dr. Dolores Finger Wright

My Racist Friend

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2024 32:56 Transcription Available


Amy and Don discuss the loss of a dear friend and colleague, Dr. Dolores Finger Wright, by reflecting on their brief experiences with her and her impact in how she lived. This podcast includes excerpts from Dr. Wright's appearance on this podcast in 2019 (season 1, episode 8) and clips from her appearance in the 2017 documentary "Tell Them We Are Rising: The Story of Black Colleges and Universities" which highlight her experiences organizing the 1960 Greensboro Sit-In. We dearly miss you, Dr. Wright. Resources mentioned in this episode: • Clip of "Tell Them We Are Rising" (Facebook video) https://www.facebook.com/watch/?extid=CL-UNK-UNK-UNK-IOS_GK0T-GK1C&mibextid=v7YzmG&v=1079030432306365  • "Suburbanization and the Color Line along Grandview Drive" (article) https://invisibleindianapolis.wordpress.com/2017/06/29/suburbanization-and-the-color-line-along-grandview-drive  • "Feb. 1, 1960: The Greensboro Sit-in Begins" (article) https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/tdih/greensboro-sit-in/  • Nice White Parents (podcast) https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/nice-white-parents/id1524080195  • "One Year After Pulse" (article) https://time.com/one-year-after-pulse/  • "The Charleston Church Massacre (2015)" (article) https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/charleston-church-massacre-2015/    My Racist Friend is a podcast about the messy parts of relationships that help us grow together. Long-time friends Don Griffin, Jr. and Amy Makice, LCSW, enter into a transparent and ongoing conversation about complicated and difficult topics such as racism, gender, and social justice. Through the authentic lens of their strong mutual relationship, their goal is to model difficult conversations that can promote understanding and connection in a world that needs both. In this relationship, Amy is the inherently racist friend, who is working to change and better understand how racism impacts her relationship with people she loves. Donald Griffin Jr. is a Bloomington native, former Deputy Mayor for Bloomington, and a real estate broker, proudly serving his community for the past three decades. Since opening Griffin Realty in 2003, Don's dedication to excellence has helped to guide his company to be among the top producers in Indiana with nearly a half billion in individual lifetime sales. Amy Makice, founder of Bloomington Center for Connection, is a licensed psychotherapist based in Bloomington, Indiana. Her professional journey is rooted in her passion for Relational-Cultural Therapy (RCT), and her commitment to RCT extends into community building initiatives to promote the power of connection. Amy helps to bring the Relational Summits to Bloomington, featuring distinguished guests like Maureen Walker, Amy Banks, and Isaac Knapper.  Buy "Your Racist Friend" by They Might Be Giants on iTunes

Her Går Det Godt
Højt påskehumør og "et andeæg i halsen" - Her Går Det Godt

Her Går Det Godt

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2024 14:02


Nyt podcaststudie på en rigtig 'matador-adresse', drøm stort som Donald Trump, "København er den nye provins", et chimpanse-mysterium på Color-Line, et ordentligt riv af en privat fest i Humlebæk, "Tju-Bang-Malerier", 'Kommunalvalg og kaffe', nu kan man differentiere momsen, en selvmodsigende SVM-regering, "stå op - tag på arbejde - dø", Macron er jacked, Bibi har fået brok, luftgevær og nabostrid, og de har taget Puff-Daddy.Vil du høre hele episoden?Få 30 dages gratis prøveperiode (kan kun benyttes af nye Podimo-abonnenter): https://go.podimo.com/dk/hgdg(79 kroner herefter)Eller få 3 mdr. med 50% rabat (kan bruges af tidligere Podimo-abonnenter): https://go.podimo.com/dk/hgdgtilbud(79 kroner herefter)Værter: Esben Bjerre & Peter Falktoft Redigering: PodAmokKlip: PodAmokMusik: Her Går Det GodtInstagram: @hergaardetgodt @Peterfalktoft @Esbenbjerre

The Jefferson Exchange
Former Ashland resident writes of learning a big surprise about her family

The Jefferson Exchange

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2024 30:28


Barbara Hilyer's journey of discovery up a family tree she never knew is described in her book Legacy Lost: Passing Across the Color Line.

Si loin si proche
En quête d'histoire noire à Montréal #2

Si loin si proche

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2024 48:30


Dans la métropole cosmopolite et vibrante du Québec, des hommes et des femmes se sont mis en marche pour révéler et partager l'histoire noire de la ville et de la province. L'auteur et artiste afro-québécois Webster est de ceux-là. Rencontre avec un homme en quête d'histoire(s) et de vérité... Quand on parle d'histoire noire et d'esclavage, le récit national canadien a longtemps fait la part belle au réseau abolitionniste du chemin de fer clandestin et à tous ces esclaves américains en fuite qui, au XIXè siècle, ont trouvé refuge au Canada. On les appelait les « freedom seekers », ceux qui cherchent la liberté. Dans le premier épisode de cette série, on est parti dans les rues de Montréal, à la rencontre de leurs dignes héritiers, « history seekers » cette fois : des hommes et des femmes, afro-canadiens pour la plupart, chercheurs d'histoire qui ont décidé de remettre à sa juste place l'histoire des Noir.e.s au Québec, longtemps reléguée, comme oubliée des mémoires. Le passé esclavagiste a longtemps occupé une place particulière dans l'historiographie québécoise, entre omissions et arrangements avec un passé complexe et une vérité inconfortable. Mais les faits, comme nos chercheurs d'histoire, sont têtus. Pour ce second épisode, on vous propose de creuser le sillon que l'on a suivi en voyage à Montréal dans le premier épisode, avec l'un de ces chercheurs d'histoire, en la personne de Webster, activiste et artiste afroquébécois, qui a initié, dès 2016, des visites guidées dans sa ville Québec, sur les traces de l'histoire noire là-bas. Depuis, il a multiplié les projets, le dernier en date étant la traduction en français qu'il a lui-même mené du livre phare du philosophe américain Charles W. Mills « Le contrat racial ».Webster, de son vrai nom Aly NDiaye, est né d'un père sénégalais et d'une mère québécoise ; et aujourd'hui, il est devenu une voix qui compte, qu'il faut savoir écouter…Et c'est ce que l'on va faire aujourd'hui.Un reportage en deux épisodes de Céline Develay-Mazurelle et Laure AllaryÀ vivre, à voir :- Découvrir la programmation éclectique du Mois de l'histoire des Noir.e.s sur le site de Tourisme Montréal- Suivre une visite guidée sur les traces de la présence et l'histoire noire à Montréal : Black Montreal Experience- Aller au Musée Mc Cord Stewart, musée d'histoire sociale de Montréal- Faire un tour à Québec et suivre les visites Qc History X mises en place par l'artiste et conférencier Webster- Découvrir l'ABC's of Canadian Black History imaginé par l'historienne Dorothy Williams. En anglais.- En savoir plus sur la table ronde du Mois de l'histoire des Noir.e.s. Édition 2024- Découvrir le projet en ligne « Je suis Montréal », qui met en avant les communautés invisibilisées dans la société montréalaise.- Quelques statistiques publiques sur les communautés noires au Canada.  À lire : - «L'esclavage et les Noirs à Montréal : 1760-1840» de Franck Mackey. 2013. Éditions Hurtubise - «Black in Montreal 1628-1986: An Urban Demography» de Dorothy W. Williams. En anglais- «Le contrat racial» de Charles W Mills. Traduction française par Webster. 2022. Éditions Mémoire d'encrier- «La pendaison d'Angelique. L'histoire de l'esclavage au Canada et de l'incendie de Montréal» de Afua Cooper. 2007. Éditions De l'Homme  - «North of the Color Line. Migration and Black resistance in Canada. 1870-1955» de Sarah-Jane Mathieu. 2010. Éditions University of North Carolina Press. En anglais- «Le grain de Sable. Olivier le Jeune premier esclave au Canada » de Webster et illustré par ValMo!. 2019. Éditions Septentrion- «Fear of a Black Nation Race, Sex, and Security in Sixties Montreal», de David Austin. 2e Édition. 2023. Éditions AK Press. En anglais- «L'esclavage au Canada». Une synthèse en PDF accessible et pédagogique écrite par Webster - Un entretien avec Marcel Trudel, pionnier de l'histoire de l'esclavage au Québec». Un article de Cap aux Diamants, la revue d'histoire du Québec. 2004- Toutes les ressources sur l'histoire noire dans l'Encyclopédie Canadienne. À écouter :- Résistance : le balado sur les traces de Shadrach Minkins, par Webster. Produit par Radio Canada et disponible sur rfi.fr- Les 3 épisodes de notre voyage sur le chemin de fer clandestin au Canada, en Ontario. Une série Si loin si proche- La série audio « Portraits de Noirs au Canada» par Radio Canada Internationale.

Tarot for the End of Times - A Podcast with Sarah Cargill

In this final installment of the Interlude mini series, Sarah fully transitions out of Iteration 1 of Tarot for the End of Times by answering your most frequently asked questions. She shares what's new and what's next for the podcast as she invites listeners to stay connected while she prepares for Iteration 2 and other exciting offerings that are in the works. Question Timestamps: 1:31 - Will you be covering the minor arcana? 3:00 - Any tips for memorizing/internalizing card meanings? 4:58 - What is your opinion on the Court cards? How do you work with a divination system that reflects oppressive hierarchical power structures while also keeping your practice decolonial and intersectional? 11:37 - Do you have any suggestions for using tarot to engage in ancestor work? Especially for those of us who are disconnected from our family of origin but want to spiritually connect with the lineage? 13:48 - Any tips for creating and/or choosing a spread? 15:50 - If you have a lot of decks to choose from, how do you select the appropriate deck for a reading? 18:12 - When you're reading your own cards, what are the best ways to distinguish major themes from minor themes? 21:11 - How do you know when you're getting a “real” message vs. when you're trying to see your reading through rose-colored glasses? 25:03 - What's the best way to break in a new deck? 26:26 - What's the deal with reversals? SIGN UP FOR SNAKESKIN TAROT NEWS to stay connected during seasonal pauses and be the first to know about upcoming events, new offerings, resources, flash coupons, and pending changes with the podcast. Listeners who sign up by March 31, 2024 will receive a 10% coupon for their next reading! (Terms apply) RESOURCES: CLICK HERE FOR THE MAJOR ARCANA PLAYLIST! ⁠BOOK REFERENCE: ⁠⁠W.E.B. Du Bois's Data Portraits, Visualizing Black America, The Color Line at the Turn of the Twentieth Century.⁠ Support & Connect with Sarah: Find Sarah and continue the conversation on Instagram @snakeskin.tarot ⁠⁠⁠CLICK HERE TO BOOK A READING⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠SUPPORT THE WORK (Venmo⁠⁠⁠⁠) ⁠⁠⁠⁠SUPPORT THE WORK (PayPal)⁠ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/tarot-for-end-times/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/tarot-for-end-times/support

Si loin si proche
En quête d'histoire noire à Montréal #1

Si loin si proche

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2024 48:30


Dans la métropole cosmopolite et vibrante du Québec, des hommes et des femmes se sont mis en marche pour révéler et partager l'histoire noire de la ville et de la province. Suivons-les ! Quand on parle d'histoire noire et d'esclavage, le récit national canadien a longtemps fait la part belle au réseau abolitionniste du chemin de fer clandestin et à tous ces esclaves américains en fuite qui, au XIXè siècle, ont trouvé refuge au Canada. On les appelait les « freedom seekers »,  ceux qui cherchent la liberté. Dans ce premier épisode, on vous propose d'aller à Montréal, à la rencontre de leurs dignes héritiers, « history seekers » cette fois : des hommes et des femmes, Afro-Canadiens pour la plupart, chercheurs d'histoire qui ont décidé de remettre à sa juste place l'histoire des Noirs au Québec.Le passé esclavagiste a longtemps occupé une place particulière dans l'historiographie québécoise, entre omissions et arrangements avec un passé complexe et une vérité inconfortable. Mais les faits, comme nos chercheurs d'histoire, sont têtus. Et désormais, dans les rues du vieux Montréal ou de la Petite Bourgogne, fief historique de la communauté noire surnommé la « Harlem du Nord », on croise des visiteurs emmenés par un guide, tous en quête d'histoire noire. Dans la ville, des institutions culturelles s'interrogent aussi sur leurs pratiques ; cherchant à décoloniser leurs approches et à faire plus de place aux communautés historiquement marginalisées, en tête les Autochtones et les Noirs. Révéler la présence noire dans une ville où plus de la moitié des Afro-Québécois a décidé de vivre, c'est une façon de faire le lien entre passé et présent de la ville, d'interroger le sort réservé, hier comme aujourd'hui, aux communautés noires, de faire la lumière sur les angles morts d'un récit national qui a longtemps occulté son passé d'esclavage et de ségrégation comme ses continuités. C'est enfin l'occasion de croiser des figures de la résistance noire particulièrement inspirantes. Un reportage en deux épisodes de Céline Develay-Mazurelle et Laure Allary.Avec:- Rito Joseph, guide conférencier à l'initiative des visites « Black Montreal Experience »- Aly Ndiaye alias Webster, auteur, rappeur, conférencier et activiste afro-québécois - Dorothy Williams, historienne de référence sur la présence noire à Montréal, en particulier dans le quartier dit de la Petite Bourgogne - Les équipes en visite du Musée McCord Stewart, musée d'histoire sociale de Montréal- Franck Mackey, historien spécialiste de l'esclavage des Noirs à Montréal.   À vivre, à voir : - Découvrir la programmation éclectique du Mois de l'histoire des Noir.e.s sur le site de Tourisme Montréal- Suivre une visite guidée sur les traces de la présence et l'histoire noire à Montréal : Black Montreal Experience- Aller au Musée Mc Cord Stewart, musée d'histoire sociale de Montréal- Faire un tour à Québec et suivre les visites Qc History X mises en place par l'artiste et conférencier Webster- Découvrir l'ABC's of Canadian Black History imaginé par l'historienne Dorothy Williams. En anglais et en français. - En savoir plus sur la table ronde du Mois de l'histoire des Noir.e.s. Édition 2024- Découvrir le projet en ligne « Je suis Montréal », qui met en avant les communautés invisibilisées dans la société montréalaise. - Quelques statistiques publiques sur les communautés noires au Canada.  À lire : - « L'esclavage et les noirs à Montréal : 1760-1840 » de Franck Mackey. 2013. Éditions Hurtubise. - « Black in Montreal 1628-1986: An Urban Demography » de Dorothy W. Williams. En anglais.- « Le contrat racial » de Charles W Mills. Traduction française par Webster. 2022. Éditions Mémoire d'encrier.- « La pendaison d'Angelique. L'histoire de l'esclavage au Canada et de l'incendie de Montréal » de Afua Cooper. 2007. Éditions De l'Homme.  - « North of the Color Line. Migration and Black resistance in Canada. 1870-1955 » de Sarah-Jane Mathieu. 2010. Editions University of North Carolina Press. En anglais- « Le grain de Sable. Olivier le Jeune premier esclave au Canada » de Webster et illustré par ValMo!. 2019. Éditions Septentrion.- « Fear of a Black Nation Race, Sex, and Security in Sixties Montreal, de David Austin. 2e Édition. 2023. Éditions AK Press. En anglais- « L'esclavage au Canada ». Une synthèse en PDF accessible et pédagogique écrite par Webster - Un entretien avec Marcel Trudel, pionnier de l'histoire de l'esclavage au Québec. Un article de Cap aux Diamants, la revue d'histoire du Québec. 2004- Toutes les ressources sur l'histoire noire dans l'Encyclopédie Canadienne. À écouter :- Résistance : le balado sur les traces de Shadrach Minkins, par Webster. Produit par Radio Canada et disponible sur rfi.fr- Les 3 épisodes de notre voyage sur le chemin de fer clandestin au Canada, en Ontario. Une série Si loin si proche- La série audio « Portraits de Noirs au Canada » par Radio Canada Internationale.

Haute Couture
"les Rencontres" - interview with Selby Wynn Schwartz

Haute Couture

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2023 49:39


Listen to author and critic Erica Wagner in conversation with Selby Wynn Schwartz, writer of “After Sappho”, her first novel published by Galley Beggar Press in 2022. Together, they talk about her insatiable appetite for literature as a child and the way it led her to becoming a writer. They also evoke Lina Poletti, Sarah Bernhardt, Virginia Woolf or even Nathalie Barney, the women artists who inspired “After Sappho”, the book in which Selby Wynn Schwartz pays tribute to them.As part of the Rendez-vous littéraires rue Cambon [Literary Rendezvous at Rue Cambon], the podcast "les Rencontres" highlights the birth of a writer in a series imagined by CHANEL and House ambassador and spokesperson Charlotte Casiraghi.Selby Wynn Schwartz, After Sappho, © Selby Wynn Schwartz 2002, first published by Galley Beggar Press, 2022.Quote from the interview "The Galley Beggar Q&A: Selby Wynn Schwartz", © Galley Beggar Press, 2022.Quote from the article "After Sappho by Selby Wynn Schwartz review – in praise of visionary women" written by Lara Feigel, © Guardian News & Media Ltd 2023.© Booker Prize Foundation.© The Orwell Prize for Political Fiction 2023.© University of Edinburgh.Selby Wynn Schwartz, The Bodies of Others: Drag Dances and their Afterlives, © Selby Wynn Schwartz University of Michigan Press, 2019.© Lambda Literary. © American Society for Theatre Research.Selby Wynn Schwartz, A Life in Chameleons, © Selby Wynn Schwartz, 2023. © Reflex Press. © University of California, Berkeley. © Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo. The Great Art Of Light And Shadow: Archaeology of the Cinema by Laurent Mannoni, translated by Richard Crangle. Translation © University of Exeter Press, 2000. Anne Carson, Short Talks, © Brick Books, 2015.Sappho, If Not, Winter: Fragments of Sappho, Translated by Anne Carson, © Virago, 2003.© Galley Beggar Press.Sappho, If Not, Winter: Fragments of Sappho, Translated by Anne Carson, © Virago, 2003.Assia Djebar, Women of Algiers in their apartments, © Caraf Books, 1999.Assia Djebar, Femmes d'Alger dans leur appartement © Éditions des femmes, 1980.Igiaba Scego, The Color Line, Translated by John Cullen and Gregory Conti, first published in the English language by Other Press in 2022.Igiaba Scego, La linea del colore, first published in Italy in 2020 by Bompiani, © Igiaba Scego, 2020.Dionne Brand, The Blue Clerk: Ars Poetica in 59 Versos. © 2018 Dionne Brand. All rights reserved.Saidiya Hartman, Wayward Lives, Beautiful Experiments: Intimate Histories of Riotous Black Girls, Troublesome Women, and Queer Radicals, © WW Norton & Company, 2019.T. Denean Sharpley-Whiting, Bricktop's Paris: African American Women in Paris between the Two World Wars, © SUNY Press, 2015.Alessandra Cenni, Gli Occhi Eroici : Sibilla Aleramo, Eleonora Duse, Cordula Poletti : una storia d'amore nell'Italia della belle époque, © Mursia, 2011.Cordula « Lina » Poletti, Il Poema Della Guerra, © Nicola Zanichelli, 1918. All rights reserved.Virginia Woolf, Orlando, 1928.© LASTESIS© Non Una Di Meno. All rights reserved.

True Crime
The Cowboy Way and the Color Line by The Heist

True Crime

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2023 32:12


Nate Bradford, Jr. and other Black farmers and ranchers are fighting to preserve a type of rural, Black agricultural life.Follow the Heist on iHeartRadio - https://ihr.fm/3uLXPYUFollow on Apple Podcasts - https://apple.co/3uPcVgdFollow everyone else - https://bit.ly/3Nlu8nYSurviving as a rancher is hard for lots of reasons: land has gotten more expensive, corporate farms have gotten more powerful and put pressure on small ranches to expand their operations to stay in business, inflation has driven up the prices of feed and supplies… But for Nate, and for Black ranchers and farmers across the country, ranching is also hard because the USDA, the government agency that they're supposed to be able to turn to for support, instead makes it hard for them to get that support.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ You can find Indie Drop-In at https://indiedropin.com Help Indie Drop-In support indie creators by buying us a coffee! https://buymeacoffee.com/indiedropin Brands can advertise on Indie Drop-In using Patreon https://patreon.com/indiedropin Twitter: https://twitter.com/indiedropin Instagram: https://instagram.com/indiedropin Facebook: https://facebook.com/indiedropin Any advertising found in this episode is inserted by Indie Drop-In and not endorsed by the Creator. If you would like to have your show featured, go to http://indiedropin.com/creators ~~~~~~

Batting the Breeze
Beyond the Baseball Color Line

Batting the Breeze

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2023 29:11 Transcription Available


Rebecca Bratspies, New York environmental and human rights lawyer, shared with me the extraordinary and inspirational life story of Jackie Robinson, the first black player in US Major League Baseball, back on April 15 1947, after crossing the Baseball Color Line. Having written "Naming Gotham - The Villains, Rogues and Heroes Behind New York's Place Names", Rebecca was able to share stories of many other characters who have been commemorated on New York bridges, tunnels, parkways, boulevards and parks. But why did they commemorate the rogues as well as the heroes?  For more information, check out show notes at https://www.battingthebreeze.com/beyond-the-baseball-color-lineThanks to Scott Beckwith for his fantastic song "Mercy" used throughout this episode.  Mercy (Scott Beckwith - American Bandwagon, track 04) By Parking Lot Music is licensed under a  Creative Commons License.We love receiving your feedback - head over to https://www.battingthebreeze.com/contact/ Thanks for listening!

The Heist
The Cowboy Way and The Color Line

The Heist

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2023 31:15


Surviving as a rancher is hard for lots of reasons: land has gotten more expensive, corporate farms have gotten more powerful and put pressure on small ranches to expand their operations to stay in business, inflation has driven up the prices of feed and supplies… But for Nate, and for Black ranchers and farmers across the country, ranching is also hard because the USDA, the government agency that they're supposed to be able to turn to for support, instead makes it hard for them to get that support. 

David Boles: Human Meme
Harriet Tubman and the Underground Color Line

David Boles: Human Meme

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2023 16:54


In this Boles.tv live stream highlight, David Boles examines the history, and the accountability of the life of Harriet Tubman and how today, her kind legacy is damaged, not by the color of her black skin, but by the color of her original sculptor's white skin and his woke critics.  

Harde Mottak
Episode 132: Sommaren är kort

Harde Mottak

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2023 103:21


Mottaket er tilbake i studio igjen etter et to ukers opphold, og etter å ha sett det LSK leverte på Color Line stadion, skulle panelet gjerne ha sett at pausen var enda lengre. Prestasjonen var så dårlig at Patrick nesten kalte den begredelig, noe som er uvanlig hardt skyts fra den kanten. Overgangsvinduet og særlig de tre nysigneringene ble behørig dekket i Facebook-streamen med Espen Olsen, men også i denne episoden vurderes jobben klubben har gjort på overgangsfronten. I spørsmålsrunden kåres Romerikes fineste sted og fotballbane, før panelet analyserer Sportsklubbens sjanser i Sarpsborg om to uker. En alltid like positiv Patrick oppfordrer alle kanaris til å ta turen til Solbyen. Podkasten produseres av Mottaket Media og inneholder annonsering.

Tuesdays with Merton Podcast
BONUS episode: Christopher Pramuk's Presidential Address for Sophia Comes Forth Reaching, the 18th General Meeting of the ITMS

Tuesdays with Merton Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2023 29:28


INTERNATIONAL THOMAS MERTON SOCIETY, Presidential Address for "Sophia Comes Forth Reaching": the 18th General Meeting of the ITMS. Dr. Christopher Pramuk is Regis University Chair of Ignatian Thought and President of the International Thomas Merton Society. He is the author of six books, including two award-winning studies of the famed Catholic monk and spiritual writer Thomas Merton, as well as, as well as Hope Sings, So Beautiful: Graced Encounters Across the Color Line, a meditation on race relations in society and church. Chris's latest book, The Artist Alive: Explorations in Music, Art, and Theology, draws from his many years of using music, poetry, and the arts in the classroom. Chris lectures widely around the country and has led retreats on topics such as racial justice, Ignatian spirituality, and the witness of Thomas Merton.

AMDG: A Jesuit Podcast
Discover Your Inner Artist Spirit with Chris Pramuk

AMDG: A Jesuit Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2023 43:50


Today's host, Eric A. Clayton, encountered today's guest's professional title before he met the man himself. Eric was told to chase down the person who held the “Chair of Ignatian Thought and Imagination” at Regis University—and he was not disappointed. Dr. Chris Pramuk is said chair. He's also an associate professor of religious studies. His interests focus on the intersection of faith, creativity and justice, and the conversation reflects this multitude. Chris and Eric jump from Thomas Merton to the musical tradition of the Black Catholic Church to Buddhism to Joni Mitchell. Woven throughout the conversation is a clear thread of Ignatian spirituality—and an invitation to each of us to discover the artist spirit alive within ourselves. Chris has written six books, including the two we discuss in this episode: Hope Sings, So Beautiful: Graced Encounters Across the Color Line and The Artist Alive: Explorations in Music, Art and Theology. He's also written two award-winning studies on Thomas Merton. Learn more about Chris, his work and his books at the links below. The Artist Alive — https://www.amazon.com/Artist-Alive-Explorations-Music-Theology/dp/1599828383 Hope Sings, So Beautiful — https://www.amazon.com/Hope-Sings-So-Beautiful-Encounters/dp/0814682103 https://www.regis.edu/academics/faculty-finder/faculty/chris-pramuk

Longform
Episode 538: Brittany Luse

Longform

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2023 61:31


Brittany Luse is the host of NPR's It's Been a Minute. “One of the things I love about this job is everything is practice. I love it. It's like if a show is great and everyone loves it, you gotta put on another one. You just gotta do it again. And if the show didn't quite do what you'd hoped or set out to do in your mind and in your heart, you gotta do another one. I just love it. You can never feel too good and you can never feel too bad.” Show notes: @bmluse 02:00 "#497: Sam Sanders" (Longform Podcast • Aug 2022) 02:00 "Kale-flavored Cheez-Its" (Sampler • Gimlet • Jun 2016) 03:00 It's Been a Minute (NPR) 04:00 "Brittany goes to 'Couples Therapy;' Plus, why Hollywood might strike" (It's Been a Minute • NPR • Apr 2023) 04:00 "Tina Turner's happy ending" (It's Been a Minute • NPR • May 2023) 05:00 "Relationship Goals" (Sampler • Gimlet • Mar 2016) 12:00 Roald Dahl's Matilda the Musical (Working Title Films • 2022) 24:00 The Nod (Gimlet) 25:00 "Whole Hog" (The Nod • Gimlet • Sep 2017) 27:00 "The Hairstons Part 1: Snakes on a Plantation" (The Nod • Gimlet • Dec 2017) 27:00 "The Hairstons Part 1: Diary of a Mad Black Cousin" (The Nod • Gimlet • Dec 2017) 29:00 "Hair, Laid" (The Nod • Gimlet • May 2018) 29:00 "I Want That Purple Stuff" (The Nod • Gimlet • Aug 2017) 29:00 "Big Freedia's Bounce" (The Nod • Gimlet • Sep 2020) 29:00 "How to Show Up" (The Nod • Gimlet • Jun 2019) 32:00 For Colored Nerds (Eric Eddings and Brittany Luse) 42:00 "Quibi Is Shutting Down Barely Six Months After Going Live" (Benjamin Mullin, Joe Flint, Maureen Farrell • Wall Street Journal • Oct 2020) 44:00 "Why Am I Watching Married At First Sight Instead of Planning My Wedding?" (Harper's Bazaar • May 2021) 46:00 "The Hard-To-Take But Smart Relationship Advice Beyoncé Has Given Us" (Refinery29 • Apr 2016) 49:00 "The Fiction of the Color Line" (Vulture • Jan 2021) 53:00 "Death of Adulthood" (For Colored Nerds • 2014) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Hooks & Runs
156 - Baseball, Literature and "The Body Scout" w/ Lincoln Michel

Hooks & Runs

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2023 48:19


This week writer, novelist and editor Lincoln Michel joins us to discuss his 2021 baseball-themed cyperpunk novel "The Body Scout" and his 2021 essay "Why is Baseball the Most Literary of Sports?" This turned into a fun conversation that also dives into baseball in science fiction, Robert Coover's "The Universal Baseball Association," what exactly is cyberpunk, and the steroid era's aftermath.In part 2, Andrew and Craig contemplate some baseball related time travel questions.Lincoln Michel's website (https://lincolnmichel.com/)The Body Scout at bookshop.org:https://bookshop.org/shop/hooksandruns"Why is Baseball the Most Literary of Sports" on Literary Hub (lithub.com)Episodes referenced:136 - The 1969 Seattle Pilots & the Early Expansion Era w/ Andy McCue-->Join our Discord: https://discord.gg/tT8d3pVUsN-->You can support Hooks & Runs by purchasing books, including the book featured in this episode, through our store at Bookshop.org. Here's the link. https://bookshop.org/shop/hooksandrunsHooks & Runs - www.hooksandruns.comHooks & Runs on TikTok -  https://www.tiktok.com/@hooksandrunsHooks & Runs on Twitter - https://twitter.com/thehooksandrunsAndrew Eckhoff on Tik TokLink: https://www.tiktok.com/@hofffestRex von Pohl (Krazy Karl's Music Emporium) on Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/people/Krazy-Karlz-Music-Emporium/100063801500293/ Music: "Warrior of Light" by ikolics (Premium Beat)  

The Empowerment Zone
Documentary film “Blurring the Color Line: Chinese in the Segregated South”

The Empowerment Zone

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2023 34:10


Dr. Crystal Kwok: Examining the Complexity of African American and Chinese Relations — This month “The Empowerment Zone” is celebrating Asian American Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander Heritage Month (AANHPI) by featuring Dr. Crystal Kwok and her documentary film “Blurring the Color Line:  Chinese in the Segregated South.” Join the conversation as Ramona talks to Dr. Kwok about her film, which examines the complex historical relationship between the African American and Asian American communities. We are proud to announce that the film will premiere on the World Channel on PBS streaming platforms this month on May 25. Dr. Kwok's documentary has already won multiple awards including the Mira Nair Rising Female Filmmaker Award at the Harlem International Film Festival and the Courage Award at the DisOrient Film Festival. Dr. Kwok is a transnational award winning filmmaker who established her career in Hong Kong as an actress, writer, director, and talk show host.  Originally from San Francisco, California, Dr. Kwok now lives in Hawaii. Resources: https://www.blurringthecolorline.com/  Highlights from our conversation: Dr. Kwok's dissertation defense Dr. Kwok's acting career and her professional trajectory to becoming a filmmaker Working with Jackie Chan Challenges women face in the entertainment and movie industries How and why Dr. Kwok created her own platforms How Dr. Kwok's film evolved from researching the history of women in her family to exploring Chinese and African American relations Complexity of race relations in the American South Exploring how Chinese Americans embrace and engage in anti-blackness Binary spaces How Dr. Kwok seeks to inspire social impact through her film Strategies for college success Redefining education

Mother Tree Network
How a Black and a White Woman Together Are Uplifting Women's Voices across the Color Line

Mother Tree Network

Play Episode Play 30 sec Highlight Listen Later May 4, 2023 49:29


While I was in the North Georgia Mountains, I got a chance to talk with Shannon Mitchell and Christine Gautreaux, co-owners of Women Connected in Wisdom.  Their business model includes an online community, podcast, book, and an annual conference where authors speak.Both women live in Atlanta and have multiple businesses.Shannon bowled me over when she shared during the interview that she took her unemployment checks during Covid to start up her business SheaLo Glow.Now three years later this twenty-something queen has a storefront shop as well as an online business!Shannon also shares her story of a 12-year separation from her mother and her mother's family, and how it affected her  identity and connection to her cultural community.  We also learn about her positive relationship with Christina and how they both prioritize openness and honesty.  Christine, a professional speaker and social worker, has written books that have opened doors for her and given her opportunities to speak at conferences and events. Christine noticed that many other women had incredible stories and voices, but had not yet been published. Together she and Shannon, decided to create a podcast and a compilation book featuring 18 authors, most of whom had never been published before. Their mission is to get these stories and voices out into the world and into the hands of readers. Christine believes that books are valuable tools for entrepreneurs and caregivers alike and can open doors that might not otherwise be available.Called Women Connected in Wisdom, the book and podcast focuses on the eight dimensions of wellness and the importance of uprooting oppression, acknowledging the unique challenges faced by Black women. The podcast also includes recommendations for books each episode.Shannon shares her love for shea butter and their skincare routine. Lastly, we hear about Christine's love of her  Interplay performance group in Atlanta that deals with big historic issues through movement and storytelling.Resources Mentioned in ShowWomenconnectedinwisdompodcast.comhttps://www.shealoglo.com/https://www.amazon.com/Stillpoint-Self-Care-Playbook-Caregivers-Breathe/dp/1732370400Support the showMother tree Network Podcast--Where Spirituality and Earth Wisdom Meet Racial Justice and Women's Leadership. Want to become your unlimited self and evolve the planet?Go here to get the Mother Tree podcast + Show Notes sent to your inbox https://www.dramandakemp.com/podcast

The Last Negroes at Harvard
The Campus Color Line: College Presidents and the Struggle for Black Freedom

The Last Negroes at Harvard

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2023 58:07


Eddie Cole is Associate Professor of Higher Education and History at UCLA, and author of the award-winning book, The Campus Color Line: College Presidents and the Struggle for Black Freedom.Some of America's most pressing civil rights issues―desegregation, equal educational and employment opportunities, housing discrimination, and free speech―have been closely intertwined with higher education institutions. Although it is commonly known that college students and other activists, as well as politicians, actively participated in the fight for and against civil rights in the middle decades of the twentieth century, historical accounts have not adequately focused on the roles that the nation's college presidents played in the debates concerning racism. 

The Project Gutenberg Open Audiobook Collection
The Wife of his Youth and Other Stories of the Col

The Project Gutenberg Open Audiobook Collection

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2023 446:52


The Wife of his Youth and Other Stories of the Color Line, and Selected Essays

New Books Network
Laura Janet Feller, "Being Indigenous in Jim Crow Virginia: Powhatan People and the Color Line" (U Oklahoma Press, 2022)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2023 43:03


Spanning a century of fraught history, Being Indigenous in Jim Crow Virginia: Powhatan People and the Color Line (University of Oklahoma Press, 2022) by Dr. Laura J. Feller describes the critical strategic work that tidewater Virginia Indians, descendants of the seventeenth-century Algonquian Powhatan chiefdom, undertook to sustain their Native identity in the face of deep racial hostility from segregationist officials, politicians, and institutions. Like other Southeastern Native groups living under Jim Crow regimes, tidewater Native groups and individuals fortified their communities by founding tribal organizations, churches, and schools; they displayed their Indianness in public performances; and they enlisted whites, including well-known ethnographers, to help them argue for their Native distinctness. Describing an arduous campaign marked by ingenuity, conviction, and perseverance, Dr. Feller shows how these tidewater Native people drew on their shared histories as descendants of Powhatan peoples, and how they strengthened their bonds through living and marrying within clusters of Native Virginians, both on and off reservation lands. She also finds that, by at times excluding African Americans from Indian organizations and Native families, Virginian Indians themselves reinforced racial segregation while they built their own communities. Even as it paved the way to tribal recognition in Virginia, the tidewater Natives' sustained efforts chronicled in this book demonstrate the fluidity, instability, and persistent destructive power of the construction of race in America. This interview was conducted by Dr. Miranda Melcher whose doctoral work focused on post-conflict military integration, understanding treaty negotiation and implementation in civil war contexts, with qualitative analysis of the Angolan and Mozambican civil wars. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network

New Books in History
Laura Janet Feller, "Being Indigenous in Jim Crow Virginia: Powhatan People and the Color Line" (U Oklahoma Press, 2022)

New Books in History

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2023 43:03


Spanning a century of fraught history, Being Indigenous in Jim Crow Virginia: Powhatan People and the Color Line (University of Oklahoma Press, 2022) by Dr. Laura J. Feller describes the critical strategic work that tidewater Virginia Indians, descendants of the seventeenth-century Algonquian Powhatan chiefdom, undertook to sustain their Native identity in the face of deep racial hostility from segregationist officials, politicians, and institutions. Like other Southeastern Native groups living under Jim Crow regimes, tidewater Native groups and individuals fortified their communities by founding tribal organizations, churches, and schools; they displayed their Indianness in public performances; and they enlisted whites, including well-known ethnographers, to help them argue for their Native distinctness. Describing an arduous campaign marked by ingenuity, conviction, and perseverance, Dr. Feller shows how these tidewater Native people drew on their shared histories as descendants of Powhatan peoples, and how they strengthened their bonds through living and marrying within clusters of Native Virginians, both on and off reservation lands. She also finds that, by at times excluding African Americans from Indian organizations and Native families, Virginian Indians themselves reinforced racial segregation while they built their own communities. Even as it paved the way to tribal recognition in Virginia, the tidewater Natives' sustained efforts chronicled in this book demonstrate the fluidity, instability, and persistent destructive power of the construction of race in America. This interview was conducted by Dr. Miranda Melcher whose doctoral work focused on post-conflict military integration, understanding treaty negotiation and implementation in civil war contexts, with qualitative analysis of the Angolan and Mozambican civil wars. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history

New Books in Native American Studies
Laura Janet Feller, "Being Indigenous in Jim Crow Virginia: Powhatan People and the Color Line" (U Oklahoma Press, 2022)

New Books in Native American Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2023 43:03


Spanning a century of fraught history, Being Indigenous in Jim Crow Virginia: Powhatan People and the Color Line (University of Oklahoma Press, 2022) by Dr. Laura J. Feller describes the critical strategic work that tidewater Virginia Indians, descendants of the seventeenth-century Algonquian Powhatan chiefdom, undertook to sustain their Native identity in the face of deep racial hostility from segregationist officials, politicians, and institutions. Like other Southeastern Native groups living under Jim Crow regimes, tidewater Native groups and individuals fortified their communities by founding tribal organizations, churches, and schools; they displayed their Indianness in public performances; and they enlisted whites, including well-known ethnographers, to help them argue for their Native distinctness. Describing an arduous campaign marked by ingenuity, conviction, and perseverance, Dr. Feller shows how these tidewater Native people drew on their shared histories as descendants of Powhatan peoples, and how they strengthened their bonds through living and marrying within clusters of Native Virginians, both on and off reservation lands. She also finds that, by at times excluding African Americans from Indian organizations and Native families, Virginian Indians themselves reinforced racial segregation while they built their own communities. Even as it paved the way to tribal recognition in Virginia, the tidewater Natives' sustained efforts chronicled in this book demonstrate the fluidity, instability, and persistent destructive power of the construction of race in America. This interview was conducted by Dr. Miranda Melcher whose doctoral work focused on post-conflict military integration, understanding treaty negotiation and implementation in civil war contexts, with qualitative analysis of the Angolan and Mozambican civil wars. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/native-american-studies

Stuff You Missed in History Class
Introducing Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children

Stuff You Missed in History Class

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2023 2:10


Hi, SYMIHC fans! The podcast, Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children, follows the stories behind the little-known history of the Industrial School for Negro Children at Mt. Meig's, a horrific penal institution for children who were accused of infractions as minor as truancy. About Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children: In 1968, five Black girls ran away from a reform school in Mount Meigs, Alabama and revealed that it was a modern-day slave camp. We relive the narrative of five brave women who dared to cross the Color Line in the Jim Crow South to help ignite a federal investigation. We explore the personal histories of former Mt. Meig's students and whistle blowers. Through interviews with historians, civil rights advocates and as many living survivors as possible, we address the circumstances at Mt. Meigs as a means to reveal and acknowledge this piece of US History. Listen to Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children now on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Adventist History Podcast
(S2, E48) The Color Line, part 9

Adventist History Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2023 59:29


Summary: We return to the color line to talk about how Adventists were involved with and reacted to the Civil Rights Movement. The What: The Adventist History Podcast is a monthly podcast telling a story of the Seventh-day Adventist Church hosted by Matthew J. Lucio. Links: Web http://adventisthistorypodcast.org/ Support: https://www.patreon.com/AdventistHistoryPodcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/adventisthistorypodcast/ Watch: http://youtube.com/c/adventisthistory Check Out Our Other Podcasts:: Adventist Pilgrimage (with Dr. Michael Campbell and Dr. Greg Howell) Adventist History Extra The Ellen White Podcast (with Dr. Jud Lake)

Hell and Gone
Introducing Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children

Hell and Gone

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2023 2:10


Hi, Hell and Gone fans! The podcast, Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children, follows the stories behind the little-known history of the Industrial School for Negro Children at Mt. Meig's, a horrific penal institution for children who were accused of infractions as minor as truancy. About Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children: In 1968, five Black girls ran away from a reform school in Mount Meigs, Alabama and revealed that it was a modern-day slave camp. We relive the narrative of five brave women who dared to cross the Color Line in the Jim Crow South to help ignite a federal investigation. We explore the personal histories of former Mt. Meig's students and whistle blowers. Through interviews with historians, civil rights advocates and as many living survivors as possible, we address the circumstances at Mt. Meigs as a means to reveal and acknowledge this piece of US History. Listen to Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children now on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Disorganized Crime: Smuggler's Daughter
Introducing Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children

Disorganized Crime: Smuggler's Daughter

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2023 2:10


Hi, Disorganized Crime fans! The podcast, Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children, follows the stories behind the little-known history of the Industrial School for Negro Children at Mt. Meig's, a horrific penal institution for children who were accused of infractions as minor as truancy. About Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children: In 1968, five Black girls ran away from a reform school in Mount Meigs, Alabama and revealed that it was a modern-day slave camp. We relive the narrative of five brave women who dared to cross the Color Line in the Jim Crow South to help ignite a federal investigation. We explore the personal histories of former Mt. Meig's students and whistle blowers. Through interviews with historians, civil rights advocates and as many living survivors as possible, we address the circumstances at Mt. Meigs as a means to reveal and acknowledge this piece of US History. Listen to Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children now on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Flashback: History's Unintended Consequences
Introducing Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children

Flashback: History's Unintended Consequences

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2023 2:10


Hi, Flashback fans! The podcast, Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children, follows the stories behind the little-known history of the Industrial School for Negro Children at Mt. Meig's, a horrific penal institution for children who were accused of infractions as minor as truancy. About Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children: In 1968, five Black girls ran away from a reform school in Mount Meigs, Alabama and revealed that it was a modern-day slave camp. We relive the narrative of five brave women who dared to cross the Color Line in the Jim Crow South to help ignite a federal investigation. We explore the personal histories of former Mt. Meig's students and whistle blowers. Through interviews with historians, civil rights advocates and as many living survivors as possible, we address the circumstances at Mt. Meigs as a means to reveal and acknowledge this piece of US History. Listen to Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children now on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Waiting on Reparations
Introducing Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children

Waiting on Reparations

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2023 2:10


Hi, Waiting on Reparations fans! The podcast, Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children, follows the stories behind the little-known history of the Industrial School for Negro Children at Mt. Meig's, a horrific penal institution for children who were accused of infractions as minor as truancy. About Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children: In 1968, five Black girls ran away from a reform school in Mount Meigs, Alabama and revealed that it was a modern-day slave camp. We relive the narrative of five brave women who dared to cross the Color Line in the Jim Crow South to help ignite a federal investigation. We explore the personal histories of former Mt. Meig's students and whistle blowers. Through interviews with historians, civil rights advocates and as many living survivors as possible, we address the circumstances at Mt. Meigs as a means to reveal and acknowledge this piece of US History. Listen to Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children now on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

This Day in History Class
Introducing Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children

This Day in History Class

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2023 2:10


Hi, This Day in History Class fans! The podcast, Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children, follows the stories behind the little-known history of the Industrial School for Negro Children at Mt. Meig's, a horrific penal institution for children who were accused of infractions as minor as truancy. About Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children: In 1968, five Black girls ran away from a reform school in Mount Meigs, Alabama and revealed that it was a modern-day slave camp. We relive the narrative of five brave women who dared to cross the Color Line in the Jim Crow South to help ignite a federal investigation. We explore the personal histories of former Mt. Meig's students and whistle blowers. Through interviews with historians, civil rights advocates and as many living survivors as possible, we address the circumstances at Mt. Meigs as a means to reveal and acknowledge this piece of US History. Listen to Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children now on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Big Brother: North Korea’s Forgotten Prince
Introducing Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children

Big Brother: North Korea’s Forgotten Prince

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2023 2:10


Hi, Big Brother fans! The podcast, Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children, follows the stories behind the little-known history of the Industrial School for Negro Children at Mt. Meig's, a horrific penal institution for children who were accused of infractions as minor as truancy. About Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children: In 1968, five Black girls ran away from a reform school in Mount Meigs, Alabama and revealed that it was a modern-day slave camp. We relive the narrative of five brave women who dared to cross the Color Line in the Jim Crow South to help ignite a federal investigation. We explore the personal histories of former Mt. Meig's students and whistle blowers. Through interviews with historians, civil rights advocates and as many living survivors as possible, we address the circumstances at Mt. Meigs as a means to reveal and acknowledge this piece of US History. Listen to Unreformed: the Story of the Alabama Industrial School for Negro Children now on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Southern Mysteries Podcast
Episode 112 The Color Line Murders

Southern Mysteries Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2022 36:44


Some of the oldest true crime cases in America are racial terror lynchings. To understand the history of lynching in the American South you have to know what led to the acceptance of racial terror and the brave people who led anti lynching campaigns in an effort to end the violence and save lives.    Want more Southern Mysteries?  Hear the Southern Mysteries show archive and immediately access exclusive content when you become a patron of the show.  Join now at patreon.com/southernmysteries   Connect Website: southernmysteries.com Facebook: Southern Mysteries Podcast Twitter: @southernpod_ Instagram: @explorethesouth Email: southernmysteriespodcast@gmail.com    Episode Sources Hanging Bridge: Racial Violence and America's Civil Rights Century by Jason Morgan Ward. Oxford University Press The Cross and the Lynching Tree (James Hal Cone and Bill Moyers). The Journal.  Emmett Till Antilynching Act. Public Law No: 117-107 (03/29/2022). This bill makes lynching a federal hate crime offense. This Bridge in Mississippi Has Hosted Decades of Racial Violence. Vice. April 27, 2016 What happens when we forget? Facing South. May 7, 2018 Thirty Years of Lynching in the United States 1889-1918. NAACP Report on Lynching  Equal Justice Initiative, Lynching in America: Confronting the Legacy of Racial Terror (3d Ed., 2017). How one Civil Rights activist posed as a white man in order to investigate lynchings. Fresh Air, NPR. March 30, 2022   Episode Music “One” courtesy of Ross Gentry. Special thanks to Headway Recordings, in Asheville, North Carolina. Theme Song “Dark & Troubled” by Pantherburn. Special thanks to Phillip St Ours for permission for use