POPULARITY
In this engaging episode of the Bharatvaarta Podcast, host Sharan is joined by Dr. Vikram Sampath to discuss his latest book on the controversial history of Haider Ali and Tipu Sultan's contrasting reigns. The conversation covers various aspects including Tipu Sultan's controversial policies, the methodological challenges of historical writing, and the nuances of presenting an impartial account in a polarized field. Dr. Sampath also shares insights into the importance of documenting contemporary lives for future historians and discusses his initiatives to support upcoming historians through the FIHCR (Foundation for Indian Historical and Cultural Research). Topics: 00:00 Introduction 01:06 Meet Dr. Vikram Sampath 01:36 The Haider and Tipu Saga 03:47 Balancing Historical Perspectives 05:23 The Craft of a Historian 05:34 Tipu Sultan's Documentation 07:21 Contemporary and Oral Sources 18:05 Comparing Haider and Tipu 26:49 Tipu's Language Policies 30:55 Tipu's Dreams and Interpretations 34:34 Toxic Masculinity and Treatment of Women 37:24 Historical Movies and Controversies 39:29 Challenges in Indian Historical Cinema 42:21 Religious Policies and Temple Grants 51:07 Role of Brahmins and Administrators 55:21 Controversial Historical Figures 57:52 Future of Historical Research 01:04:51 Conclusion and Final Thoughts
In partnership with Griffith University, UNESCO has conducted a global study highlighting Indigenous media's vital role in empowering communities, combating stereotypes, and advocating for their media rights. Indigenous Rights Radio Producer Dev Kumar Sunuwar spoke to Susan Forde, Prof. of Media and Journalism at the School of Humanities, Languages, and Social Sciences, Griffith Centre for Social and Cultural Research, Griffith University, Australia. Program Producer: Dev Kumar Sunuwar Interviewee: Susan Forde, Prof. of Media and Journalism at the School of Humanities, Languages, and Social Sciences, Griffith Centre for Social and Cultural Research, Griffith University, Australia. Music: 'Whispers,' by Ziibiwan, used with permission. 'Burn your village to the ground' by Haluci Nation, used with permission
The Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese recently announced a plan to set a minimum age to use social media platforms. Should children be barred from social media? Here we discuss the question. Guests: Amanda Third, Professorial Research Fellow in Digital Social and Cultural Research in the Institute for Culture and Society and Co-Director of the Young and Resilient Research Centre at Western Sydney University; Aparajita Bharti, Founding Partner of TQH, a Delhi-based public policy research firm, and co-founder of Young Leaders for Active Citizenship Host: Mandira Moddie You can now find The Hindu's podcasts on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and Stitcher. Search for Parley by The Hindu. Write to us with comments and feedback at socmed4@thehindu.co.in
Free to air TV was once the only place to watch your favourite football match, but that could change as streaming services and tech companies now compete for sports media rights. Sports bodies sell their rights to broadcasters, who then sell advertising slots or subscriptions, so the clubs and athletes get paid. While this mostly remains the case in Australia, the global value of these rights will this year surpass $US 60 billion with Amazon Prime, NBC and ESPN joining up for the rights to both men's and women's basketball. Guests: Minal Modha, Head of Sport at research firm, Ampere AnalysisBen Strauss, Sports and Media Reporter at The Washington PostDavid Rowe, Emeritus Professor of Cultural Research at the University of Western SydneyTim Burrowes, publisher of the media and marketing industry newsletter, Unmade.
I Like Your Work: Conversations with Artists, Curators & Collectors
Jennifer Combe is a mother, artist, and associate professor of art at The University of Montana. Before shifting to higher education, she taught K12 in Washington State public schools for fifteen years. Her artwork investigates gender, contemporary mothering, and children's development. Her visual work has been exhibited at The Missoula Art Museum, Holter Museum of Art, Paris Gibson Square Museum of Art, The Gift Shop exhibition space at The Henry Art Gallery in Seattle, the NAEA gallery in Virginia, and The Washington State Center for Performing Arts. Her work is featured in the book An Artist and a Mother, published by Demeter Press. Her work in art education spans early childhood education, community arts, and social theory. Her educational work has been featured in The Journal of Social Theory in Art Education, The Journal of the Motherhood Initiative for Research and Community Involvement, The Journal of Cultural Research in Art Education, and Visual Arts Research. She has lectured for The National Art Education Association in New York, Chicago, San Diego, Dallas/Fort Worth and New Orleans. She lectured on mothering and art education in Florence, Italy for The Motherhood Initiative on Research and Community Involvement. She lives outside of Missoula, MT with her family. "My research and artistic work explore cultural constructs around gender and mothering, ability, and schooling. Drawing from autobiography, I locate the essence of an experience and then distill my understanding of that experience into simplified, often geometric, forms. This process helps deconstruct cultural paradigms that complicate interpretation and meaning—ultimately how we perceive ourselves. Working in the studio involves a form of meditation and contemplative translation of experiences and anxieties through the direct process of applying paint or fabric to various surfaces such as glass, panel, linen, or paper. Non-objective abstraction allows an ambient space for the ambiguities of memory and the tumult of emotion to be freely realized. Often working in multiples, I process experiences in singular works and then rejoin the simplified forms to make a complex, yet fleeting whole. My hope is to claim control over the ambiguities of experience and emotion, if even for a moment." LINKS: jennifercombe.com @jkcombe I Like Your Work Links: Check out our sponsor for this episode: The Sunlight Podcast: Hannah Cole, the artist/tax pro who sponsors I Like Your Work, has opened her program Money Bootcamp with a special discount for I Like Your Work listeners. Use the code LIKE to receive $100 off your Money Bootcamp purchase by Sunlight Tax. Join Money Bootcamp now by clicking this link: https://www.sunlighttax.com/moneybootcampsales and use the code LIKE. Chautauqua Visual Arts: https://art.chq.org/school/about-the-program/two-week-artist-residency/ 2-week residency https://art.chq.org/school/about-the-program/ 6-week residency Join the Works Membership ! https://theworksmembership.com/ Watch our Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@ilikeyourworkpodcast Submit Your Work Check out our Catalogs! Exhibitions Studio Visit Artist Interviews I Like Your Work Podcast Say “hi” on Instagram
In this podcast, Shri Pankaj Saxena helps us understand the role of the family in the overall context of Hindu cosmology. He explains that the Hindu worldview is based on Kartavya Bodh, a sense of duties toward one another in the family and beyond. We explore how it is clashing with the rights narrative around us today.The family unit makes it easier for a Hindu to repay the Panch Rna-s and live a fulfilled life with psychological, spiritual, physical and intellectual comfort. Listen to an exposition on the pyramid of identities that a Hindu is part of. How do these identities help us with a larger goal and how do they balance human existence with nature and culture?For the family to be remain relevant in today's scenario, we need to step out of our idealistic bubble and take a realistic look at the problems within the family today. Once the situation is understood, we can attempt to explore the way forward.Pankaj Saxena is Co-Founder and Director, Cultural Research at Brhat. He is an author on Hindu temples, arts, literature, history and culture. His writing explains the beauty of Sanātana Dharma through stories about traditions, communities and culture. He has a deep interest in cultural anthropology, evolutionary biology and ecology, and has visited more than 1200 Hindu temples.Link to books of Shri Ram Swarup and Shri Sita Ram Goel, mentioned in the podcast. You can also find PDFs of these books online which can be downloaded.Note: If you find our work valuable, please consider making a contribution. It will help us cover the costs of reaching many more Hindu parents. If you live in India, please write to contact@hinduparenting.org to get the QR code. All others outside India can use the substack platform (through Stripe).Contents of the podcast:0:00 - Introduction to the topic, Family0:54 - Introduction to speaker, Pankaj Saxena1:54 - Courses offered by Pankaj Saxena5:25 - Idea of Family in Hindu society (Grihasthashram)12:49 - Attacks on Traditional family structure today23:09 - Kartavyabodh in Sanatana Dharma, Duties vs Rights30:42 - Varnashrama Dharma39:13 - Convention vs Tradition45:08 - Understanding the Hindu Family structure52:03 – Dowry vs Sthreedhan55:43 - Closing Remarks58:07 - Authentic References for parents to learn59:56 - Message for Hindu Parents1:00:46 - Hindu Parenting Platform InfoGeneral Information:Subscribers are requested to look for The Hindu Parenting notification emails for new podcasts/posts in their email promotions/spam tab and personally move these into the main inbox. Thereafter all posts will be delivered to their main inbox. Thank you!For questions that you'd like us to address, please use the form below:Hindu Parenting QuestionsFor comments and suggestions, please use the comments tab or write to us at contact@hinduparenting.orgPlease note that questions will not be answered on email.Do subscribe to our substack and follow us on our social media handlesTwitter: hinduparentingInstagram: hinduparentingTelegram: t.me/hinduparentingThreads: hinduparentingFacebook: facebook.com/hinduparentingFacebook group: facebook.com/groups/hinduparentingKoo: hinduparentingThe opinions expressed by guests on The Hindu Parenting Podcast are their personal opinions and Hindu Parenting does not assume any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, completeness, suitability or validity of anything shared on our platform by them. Copyright belongs to Hindu Parenting. Get full access to Hindu Parenting at hinduparenting.substack.com/subscribe
George Barna, Director of Research at the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University and Senior Research Fellow for the Family Research Council's Center for Biblical Worldview, discussed research that he has compiled about the biblical worldview of parents, and how parents can train children in a biblical worldview, a concept he addresses in the book, Raising Spiritual Champions: Nurturing Your Child's Heart, Mind, and Soul. You can find out more online at culturalresearchcenter.com.
George Barna, Director of Research at the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University and Senior Research Fellow for the Family Research Council's Center for Biblical Worldview, discussed research that he has compiled about the biblical worldview of parents, and how parents can train children in a biblical worldview, a concept he addresses in the book, Raising Spiritual Champions: Nurturing Your Child's Heart, Mind, and Soul. You can find out more online at culturalresearchcenter.com.
Bruce, the adult site broker, host of Adult Site Broker Talk and CEO of Adult Site Broker, the leading adult website broker, who is known as the company to sell adult sites, is pleased to welcome Oliver Carter as this week's guest on Adult Site Broker Talk. Oliver Carter is a Reader in Creative Economies at the Birmingham Centre for Media and Cultural Research at Birmingham City University. He is interested in how technology can create opportunities for enterprise and the regulation of media. His research into Britain's pornography business has influenced the award-winning documentary series Sexposed as well as the second episode of the 2021 BBC series Bent Coppers: Crossing the Line of Duty. His latest book Under the Counter: Britain's Trade in Hardcore Pornographic 8mm Films was published in 2023, and he is currently working on a second volume. Bruce, host of the show and CEO of Adult Site Broker said: “My interview with Oliver was fascinating. To hear about a time when porn was 100% illegal in the UK and how the business worked in those days was amazing. It's a landmark literary work about our industry and I know you'll enjoy this interview.” Adult Site Broker is the most experienced company to broker adult sites. They've sold and helped people buy more xxx sites than any other broker. Adult Site Broker is the leading company to sell porn sites and buy porn sites. They help their clients work out equitable deals. Check out their brand-new website at www.adultsitebroker.com, the leading destination to broker porn sites. Adult Site Broker also has an affiliate program, ASB Cash, at https://asbcash.com, where you can earn 20% referring people to buy adult sites and sell adult sites to Adult Site Broker, the porn website broker. For more information, please visit us at www.adultsitebroker.com to help you broker adult sites. Listen to Oliver Carter on Adult Site Broker Talk, starting today at www.adultsitebrokertalk.com
The first post-lockdown study reveals a rapid decline in worldview-- only 4% of American adults now possess a biblical persdpective. Researcher George Barna is blunt: "Biblical theism much closer to extinction in America ... than it is to influencing the soul of the nation."What have we done in the last three years? And how do we begin to return to the truth in our own homes and hearts?We ask Dr. Adam Rasmussen with the Cultural Research Center.
Adam Rasmussen, Fellow at the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University and Associate Professor of Humanities at ACU, shared information relative an American Worldview Inventory survey on the percentage of Americans in a variety of categories who possess a Biblical worldview. You can find out more online at culturalresearchcenter.com.
Adam Rasmussen, Fellow at the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University and Associate Professor of Humanities at ACU, shared information relative an American Worldview Inventory survey on the percentage of Americans in a variety of categories who possess a Biblical worldview. You can find out more online at culturalresearchcenter.com.
JazzOmania #76 " L'émission de tous les Jazz ! " avec Stéphane Kochoyan Special JazZahara Festival Jazz Andalous https://www.jazzahara.com/ Participer à JazZahara à Zahara de Los Atunes a été une expérience incroyable. Le festival met en vedette des musiciens andalous, d'aujourd'hui et de demain, des maîtres comme Chano Dominguez et la nouvelle génération. Les musiciens de jazz ont des accents différents selon les régions où ils habitent, mais ils parlent la même langue. Et c'est exactement ce que nous pouvons trouver dans la sélection de JazZahara, le son est plein de soleil et de soul avec quelques origines ethniques ou folkloriques comme le flamenco qui se mélangent avec toute l'histoire du jazz. L'esprit et le niveau d'inspiration sont élevés et intenses. JazZahara est une superbe destination : Le village pittoresque de Zahara de los Antunes est une belle destination touristique, de grandes plages de sable fin, des toros élévés au b ord de la mer en semi-liberté, des chevaux magnifiques, de bons hôtels et restaurants vides à la fin de la saison et JazzAhara peut avoir lieu pour attirer les fans de musique ! La salle de concert, Patio de la Palmera, un endroit spécialement aménagé pour le festival, est absolument formidable pour partager l'émotion musicale sous la lune… La scène n'est pas trop grande, il n'y a pas d'écran, le personnel de sécurité est très discret, le public est mixé par différentes générations dont des enfants… L'ambiance est très propice pour écouter du jazz et vivre un festival. JazZahara est aussi l'occasion de rencontres et d'échanges entre professionnels du local à l'international, et c'était un grand plaisir de rencontrer et d'écouter des artistes, des managers, des propriétaires de clubs et des producteurs qui font vivre le jazz dans cette belle région, ils sont brillants et solides avec de belles vibrations, ambitions pour leur art et leur pays. J'ai beaucoup appris avec eux. Les réunions professionnelles dans le hall de l'hôtel étaient intéressantes et productives. J'ai pu y rencontrer pour la première fois des collègues du monde entier tels que Birame Seck, directeur du festival St Louis, Margarita Borisova de Bulgarie "Jazz Plus", Pedro Cravinho au Birmingham Centre for Media and Cultural Research. Nous avons suivi le festival ensemble. a Ce séjour restera inoubliable pour tous les participants. L'équipe de Marina Fernandez et Yvan Pivotti est extrêmement efficace avec beaucoup de délicatesse et de professionnalisme. Je les remercie sincèrement de m'avoir invité à ce merveilleux festival. La Playlist de Stéphane Kochoyan Speciale JazzAhara Festival 2022 avec les musiciennes et musiciens écoutés et rencontrés : 01 - Chano Dominguez, feat Guillermo McGill, Javier Colina Tomatito - Retaila 02 - Chano Dominguez feat Michael League, Hamilton De Holanda - Para Chick 03 - Triando - Grito (BulerÌa) 04 - Juana Gaitan, Bernardo Parrilla - Dos Mundos 05 - Marta SantamarÌa - Devagarinho 06 - Nono Garcia - Atun y Chocolate (feat. Ester GarcÌa) 07 - Tito Alcedo & Nono GarcÌa - Titonete 08 - Ray Charles - Hit the Road Jack 09 - O Sister! - Nowzah! (I Don't Accept Your Rules) 10 - Valentin Murillo Grupo - Corcor Suite Yeahhh 11 - Lovis G. - Don't Waste Your Time 12 - Bernardo Parrilla feat Guillermo McGill - Fuego 13 - Antonio Lizana - Carry You (feat. Becca Stevens) 14 - One Pac & Fellows - African Grooves - Senegalais 15 - Laura Furci feat Guillermo McGill, Javier Colina - Don't wait to long 16 - Sumrra - 13700 Millons de Anos
Pankaj Saxena is Co-Founder, Bṛhat and Director, Cultural Research, Bṛhat. He is an author who writes on Hindu temples, Indian art, literature, history and culture. He is also deeply interested in cultural anthropology, evolutionary biology and ecology. He has visited more than 600 ancient Hindu temples on his temple trails.
In this episode, Emily Soderborg shares her experiences attending the Bear Dance with her family on the Ute Mountain Ute Reservation. Emily shares what she learned about the White Mesa Community and their Bear Dance stories and traditions.
George Barna, who serves, the Director of Research at the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University, shared information relative to the America's Values Study, commissioned by Marc Nuttle of AmericasOne, indicating the type of leaders and government that respondents desire. You can find out more online at culturalresearchcenter.com.
George Barna, who serves, the Director of Research at the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University, shared information relative to the America's Values Study, commissioned by Marc Nuttle of AmericasOne, indicating the type of leaders and government that respondents desire. You can find out more online at culturalresearchcenter.com.
Professor David Rowe, Emeritus Professor of Cultural Research at the Institute of Cultural and Society University of Western Sydney, spoke about the matter with Tom Elliott.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Pankaj Saxena is Co-Founder, Bṛhat and Director, Cultural Research, Bṛhat. He is an author who writes on Hindu temples, Indian art, literature, history and culture. He is also deeply interested in cultural anthropology, evolutionary biology and ecology. He has visited more than 600 ancient Hindu temples on his temple trails.
This is episode #20 of the podcast and it's Thursday, the 23rd of June, 2022. Today I sat down, virtually, of course, with Dr. Michael Mopas, Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Carleton University in Ottawa, Ontario. He is cross-appointed to the Institute of Criminology and Criminal Justice and the Department of Law and Legal Studies, and serves as a member of the Duncombe Studio for Social and Cultural Research. Most of Michael's work is in the area of science, technology, and law with a focus on 'sound'. In his spare time, he plays upright bass in several jazz bands in the city and participates in long-distance triathlons. He has completed two Ironman races (Lake Placid and Mont-Tremblant) and several other events.In our discussion, we turned to wearable fitness-trackers and mobile apps that allow athletes to measure, monitor, visualize, and record a variety of training metrics. Dr. Mopas and his collaborators have looked into the deeply embodied and sensory dimensions of self-tracking. The overall insight seems to be that the data generated by self-trackers are not only cognitively processed, but also sensed and felt by users. While we do have some understanding of what exactly self-tracking devices measure and quantify, we know less about how/when do their users know these quantitative metrics work for them. How do we mitigate the potential dissonance between these quantitative metrics and the athletes' lived experiences?The second part of the discussion moved toward technology. We talked about the future of wearable self-tracking devices and debated if AI can be employed to better understand the emotional needs of the user. Here is the show.Show Notes:- Do wearable tracking devices take too much of our ability of ‘being in the moment'?- Should we value quantitative metrics over other ways of knowing and making sense?- Moments of dissonance: self-tracking device's quantitative metrics vs. the athletes' lived experience- Sharing data (e.g., Strava): potential benefits and limitations- Technology: Can we develop AI that learns qualitative data that people input into such devices?Note:Relevant papers:Mopas, Michael S., and Ekaterina Huybregts. "Training by feel: wearable fitness-trackers, endurance athletes, and the sensing of data." The Senses and Society 15.1 (2020): 25-40.Lupton, Deborah, and Sarah Maslen. "The more-than-human sensorium: sensory engagements with digital self-tracking technologies." The Senses and Society 13.2 (2018): 190-202.Link to Dr. Mopas' web page: https://carleton.ca/socanth/people/mopas-michael/
Belief Hole | Conspiracy, the Paranormal and Other Tasty Thought Snacks
[ ATTN BELIEFLINGS!: Tune in to our YouTube Channel tonight (June 17) at 5:30PM PST / 8:30PM EST to chat it up with us and fellow Belieflings in the Youtube Live Chat during a video premiere of this episode!... it's a real fun hang ;) ] _____ It's late at night. You're driving a lonely stretch of forested road. Up ahead you catch a glimpse of something in your headlights. As you start to slow down you're thinking to yourself, “It must be a deer.” But there's something wrong. There's something about it that's not quite right. It's not quite a deer. As you begin to process what you're seeing, your stomach sinks. As the thing raises up to meet its eyes to yours, its disfigured joints begin to crack and pop into place, and with a predator's stare and sinister grin, it is eager to meet you. This is no deer. On this episode of Belief Hole, we dissect alleged true accounts of the Appalachian Not Deer and compare them to strange reports from the early 20th century. Join us, as we explore the hoofed horror of animal mimics, shapeshifters, and sinister imposters. TIMESTAMPS 3:59 | Not Deer / Deor introduction 5:53 | Description of the Not Deer 6:47 | No Creepypasta Allowed 8:20 | Imposter Entities/ Animal Mimics 11:00 | Description continues 11:27 | Zac's Creepy Deer Encounter 16:40 | Origin: Madison's ‘Not Deer' 23:32 | Skeptic - The CWD argument 27:17 | Glitching Not Deer Attack | STORY 31:17 | Like a Human on All Fours | STORY 33:00 | Hiding Within the Heard | STORY 35:42 | Don't Stop the Car | STORY 38:35 | Strange Nature: Man-Eating Plants and Gypsy Ghost Stories 44:14 | EXPANSION PREVIEW | Vampire Vine Clip 46:27 | Get Nightstakker Beard Products! 48:13 Bizarre historical encounters from Albert Rosales 48:48 | Uncanny Valley - Signs of the Imposter 49:40 | 1939 Strange Deer Creature | STORY 50:42 | Mrs Laubs ‘Pads for Feet' 1951 | STORY 52:15 | Deer Caught Eating Human Being! 53:55 Animal Pretenders, Possessed Animals - Beyond Creepy 56:50 | You Weren't Supposed to See That | STORY 58:33 | Unsettling Deer-Like thing in the Road from Root and Rock 1:00:49 | The Pig Boy | STORY 1:03:09 | The Still Donkey | STORY 1:04:35 | Conflating the Not Deer with Wendigo/Skinwalker and a thought on Cultural Research 1:09:00 | Thank Yous 15:40 | Outtakes
Julianne Schultz is a journalist and the author of several books,including The Idea of Australia, Reviving the Fourth Estate and Steel City Blues. She is the Chair of The Conversation and Professor Emeritus of Media and Culture at Griffith's Griffith Centre for Social and Cultural Research. Julianne was the publisher and founding editor of Griffith Review. She has served on the board of directors of the ABC, Grattan Institute and Copyright Agency, and chaired the Australian Film TV and Radio School, Queensland Design Council and National Cultural Policy Reference Group. About The Garret Read the transcript of this interview at thegarretpodcast.com. You can also follow The Garret on Twitter and Instagram, or follow our host Astrid Edwards on Twitter or Instagram. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Sports betting and advertising is ubiquitous throughout the channels of any regular sports fan. With sports codes, media, advertising and betting agencies all being interdependent - where does the boom in ads, odds and engagement end? This episode we explore the good, the bad and the fascinating impact sports betting is having on sports culture. Guests: Adam Cohen, Lecturer for Sport Management at the UTS Business School & David Rowe, Emeritus Professor of Cultural Research at the Institute for Culture and Society, Western Sydney University
Take off for a discussion of “airmindedness” with contributors to Aviation in the Literature and Culture of Interwar Britain (Palgrave 2020). What did it mean to be “airminded” in interwar Britain? How did airmindedness encapsulate the possibilities and potential dangers of aviation? How was it an expression of military and industrial power as well as aerial theatre? Join Rinni Haji Amran, Brett Holman, and Luke Seaber for a discussion of aviation, Croydon aerodrome, and the work of W. H. Auden, Virginia Woolf, and T. H. White, among others. Rinni Haji Amran is a Lecturer in English Literature at the University Brunei Darussalam. Brett Holman is a Professional Associate of the Centre for Creative and Cultural Research at the University of Canberra in Australia. Luke Seaber is Senior Teaching Fellow in Modern European Culture at University College London and the co-editor with Michael McCluskey of Aviation in the Literature and Culture of Interwar Britain (Palgrave 2020).
George Barna, the Director of Research at the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University, discussed the extent to which Christian parents of pre-teens possess a Christian worldview, which can have an impact on their children. You can find out more online at culturalresearchcenter.com.
George Barna, the Director of Research at the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University, discussed the extent to which Christian parents of pre-teens possess a Christian worldview, which can have an impact on their children. You can find out more online at culturalresearchcenter.com.
Listen in to Search for the Soul of the Nation, featuring Dr Monique Ryan (Independent for Kooyong), Nicolette Boele (Independent for Bradfield), Despi O'Connor (Independent for Flinders) and Julianne Schultz (Professor Emeritus of Media and Culture at Griffith University Centre for Social and Cultural Research, also Chair of The Conversation Media Group).You can also click to watch this recording on YouTube.As Julianne Schultz asks in her new book "The Idea of Australia: A search for the soul of the nation" from which our event derives it's name;“Maybe, because Australia has been so rich for so long, complacency and entitlement, rather than innovation and aspiration, have become the norm.Maybe, because the habit of not looking back has become so ingrained, we are incapable of imagining what we might become, as we have little idea of how we got here.Maybe, because we have for so long accommodated bullies, we retreated to smaller dreams in manageable spaces. Maybe, because so few of our political leaders have had courageous imaginations, they are in fact led by others.Maybe, because we are ashamed of our racialist past, we forgot how to hold onto the good bits. Maybe, Australia being home to the world's oldest continuous culture is just too difficult for its white settlers to comprehend.Australia needs to address these issues if it is to become more than a half-formed idea.”- Julianne Schultz.More about the guests and host:https://moniqueryan.com.auhttps://nicoletteboele.com.auhttps://teamdespi.com.auhttps://bit.ly/JulianneSchultzPresented by Philip Bateman and produced by Bravo CharlieSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/SmarterImpact)
Dr. Tracy Munsil is the Executive Director of the Cultural Research Center and is also Associate Professor of Political Science at Arizona Christian University. Dr. Munsil chaired the collaborative process to develop the ACU CORE liberal arts curriculum and teaches political science and Humanities courses at ACU. She was appointed by Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey to the Commission on Appellate Court Appointments and serves on the Board of Directors for Voices for the Voiceless, a next-generation pro-life organization based in Phoenix. Dr. Munsil was a full-time lecturer in the Arizona State University School of Politics and Global Studies. Her doctorate was her third degree from ASU, after earning both a political science master's and a bachelor's degree in journalism. At ASU she met her husband, ACU President Len Munsil. Dr. Munsil home-educated their eight children for 14 years.As the Executive Director of the Cultural Research Center--where she works closely with both ACU President Len Munsil and Dr. George Barna, a renowned Christian thought leader--Dr. Tracy Munsil is spearheading some of the most culturally vital research being produced today. In this episode, she will begin to unpack some of the stunning results of the CRC's first research publications.For more information on Dr. Tracy Munsil, please click on this link.To learn about Arizona Christian University, please follow this link.To begin working through the dynamic research presented by the Cultural Research Center, please visit this link."Kingdom Culture Conversations" is a podcast created through Frameworks, a Biblical worldview initiative of Northwest Christian School.For more information on Frameworks, please visit: https://frameworks.ncsaz.org/For more information on Northwest Christian School, visit: https://www.ncsaz.org/To reach out to Geoff Brown, please email gbrown@ncsaz.org or you can reach him by cell phone: (623)225-5573.
Dr. Tracy Munsil is the Executive Director of the Cultural Research Center and is also Associate Professor of Political Science at Arizona Christian University. Dr. Munsil chaired the collaborative process to develop the ACU CORE liberal arts curriculum and teaches political science and Humanities courses at ACU. She was appointed by Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey to the Commission on Appellate Court Appointments and serves on the Board of Directors for Voices for the Voiceless, a next-generation pro-life organization based in Phoenix. Dr. Munsil was a full-time lecturer in the Arizona State University School of Politics and Global Studies. Her doctorate was her third degree from ASU, after earning both a political science master's and a bachelor's degree in journalism. At ASU she met her husband, ACU President Len Munsil. Dr. Munsil home-educated their eight children for 14 years.As the Executive Director of the Cultural Research Center--where she works closely with both ACU President Len Munsil and Dr. George Barna, a renowned Christian thought leader--Dr. Tracy Munsil is spearheading some of the most culturally vital research being produced today. In this episode, she will begin to unpack some of the stunning results of the CRC's first research publications.For more information on Dr. Tracy Munsil, please click on this link.To learn about Arizona Christian University, please follow this link.To begin working through the dynamic research presented by the Cultural Research Center, please visit this link."Kingdom Culture Conversations" is a podcast created through Frameworks, a Biblical worldview initiative of Northwest Christian School.For more information on Frameworks, please visit: https://frameworks.ncsaz.org/For more information on Northwest Christian School, visit: https://www.ncsaz.org/To reach out to Geoff Brown, please email gbrown@ncsaz.org or you can reach him by cell phone: (623)225-5573.
In our last episode of Kingdom Culture Conversations, President Len Munsil, of Arizona Christian University, pulled back the curtain on the university's newly commissioned Cultural Research Center which is being led by internationally-recognized Christian thought leader and researcher, Dr. George Barna.In today's episode, in addition to articulating the vision and direction of the Cultural Research Center, Munsil begins to unpack one of the CRC's first major unveilings: the "American Worldview Inventory, 2021". It's a far-reaching conversation that will excite the listener about the trajectory of the CRC while also providing insights into the prevailing worldviews that our shaping contemporary American culture.For more information on President Munsil, please visit this link.To learn more about Arizona Christian University, please follow this link.Click here to get up to speed on the Cultural Research Center."Kingdom Culture Conversations" is a podcast created through Frameworks, a Biblical worldview initiative of Northwest Christian School.For more information on Frameworks, please visit: https://frameworks.ncsaz.org/For more information on Northwest Christian School, visit: https://www.ncsaz.org/To reach out to Geoff Brown, please email gbrown@ncsaz.org or you can reach him by cell phone: (623)225-5573.
What is ecological linguistics? How does the English language shape our perceptions of the environment? In this episode we discuss the different terms used to describe climate change and then highlight some more subtle ways language can shape our perceptions of the world around us.Featuring:Lee Joachim, Yorta Yorta man, Board Member of Living Languages Australia.Professor Arran Stibbe, Professor of Ecological Linguistics, University of GloucestershireDr Helen Bromhead, Linguist, Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Griffith Research Centre for Social and Cultural Research and Project Lead at the Griffith Climate Action Beacon, Griffith UniversityDr Jeremy Walker, Co-director of the Climate Justice Research Centre, and Senior Lecturer in Social and Political Sciences Program, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences University of Technology SydneyProducer/Presenter: Marlene EvenMusic: Epidemic Sound‘If It's Flooded, Forget it', public safety advertisement, 2021, ACT Emergency Services Agency
But Professor David Rowe, Emeritus Professor of Cultural Research at the Institute of Cultural and Society University of Western Sydney, said politics and sport were always going to be linked in some form. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode, Dario talks to Terry Lee. Terry is Senior Tutor in Radio & Audio at the University of Bedfordshire and is also responsible for the award-winning Radio LaB 97.1FM. He has had a long career in independent and commercial radio including managing Norwich's Future radio. In 2018, he started Fantastic Noise a podcast primarily aimed at students studying radio, and featuring the experienced voices of radio professionals and experts. Along with talking about the formation and production of Fantastic Noise, the conversation covers how students of radio approach and understand the use of sound in the digital age, podcast and radio's symbiotic relationship, and the future of audio technology and its impact on media specificity. We are also taken around the podcast neighborhood by Jess Schmidt. Her recommendations this week are The Lolita Podcast from iHeart Radio and hosted by writer-comedian Jamie Loftus (My Year in Mensa) that uses the misunderstanding and infamy around Nabakov's classic as a jumping-off point for discussions of false media narratives. Also recommended is Blank Check, a film podcast that reviews successful directors' complete filmographies, getting to the point where they were given free rein to pursue a passion project. Lori also discusses a recent talk she gave at the Birmingham Centre for Media and Cultural Research as part of a research seminar on Podcasting, Discoverability, and Listener engagement. You can listen to the full seminar here. Terry also recommends The Skewer a Charlie Brooker-esque satirical comedy show with great sound production, and The Offensive, a Mockumentary series like The Office or The Thick of It in tone, but focusing on a fictional premier league football team. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/podcaststudiespodcast/message
Dr. Barna explains that we all have an internal worldview CPU. Also if you were to die today, do you know where you would go for eternity? What is the cause of such a huge trend away from righteous Christian generation in the US and is their anything you can do to stand in the gap? George Barna has insights. Get free alerts at http://PrayInJesusName.org (c) 2021, Chaplain Gordon James Klingenschmitt, PhD. Airs on NRB TV, Direct TV Ch.378, Roku, AppleTV, Amazon FireTV, AndroidTV, GoogleTV, Smart TV, iTunes and www.PrayInJesusName.org
George Barna, who serves as Director of Research at the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University, discussed more information from the American Worldview Inventory, categorizing Christians into five different groups and examining their beliefs and how they conform to Scripture. You can find out more online at culturalresearchcenter.com.
Summary: In this episode, our host Adrian Ellis speaks with Sunil Iyengar, Director of Research and Analysis at the National Endowment for the Arts in the US, about the increasing global demand for research, information and statistics to demonstrate the value of the arts. They also discuss the need for more longitudinal and qualitative research, especially community-based participatory studies. Thereafter, Adrian is joined by fellow host Criena Gehrke to discuss key takeaways. They concur on the importance of meaningful qualitative research, especially collaborative and cross-sectoral projects. DOWNLOAD TRANSCRIPTReferences: National Endowment for the Arts Arts and Cultural Production Satellite Account NEA Research Labs Artists' Use of Technology as a Creative Medium The Diversity of Performing Arts Audiences: Weighing Organizational Factors and Business Decisions National Endowment for the Arts Research Agenda: FY 2017‐2021 Bio: Sunil Iyengar is the Director of Research and Analysis at the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), which is an independent federal agency whose funding and support gives Americans the opportunity to participate in the arts, exercise their imaginations, and develop their creative capacities. Under his leadership, the NEA has produced dozens of research reports, hosted periodic research events and webinars, led strategic plan development for the agency, and established research and data partnerships with the U.S Census Bureau and the Bureau of Economic Analysis. His office also conducts program evaluations and performance measurement for the Arts Endowment. Working with his team, Iyengar has created and pursued a long-term research agenda (based partly on an arts “system map” his office helped to design), founded a national data repository for the arts, and launched two awards programs for arts researchers, including the NEA Research Labs initiative. He chairs a federal Interagency Task Force on the Arts and Human Development. For nearly a decade, he has contributed a monthly research post (titled “Taking Note”) to the agency's official blog. Prior to joining the agency as research director, Iyengar worked as a reporter, managing editor, and senior editor for a host of news publications covering the biomedical research, medical device, and pharmaceutical industries. He writes poems, book reviews, and literary essays. Iyengar has a BA in English from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
*** Support Talk Eastern Europe. Become a Patron at www.patreon.com/TalkEasternEurope In this special episode of Talk Eastern Europe, Adam and Maciek have a conversation with Maria Kobielska, a memory scholar and assistant professor at the Department of Anthropology of Literature and Cultural Research at the Jagiellonian Univeristy in Kraków Poland. She is also the co-founder of the Research Center for Memory Cultures at the University.This episode is being produced within the framework of the project titled “Contested Histories Onsite”, a project which aims to place Europeans in discussions and debates on multiple historical perspectives and to activate citizens in public involvement of memory-constructions. As part of the EU's Europe for Citizens programme, the project's aspiration is rooted in a shared conviction that raising critical questions about the past is fundamental for citizens to develop a critical attitude towards the narratives that are competing with each other in contemporary politics.For more information on the project visit:-Contested Histories Onsite: https://contestedhistories.org/onsite/-Memory Studies Association: https://www.memorystudiesassociation.org/contested-histories-onsite/-EuroClio: https://www.euroclio.eu/project/contested-histories/Visit the Warsaw Uprising Museum Online: https://www.1944.pl/en/article/the-warsaw-rising-museum,4516.html>>> Talk Eastern Europe is a member of the EuroPod network. Check it out here: https://www.bullemedia.eu/europod >>> Join us on Facebook: www.facebook.com/groups/talkeasterneurope
It may be 2021 but the 2020 Olympics are only just about to get underway. Tokyo has been a saga, with spectators banned from attending due to COVID-19 outbreaks and calls for the event to be cancelled. With Brisbane working hard to get a guernsey and host the 2032 Olympics, we're asking: are the Olympics fit enough to go the distance?Guests:David Rowe, Emeritus Professor of Cultural Research, Institute for Culture and Society at WSU.Tim Harcourt, Chief Economist with the Institute of Public Policy and Governance at UTS.
Dr. Barna is the founder of The Barna Group, a market research firm specializing in studying the religious beliefs and behavior of Americans, and the intersection of faith and culture. From 2013 - 2018 he served as the Executive Director of the American Culture & Faith Institute, the research division of United in Purpose. In 2019 he became a professor at Arizona Christian University in Phoenix, Arizona, where he also started the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University. He is also the Senior Research Fellow for Christian Ethics and Biblical Worldview at Family Research Council. This program is underwritten by the Alliance for Shared Health. Check out how you can cut your health insurance premiums by 40-60% by joining a health sharing alliance. ASH is that option!! Learn more... (http://www.ashcommunity.org/Stacy-on-the-right/) Download our latest PDF Guide at: GUIDE: Talking to your high schoolers about politics!! (https://familyvisionmedia.org/guide) Thank you for listening!! We are live Monday through Friday from 9p to midnight eastern on SiriusXM the Patriot channel 125!!! Donate to support the show here: paypal.me/stacyontheright Or join our Patreon: patreon.com/stacyontheright Thanks and God Bless ya!! -- Spiritual Encouragement -- My son, do not forget my teaching, but keep my commands in your heart, for they will prolong your life many years and bring you prosperity. Proverbs 3:1-2 -- Stacy's Stash! -- For links to the articles and material referenced in this week's episode check out this week's page from our podcast dashboard! -- Get More Stacy -- Stacy's Blog (http://www.stacyontheright.com) Watch the show live, download previous episodes, and more Stacy! Contact Stacy stacy [at] stacyontheright.com -- Connect with Stacy -- Follow Stacy on Twitter (https://twitter.com/stacyontheright) Follow Stacy on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/stacyontheright971/)
Dr. Barna is the founder of The Barna Group, a market research firm specializing in studying the religious beliefs and behavior of Americans, and the intersection of faith and culture. From 2013 - 2018 he served as the Executive Director of the American Culture & Faith Institute, the research division of United in Purpose. In 2019 he became a professor at Arizona Christian University in Phoenix, Arizona, where he also started the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University. He is also the Senior Research Fellow for Christian Ethics and Biblical Worldview at Family Research Council. This program is underwritten by the Alliance for Shared Health. Check out how you can cut your health insurance premiums by 40-60% by joining a health sharing alliance. ASH is that option!! Learn more... (http://www.ashcommunity.org/Stacy-on-the-right/) Download our latest PDF Guide at: GUIDE: Talking to your high schoolers about politics!! (https://familyvisionmedia.org/guide) Thank you for listening!! We are live Monday through Friday from 9p to midnight eastern on SiriusXM the Patriot channel 125!!! Donate to support the show here: paypal.me/stacyontheright Or join our Patreon: patreon.com/stacyontheright Thanks and God Bless ya!! -- Spiritual Encouragement -- My son, do not forget my teaching, but keep my commands in your heart, for they will prolong your life many years and bring you prosperity. Proverbs 3:1-2 -- Stacy's Stash! -- For links to the articles and material referenced in this week's episode check out this week's page from our podcast dashboard! -- Get More Stacy -- Stacy's Blog (http://www.stacyontheright.com) Watch the show live, download previous episodes, and more Stacy! Contact Stacy stacy [at] stacyontheright.com -- Connect with Stacy -- Follow Stacy on Twitter (https://twitter.com/stacyontheright) Follow Stacy on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/stacyontheright971/)
Amid xenophobic challenges to America's core value of welcoming the tired and the poor, Irina Aristarkhova calls for new forms of hospitality in her engagement with the works of eight international artists. In ARRESTED WELCOME, the first monograph on hospitality in contemporary art, she employs a feminist perspective and asks who, how, and what determines who is worthy of welcome. With a focus on lessons that contemporary artists teach about the potential of hospitality, Aristarkhova looks at Linda Hattendorf's documentary The Cats of Mirikitani; the Serbian-born installation and performance artist Ana Prvački's project The Greeting Committee Reports . . . ; American artist Faith Wilding's performance Waiting; Taiwanese American artist Lee Mingwei's aesthetics of hospitality; American bioartist Kathy High's project Embracing Animal; Mithu Sen's artworks that explore questions of radical hospitality and crossing borders; Pippa Bacca and Silvia Moro's art project Brides on Tour; and Ken Aptekar's exhibition Neighbours in Lübeck, Germany. Aristarkhova is professor at the Penny W. Stamps School of Art & Design, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. She is author of Arrested Welcome: Hospitality in Contemporary Art and Hospitality of the Matrix: Philosophy, Biomedicine, and Culture. She is joined today by Jorge Lucero, an artist born, raised and educated in Chicago. He is chair and associate professor of art education at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Lucero's books include Mere and Easy: Collage as a Critical Practice in Pedagogy, Teacher as Artist-in-Residence: The Most Radical Form of Expression to Ever Exist, and the forthcoming What Happens at the Intersection of Conceptual Art and Teaching?. Lucero is coeditor of the international journal Visual Arts Research and sits on the editorial boards for the Journal of Social Theory and Art Education, the Journal of Cultural Research in Art Education, and the Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy. This conversation was recorded in February 2021. More about ARRESTED WELCOME: z.umn.edu/arrestedwelcome Irina Aristarkhova: https://stamps.umich.edu/people/detail/irina_aristarkhova Jorge Lucero: www.jorgelucero.com An open-access edition of ARRESTED WELCOME is available at https://manifold.umn.edu/projects/arrested-welcome.
Tuesday, April 6, 2021 Today’s show is hosted by Kerby Anderson. He has two great guests today! For his first guest, Kerby welcomes back Doug Cobb. Doug will share information about his new book: And Then The End Will Come. Kerby’s other guest is Len Munsil. Dr. Munsil will talk about Arizona Christian University and the Cultural Research […]
Tyson E. Lewis is a professor of art education in the College of Visual Arts and Design at the University of North Texas. His research interests include educational philosophy, critical theory, phenomenological research methods, and aesthetics. He is the author of Education Out of Bounds: Rethinking Imagination in a Posthuman Age (2010), The Aesthetics of Education: Theatre, Curiosity, and Politics in the Work of Jacques Rancière and Paulo Freire (2012), On Study: Giorgio Agamben and Educational Potentiality (2013), Inoperative Learning: A Radical Rewriting of Educational Potentialities (2017), and Walter Benjamin's Anti-Fascist Education: From Riddles to Radio (2020). Links to Tyson's Work:Studio-D Project. https://onstead.cvad.unt.edu/studio-d Lewis T. and Kraehe, A. (2020). Rise: Emergent Strategies for Reclaiming Joy and Agency Against Neofascist and White Supremacist Assaultive Speech. Journal of Cultural Research in Art Education. Volume 37. https://jcrae.art.arizona.edu/index.php/jcrae/article/view/161 Lewis, T. (2020). Walter Benjamin's Anti-Fascist Education: From Riddles to Radio. New York: SUNY Press. http://www.sunypress.edu/p-6842-walter-benjamins-antifascist-ed.aspx Lewis, T. (2017). Inoperative Learning: A Radical Rewriting of Educational Potentialities. New York: Routledge. https://www.routledge.com/Inoperative-Learning-A-Radical-Rewriting-of-Educational-Potentialities/Lewis/p/book/9780367363260Lewis T. and Valk, S. (2020). Educational realism: Defining Exopedagogy as the Choreography of Swarm Intelligence. Educational Philosophy and Theory. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00131857.2020.1803831
We round out Women's History Month by speaking with author and academic Christine Feldman-Barrett, author of the new book, A Women's History of the Beatles. American scholar Christine Feldman-Barrett is a Senior Lecturer in sociology at Griffith University, in Brisbane, Australia, and is a member of the Griffith Centre for Social and Cultural Research. A Women’s History of the Beatles brings a refreshing new perspective to our knowledge of Beatles history, chronicling not only the impact of women on the Beatles, but also how the band has influenced and inspired women for three generations and counting. --------------------- +Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter for photos, videos, and more from this episode & past episodes — we’re @bcthebeatles everywhere. +Subscribe to BC the Beatles on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you’re listening now. +Contact us at bcthebeatles@gmail.com.
Funerals in Australia are changing. The death rituals of past generations aren't necessarily the right fit for people dying today, or for those of us whose deaths are hopefully further away. Today on The Signal, we hear about the trends, and about the funerals of the future. From body-composting to bushland burials, water-based cremations and funerals without a ceremony at all, what are the options? And if you're relatively fit and healthy today, how much forward planning can you do? Featured: Dr Margaret Gibson, Senior Lecturer, Griffith Centre for Social and Cultural Research, Brisbane Amy Sagar, General Manager, Tender Funerals Philip Shelley, CEO, Canberra Cemeteries Michelle Dariol, Canberra Cemeteries
Funerals in Australia are changing. The death rituals of past generations aren't necessarily the right fit for people dying today, or for those of us whose deaths are hopefully further away. Today on The Signal, we hear about the trends, and about the funerals of the future. From body-composting to bushland burials, water-based cremations and funerals without a ceremony at all, what are the options? And if you're relatively fit and healthy today, how much forward planning can you do? Featured: Dr Margaret Gibson, Senior Lecturer, Griffith Centre for Social and Cultural Research, Brisbane Amy Sagar, General Manager, Tender Funerals Philip Shelley, CEO, Canberra Cemeteries Michelle Dariol, Canberra Cemeteries
Funerals in Australia are changing. The death rituals of past generations aren't necessarily the right fit for people dying today, or for those of us whose deaths are hopefully further away. Today on The Signal, we hear about the trends, and about the funerals of the future. From body-composting to bushland burials, water-based cremations and funerals without a ceremony at all, what are the options? And if you're relatively fit and healthy today, how much forward planning can you do? Featured: Dr Margaret Gibson, Senior Lecturer, Griffith Centre for Social and Cultural Research, Brisbane Amy Sagar, General Manager, Tender Funerals Philip Shelley, CEO, Canberra Cemeteries Michelle Dariol, Canberra Cemeteries
The intent of politically correct language is to avoid the potential of offending those who identify with or are part of a particular group. The intent of being politically correct is meant to be a positive step in building good relationships with others but as our special guest Karen Stollznow writes in her article Why Do We Hate Politically Correct Language, “One of the problems of politically correct language seems to be that it is usually created by outsiders, not by the people to whom the language refers”. Join us this week as we explore the virtues of politically correct language with Karen Stollznow. Dr. Stollznow is an Australian-American linguist and author. She is a Researcher at the Griffith Centre for Social and Cultural Research and was formerly a Researcher at the University of California, Berkeley. Her books include On The Offensive: Prejudice in Language Past and Present; Language Myths, Mysteries and Magic; Would You Believe It? and the best-seller God Bless America. Karen is a host of the popular science podcast Monster Talk. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/satisfactionist/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/satisfactionist/support
When the pandemic subsides, we're facing another global crisis - climate change. Warming Up is a recently launched project that aims to link the unique position of Australia's community radio sector with communication about climate change. Kerrie Foxwell Norton and Bridget Backhaus, two of the project's key organizers, both from Griffith University's Centre for Social and Cultural Research, talk about the innovative role local community radio takes in generating conversations and guiding communities through the perils and challenges of climate change.
Changes are afoot in Downing Street. How significant is the departure of advisor Dominic Cummings? We hear from Conservative MP Michael Fabricant and Sian Jones, who used to be an advisor to former Chancellor Phillip Hammond. A grim milestone has been passed. The number of people who have died with Coronavirus has now exceeded 50,000 in Britain. We speak to a former public health director and author Professor John Ashton and ask him if the early news of vaccines gives us grounds for hope. Other guests include philosopher, cultural commentator and author of 'Learning from the Germans: Race and the Memory of Evil' Susan Neiman, and Director of the Erasmus Forum for Historical and Cultural Research and author of 'Charlemagne, Emperor of the West', and writer and Reader in Early Modern History at Cardiff University, Dr Lloyd Bowen.
Preaching for the Twenty-fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time, Jessie Bazan offers a reflection on the familiar parable of the workers in the vineyard: "Our God is a God of infinite possibilities, whose ways are high above the human ways to which we’ve grown accustomed. Our God cannot be tamed within the made-up constructs of in or out, worthy or unworthy, last or first. Our God is near to all who call upon the divine name in truth, no matter if we got to work at the crack of dawn or right before quitting time." Jessie Bazan is a theologian and writer. She edited and co-authored the book, Dear Joan Chittister: Conversations with Women in the Church, released in September 2019 with Twenty-Third Publications. Jessie also serves as the program associate for the Collegeville Institute for Ecumenical and Cultural Research. She earned her Masters of Divinity degree at the Saint John's School of Theology and Seminary in Collegeville, Minnesota and Bachelor of Arts from Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Visit www.catholicwomenpreach.org/preaching/09202020 to learn more about Jessie, to view her video or read her preaching text, and for more preaching from Catholic women.
In the Music Real E123, I catch up with Today I chat with Music Researcher, Dr. Ben Green is a cultural sociologist with interests in popular music and youth studies. Ben is an adjunct research fellow at the Griffith Center for Social and Cultural Research and a sessional academic at Griffith University. In affiliation with the Regional Music Research Group, he has undertaken industry and audience research in live music scenes, with policy impact including the City of Gold Coast's Live Music Action Plan 2019–2023. Other work explores memory, affective belonging, and cultural change in music scenes based on ethnographic research in Brisbane. Ben introduces his present research project called Young People Music Making and Wellbeing During a Public Health Crisis. Ben shares powerful insights into the data about our industry to give us a perspective when it comes time to plot out a pathway to recovery post COVID lockdown. Ben's current research project seeks to understand the importance of music-making for young people (between the ages of 18 – 35) as a source of well-being during the COVID-19 crisis. A key objective of the research will be to evaluate if music-making has contributed to young people's individual well-being (extending in this context to both physical and mental health) and their sense of connection with others. Given the unprecedented circumstances of the COVID-19 pandemic, the project offers a significant opportunity to examine and evaluate the importance of music-making for young people, in both an individual and collective sense, in a time of rapidly shifting and increasingly uncertain socio-economic conditions. https://themusicreal.com.au/2020/08/29/dr-ben-green-young-people-music-making-and-wellbeing-during-a-public-health-crisis/
How has social media changed inequality in the cultural industries? In The Politics of Expertise in Cultural Labour: Arts, Work and Inequalities (Rowman and Littlefield, 2020), Karen Patel, AHRC Leadership Fellow based at Birmingham Centre for Media and Cultural Research, Birmingham City University, considers the idea of expertise in cultural labour, examining how it is understood and displayed by cultural workers. The book draws on an extensive and deep engagement with key theories of work, expertise, and culture, as well as offering detailed empirical case studies of the everyday working lives of creative practitioners. Moreover, by analyzing the impact and importance of social media, the book offers an important insight into how inequality functions even where technology seems to offer an end to cultural hierarchy. The book is essential reading across the humanities and social sciences, as well as for anyone interested in contemporary culture. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/sociology
How has social media changed inequality in the cultural industries? In The Politics of Expertise in Cultural Labour: Arts, Work and Inequalities (Rowman and Littlefield, 2020), Karen Patel, AHRC Leadership Fellow based at Birmingham Centre for Media and Cultural Research, Birmingham City University, considers the idea of expertise in cultural labour, examining how it is understood and displayed by cultural workers. The book draws on an extensive and deep engagement with key theories of work, expertise, and culture, as well as offering detailed empirical case studies of the everyday working lives of creative practitioners. Moreover, by analyzing the impact and importance of social media, the book offers an important insight into how inequality functions even where technology seems to offer an end to cultural hierarchy. The book is essential reading across the humanities and social sciences, as well as for anyone interested in contemporary culture. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
How has social media changed inequality in the cultural industries? In The Politics of Expertise in Cultural Labour: Arts, Work and Inequalities (Rowman and Littlefield, 2020), Karen Patel, AHRC Leadership Fellow based at Birmingham Centre for Media and Cultural Research, Birmingham City University, considers the idea of expertise in cultural labour, examining how it is understood and displayed by cultural workers. The book draws on an extensive and deep engagement with key theories of work, expertise, and culture, as well as offering detailed empirical case studies of the everyday working lives of creative practitioners. Moreover, by analyzing the impact and importance of social media, the book offers an important insight into how inequality functions even where technology seems to offer an end to cultural hierarchy. The book is essential reading across the humanities and social sciences, as well as for anyone interested in contemporary culture. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
How has social media changed inequality in the cultural industries? In The Politics of Expertise in Cultural Labour: Arts, Work and Inequalities (Rowman and Littlefield, 2020), Karen Patel, AHRC Leadership Fellow based at Birmingham Centre for Media and Cultural Research, Birmingham City University, considers the idea of expertise in cultural labour, examining how it is understood and displayed by cultural workers. The book draws on an extensive and deep engagement with key theories of work, expertise, and culture, as well as offering detailed empirical case studies of the everyday working lives of creative practitioners. Moreover, by analyzing the impact and importance of social media, the book offers an important insight into how inequality functions even where technology seems to offer an end to cultural hierarchy. The book is essential reading across the humanities and social sciences, as well as for anyone interested in contemporary culture. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
How has social media changed inequality in the cultural industries? In The Politics of Expertise in Cultural Labour: Arts, Work and Inequalities (Rowman and Littlefield, 2020), Karen Patel, AHRC Leadership Fellow based at Birmingham Centre for Media and Cultural Research, Birmingham City University, considers the idea of expertise in cultural labour, examining how it is understood and displayed by cultural workers. The book draws on an extensive and deep engagement with key theories of work, expertise, and culture, as well as offering detailed empirical case studies of the everyday working lives of creative practitioners. Moreover, by analyzing the impact and importance of social media, the book offers an important insight into how inequality functions even where technology seems to offer an end to cultural hierarchy. The book is essential reading across the humanities and social sciences, as well as for anyone interested in contemporary culture. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
How has social media changed inequality in the cultural industries? In The Politics of Expertise in Cultural Labour: Arts, Work and Inequalities (Rowman and Littlefield, 2020), Karen Patel, AHRC Leadership Fellow based at Birmingham Centre for Media and Cultural Research, Birmingham City University, considers the idea of expertise in cultural labour, examining how it is understood and displayed by cultural workers. The book draws on an extensive and deep engagement with key theories of work, expertise, and culture, as well as offering detailed empirical case studies of the everyday working lives of creative practitioners. Moreover, by analyzing the impact and importance of social media, the book offers an important insight into how inequality functions even where technology seems to offer an end to cultural hierarchy. The book is essential reading across the humanities and social sciences, as well as for anyone interested in contemporary culture. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
What does religion look like at the Smithsonian? How do we hold on to authenticity and reverence in a museum context? Jack speaks with Dr. Olivia Cadaval, the recently retired curator and chair of Cultural Research and Education at the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage; and Rev. Teddy R. Reeves, the specialist of religion at the Smithsonian National Museum of African-American History and Culture. We discuss tensions and triumphs presenting Latino religious rituals at the annual folk festival, NMAAHC's outstanding gOD-Talk series, and building a legacy for a new generation of researchers and curators. More info: Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage https://folklife.si.edu/ Folklife Festival https://festival.si.edu/ #gOD-Talk Series https://nmaahc.si.edu/god-talk-black-millennials-and-faith-conversation Teddy Reeves https://www.teddyrreeves.com/ +++ Leave a Review! bit.ly/interfaithish Social: www.instagram.com/interfaithish/ www.facebook.com/interfaithish/ twitter.com/interfaithish Email: interfaithish@gmail.com Voicemail: 202-599-2953
Dr. Jacob W. Glazier has a Ph.D. in Psychology: Consciousness and Society from the University of West Georgia. He has his Master of Science in Education in Clinical Mental Health Counseling degree from Western Illinois University and a Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy and Psychology degree from Augustana College. Currently an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Positive Human Development and Social Change at Life University and an online Adjunct Professor in the Department of Applied Psychology at New York University – Steinhardt, Dr. Glazier's research tends towards a transdisciplinary approach via theoretical and philosophical models and includes subjects like critical theory, embodiment, and desire as well as their relation to praxis and clinical practice. He provides therapy services online for BetterHelp and its associated sites as a licensed professional counselor. His work has been published in academic journals that include Psychoanalysis, Culture & Society, Subjectivity, Mortality, Critical Horizons, Rhizomes, Journal for Cultural Research, and others. He is under contract with Bloomsbury Publishing for a forthcoming book entitled, Arts of Subjectivity: A New Animism for the Post-Media Era. Arts of Subjectivity Publisher Webpage: https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/arts-of-subjectivity-a-new-animism-for-the-post-media-era-9781350085824/ Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/author/jacobglazier Academia Website: http://jacobglazier.academia.edu Rendering Unconscious Podcast is hosted by psychoanalyst Dr. Vanessa Sinclair, who interviews psychoanalysts, psychologists, scholars, creative arts therapists, writers, poets, philosophers, artists & other intellectuals about their process, world events, the current state of mental health care, politics, culture, the arts & more. Episodes are also created from lectures given at various international conferences. http://www.drvanessasinclair.net Rendering Unconscious Podcast can be found at Spotify, iTunes, YouTube, Vimeo... Please visit the www.renderingunconscious.org/about for links to all of these sites. Rendering Unconscious is also a book! Rendering Unconscious: Psychoanalytic Perspectives, Politics and Poetry (Trapart, 2019) www.trapart.net Please support the podcast at www.patreon.com/vanessa23carl For more information visit: www.trapart.net www.drvanessasinclair.net www.renderingunconscious.org www.dasunbehagen.org The track at the end of the episode is “The Scarlet Woman Remix”. Words by Vanessa Sinclair. Music by Xambuca. From the album Message 23: https://vanessasinclair.bandcamp.com Released by Highbrow Lowlife: https://highbrowlowlife.bandcamp.com Photo of Dr. Jacob Glazier
UNICEF's 10-part special podcast series on "The Future of Childhood" - to mark the 30th anniversary of the Convention on the Rights of the Child. In this episode, Sarah Crowe, speaks to Amanda Third talks on indigenous communities online. Associate Professor Amanda Third is Principal Research Fellow in Digital Social and Cultural Research in the Institute for Culture and Society. Her research focuses on the socio-cultural dimensions of young people's technology use, with particular emphases on children's rights in the digital age, the intergenerational dynamics shaping technology practice, and vulnerable young people's technological engagements.
In this episode we bring to you a conversation between Radhika Gajjala and Dr Karen Patel, AHRC Leadership Fellow,Birmingham Centre for Media and Cultural Research. Thankyou to Ms. Morgan Durfee of School of Media and Communication, Bowling Green State University for her help with editing the podcast.
Preaching for All Saints Day, Jessie Bazan offers a reflection which illuminates the Beatitudes today: "Holy people, past and present, bear witness to what WILL happen by living fully into what IS happening." Jessie Bazan is a theologian and writer. She edited and co-authored the book, Dear Joan Chittister: Conversations with Women in the Church, released in September 2019 with Twenty-Third Publications. Jessie also serves as the program associate for the Collegeville Institute for Ecumenical and Cultural Research. Visit www.catholicwomenpreach.org/preaching/11012019 to learn more about Jessie, to read her preaching text, and for more preaching from Catholic women.
In a time of increased xenophobia, stopping the boats, and more overt and vocal racism, what’s the role of community based multicultural broadcasting in Australia? Susan Forde is professor of journalism at Griffith University and the director of that university’s Centre for Social and Cultural Research. In the middle of doing in-depth research into the ways that ethnic community radio plays a key part in meeting and servicing the needs of diverse migrant and refugee communities all across the country, in this edition of Communication Mixdown, she takes up some of the answers to that question.
Krista Tippett Speaking of Faith A journalist and former diplomat, Krista Tippett came up with the idea for her book and radio show Speaking of Faith while consulting for the internationally renowned Institute for Ecumenical and Cultural Research at Saint John’s Abbey and University in Collegeville, Minnesota. She has hosted and produced the program since the Speaking of Faith project began as an occasional feature in 2000, before taking on its current form as a national weekly program in 2003. Join Michael Lerner in conversation with Krista about her work and her conversations about faith, meaning, and religion. Krista Tippett Krista is a graduate of Yale Divinity School and a former Fulbright Scholar. She has reported and written for The New York Times, Newsweek, the BBC, and other international news organizations. Tippett also served as special assistant to the U.S. ambassador to West Germany. In 2007, Viking published her first book, Speaking of Faith—Why Religion Matters, and How to Talk About It. Of that book and her program, journalist and author Yossi Klein Halevi has written, “there is no more trustworthy guide to the challenges of faith in a dangerous world than Krista Tippett.” Find out more about The New School at tns.commonweal.org.