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This episode begins with a reflection on this podcast project reaching its 50th episode. I share some additional background and future plans, including some of the symbolism behind the WAI logo. This episode introduces some ideas from the article, Indigeneity as a Post-Apocalyptic Genealogical Metaphor, which explores the metaphysics of indigeneity - Indigenous metaphysics through a global Indigenous consciousness. In conclusion, a diverse range of Indigenous experiences are presented in the constellation of Indigeneities identified as Elder/Local, Continental/Regional, Diasporic, Creole, Born-Again, Global/Trans-Indigenous, which are described in the artice, A Wīnak Perspective on Cosmovisíon Maya and Eco-Justice Education. Terms: Yamanik (Green Stone/Jade in K'iche'-Maya), Hoa/Soa (Partner/Companion – Pair in lea faka-Tonga and gagana Sāmoa). References mentioned or inspirational to this episode: ‘Tongan Hoa: Inseparable yet indispensable pairs/binaries', by Lear, Māhina-Tuai, Vaka, Ka'ili, & Māhina Pasifika Webinar Series: Signature Event featuring Dr. Tēvita O. Ka'ili The Polynesian Iconoclasm by Jeffrey Sissons Indigenous science (fiction) for the Anthropocene: Ancestral dystopias and fantasies of climate change crises by Kyle P. Whyte Naming, A Coming Home: Latinidad and Indigeneity in the Settler Colony by Flori Boj Lopez The Apocalypse of Settler Colonialism: The Roots of Slavery, White Supremacy, and Capitalism in Seventeenth-Century North America and the Caribbean by Gerald Horne The Black Shoals: Offshore Formations of Black and Native Studies by Tiffany Lethabo King The University and the Undercommons: Seven Theses by Fred Moten and Stefano Harney The Undercommons: Fugitive Planning & Black Study by Stefano Harney and Fred Moten The Empty Wagon: Zionism's journey from identity crisis to identity theft by Rabbi Yaakov Shapiro The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness by Paul Gilroy Creole Indigeneity: Between Myth and Nation in the Caribbean by Shona N. Jackson Sovereign Embodiment: Native Hawaiians and Expressions of Diasporic Kuleana by Kēhaulani Vaughn Trans-Indigenous: Methodologies for Global Native Literary Studies by Chadwick Allen
On this episode I'm joined by Ekow Eshun. Ekow Eshun is a writer, editor and curator, known for his work in arts, culture, and identity. In the episode we discuss his latest exhibition, The Time Is Always Now: Artists Reframe the Black Figure, on view through February 9 at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The show brings together over 60 contemporary works that unfold around three core themes: Double Consciousness, Past and Presence and Aliveness. As the former Director of the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) in London, he played a significant role in shaping the institution's programming. Image Credit: Zeinab Batchelor Contributing Audio Credit: Alan Mckinney
Sign up for Investfest Raffle and Chance to Meet with 19Keys today https://highlvl.19keys.com/investfest-raffleAbout '19 Minutes':Intense, Focused Dialogues: Straying from the typical long-form format, '19 Minutes' is about packing a punch. Each episode, ranging from a sharp 45 minutes to an impactful 2-hour session, is a deep dive into a world of ideas.Exclusive Access, Unseen Angles: From studios to personal spaces, '19 Minutes' takes you behind the scenes. It's your VIP pass to the unseen aspects of our guests' lives.Strategic Release, Vast Reach: Premiering on Keys TV and then hitting 19Keys' YouTube channel, the show ensures widespread viewership. Episodes drop in gripping 19-minute segments, followed by full-length releases for the binge-watchers.As a visionary and a pioneer, 19Keys taps into a range of topics from tech to wellness. His expertise and charismatic hosting make each episode not just a conversation, but a masterclass.Featured Guests:Hit-Boy & Big Hit, Memphis Depay, Keenan Beasley, Stephan Speaks, Bobby Price, Loon, Mr Grateful, Dame Dash, Mike Rashid, Aristotle Investments, and many more.'19 Minutes' – where every minute counts.In this episode of "19Minutes with 19Keys," 19Keys and Rashad Bilal engage in a deep and insightful conversation about the complexities of consciousness and identity within the Black community. They delve into the concept of double and triple consciousness, particularly how Black individuals navigate their identities within a predominantly white society while also dealing with internal community perceptions. The discussion highlights the challenges and strategies for maintaining authenticity and integrity in the face of societal pressures and expectations.The conversation also explores the idea of leadership and responsibility within the community. Rashad Bilal shares his experiences as a financial planner and co-founder of a major financial literacy platform, emphasizing the importance of having a pure heart and genuine intentions. They discuss the sacrifices required to achieve success, the importance of self-knowledge, and the need for collective upliftment. The episode underscores the critical role of personal and community evolution in overcoming systemic challenges and fostering lasting change.19KEYS Bio:19Keys is a visionary thinker and motivational speaker who empowers people to unlock their greatest potential. Visit www.19Keys.com for more information.*Special EYL Viewer Promotion*Text “HLC“ to 2012283670Tap in on all platforms:Youtube:https://www.youtube.com/c/19keysTwitter:https://twitter.com/19keys_Instagram:www.instagram.com/19_keys/TikTok:https://www.tiktok.com/@19keys?Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/19keys/messageFollow his links below to learn more:LinkTreehttps://linktr.ee/19_keys Crownz 19 Linkhttps://crownz19.com/ GoldeWater Linkhttps://goldewater.com/ Book linkhttps://crownz19.com/products/paradigm-keys-solution-based-mind-reprogramming-e-bookAffiliate Links:(Get Your Podcast Setup Gear) AMAZON LINK https://www.amazon.com/shop/b_amechi (Get youtube support for thumbnails, timestamps and more with Taja AI https://www.taja.ai/?via=amechi#FinancialHealthEducation #WealthManagement #PersonalFinance #BlackFinancialEmpowerment #TransformativeFinancialEducationSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/19keys/exclusive-contentAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Decolonial thinker Professor Paul Gilroy joins EMPIRE LINES live in Plymouth, to chart thirty years since the publication of The Black Atlantic, his influential book about race, nationalism, and the formation of a transoceanic, diasporic culture, of African, American, British, and Caribbean heritages. Published in 1993, Paul Gilroy's The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness explores the interconnectedness of Black diasporas and communities across Western/Europe. He argues that the experience of slavery and colonisation, racism and global migration has shaped a unique Black cultural identity that transcends national borders. By examining the cultural contributions of Black individuals in music, literature, and art, Paul suggests that the Black Atlantic remains a site of resistance and creativity. Highlighting the plural and complex experiences of Black people throughout history and today, he challenges the notion of a singular, essential Black identity. We consider some of the transdisciplinary artist-activist-academics referenced in his texts, including W.E.B. Du Bois, Stuart Hall, and James Baldwin, to more contemporary figures, like Nadia Cattouse, bell hooks, and June Jordan, and Angeline Morrison. Plus, Paul talks about his early interests in music journalism, research into Black jazz and blues music, as well as British folk and country songs - and even Eminem. We consider Paul's engagements with Critical Race Theory (CRT), and Cultural Studies in Birmingham in the Midlands, and how his practice challenges ideas of Black nationalism, Afro-centrism, and political Blackness. We discuss too his ideas about afro-pessimism and planetary humanism, and how capitalism, militarism, and the environment has changed over the last thirty years. A self-described ‘child of Rachel Carson', he details his support for Extinction Rebellion, and the obligation of older generations to find hope in an era of climate and ecological crises. Finally, Paul describes his ‘Creole upbringing' in north London, connecting with his Guyanese heritage in the multicultural, cosmopolitan city, and how his mixed parentage shaped his relationship with rural landscapes, including the south-west of England, from where we speak. This episode was recorded live at the Black Atlantic Symposium in Plymouth - a series of talks and live performances, celebrating the 30th anniversary of Paul Gilroy's formative text - in November 2023: eventbrite.co.uk/e/black-atlantic-tickets-750903260867?aff=oddtdtcreator For more, listen to Ashish Ghadiali on the exhibition Against Apartheid (2023): pod.link/1533637675/episode/146d4463adf0990219f1bf0480b816d3 For more about Life Between Islands: Caribbean-British Art 1950s – Now (2021-2022) at Tate Britain in London, read my article for Artmag: artmag.co.uk/the-caribbean-condensed-life-between-islands-at-the-tate-britain/ For more about Ingrid Pollard, hear the artist on Carbon Slowly Turning (2022) at the Turner Contemporary in Margate: pod.link/1533637675/episode/e00996c8caff991ad6da78b4d73da7e4 For more about the Quiltmakers of Gee's Bend, listen to Raina Lampkins-Felder, curator at the Souls Grown Deep Foundation and Royal Academy in London: https://pod.link/1533637675/episode/2cab2757a707f76d6b5e85dbe1b62993 WITH: Professor Paul Gilroy, sociologist, Founding Director of the Sarah Parker Remond Centre for the Study of Racism & Racialisation at University College London (UCL), and Co-Chair of the Black Atlantic Innovation Network (BAIN). He won the Holberg Prize in 2019. ART: ‘'The Black Atlantic, Paul Gilroy (1993-Now) (EMPIRE LINES Live in Plymouth, with Radical Ecology)' PRODUCER: Jelena Sofronijevic. Follow EMPIRE LINES on Instagram: instagram.com/empirelinespodcast And Twitter: twitter.com/jelsofron/status/1306563558063271936 Support EMPIRE LINES on Patreon: patreon.com/empirelines
“It really has to do with this ability to, to dream and to live unencumbered.” — Dr. Dwight RadcliffSeeing justice, equity, and social transformation through the lens of hip-hop culture and Christian faith, Rev. Dr. Dwight Radcliff offers a vision of freedom and unencumbered life for the future of the Black community to which we can all bear witness.Raising challenging questions about the meaning of thriving in a culture dominated by fear, he speaks in a prophetic voice, interweaving the powerful, compounding effects of the language of the Gospel and the language of hip-hop.As a cultural theologian, community leader, and pastor, one of Dwight's many gifts is presence—presence to emotion, to the realty of injustice, and to the complexities of thriving in the context of race and gender.He speaks about the power of purpose and calling in his life, pointing out the unique insight hip-hop, rap, and R&B music can offer the human experience. He calls us to be attuned to the whole reality of pain, suffering, trauma, and struggle when discussing psychological and spiritual health and thriving. And he bears witness to fear, anger, and grief—re-sensitizing us to our pain and vulnerability—speaking truth for the sake of beauty and justice.In this conversation, we discuss:Thriving as the ability to dream and live unencumbered, and the ways the Black church embodies that thrivingThe grievous reality of Black double-consciousness that results from systemic racismAnd his personal experience as a Black man todayMental health in the Black communityThe power of sanctified purposeHow hip-hop culture and music help us understand thriving at embodied, emotional, and familial levels, beyond the horizon of rational understandingAnd how the prophetic vision of hip hop operates in the same tradition of justice spelled out by the Gospel that Jesus taught and lived.Show NotesCheck out Rev. Dr. Dwight Radcliff's Hip Hop Playlist (Note: Explicit Content)What is it to live unencumbered?“Hip-hop culture keeps me in check. It reminds me that the church of Jesus Christ is also supposed to be a prophetic and subversive voice.”Hip-hop and the Black experienceIntroduction: Rev. Dr. Dwight A. RadcliffDwight Radcliff: What is thriving?“I think it really has to do with this ability to dream and to live unencumbered.”Fear and the experience of Black men“The American dream is not available to all equally.”“What is unencumbered life for Dwight?”W.E.B. Du Bois and Double ConsciousnessW.E.B. Du Bois's book, The Souls of Black Folk (Project Gutenberg)Double consciousness is “fatal to self-confidence,” producing “a peculiar wrenching of the soul, a peculiar sense of doubt and bewilderment.”“I don't get to just be me.”Dr. John M. Perkins“Where does our pain come from? Why are you hurting? And I give you your pain and I say that you are hurting; and you give me my pain and we say that we are hurting.”Honest, vulnerable conversationsTrauma and inherited trauma“Why do we have to be Black?”“One of the things that I'm lamenting right now in our society is our inability to have honest conversations—our inability to say, ‘Hey, this happened, this was horrible.' There are ramifications and ripple effects of that. How do we address it, talk about it, and begin to take corrective action so that all of our children can begin to dream and live unencumbered.”Where are honest conversations happening?“I might not change the world, but I'll damn sure inspire the mind that does.” (paraphrase of Tupac Shakur)Socioepigenetics: the impact of genetic inheritance for emotional trauma, depression, anxiety, and the effects of social injusticeMental health in the Black church and broader Black community, and the mistrust of mental health providersBarbara Holmes on Black contemplative practices and spiritualityHip-hop culture and expression of pain and sufferingDwight Radcliff's journey through hip-hopPentacostal Holiness church and seeing hip-hop as the devil.“You're more concerned with the curse words than the cursed worlds.”“I began to do a dangerous thing: I began to read the Bible.”James Cone, The Spirituals & the BluesWest African spirituality and “holding all things together”Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five, “The Message”“Don't push me, cuz I'm close to the edge / I'm trying not to lose my head”“It's like a jungle sometimes / It makes me wonder how I keep from going under”2Pac, “I Wonder If Heaven Got a Ghetto”C. Dolores Tucker, a Black congresswoman and critic of 2PacHip-Hop as a way of life, unencumbered and wholly oneselfJ. Kameron Carter on poesis and creativity“Poesis… making a haven in a ghetto.”“I am hip-hop.”Lament and Good NewsAbout Dwight RadcliffTheologian and pastor Rev. Dr. Dwight A. Radcliff Jr. is Academic Dean and director of the William E. Pannell Center for Black Church Studies and is Assistant Professor of Mission, Theology, and Culture at Fuller Theological Seminary. Prior to coming to Fuller, Dr. Radcliff taught at Vanguard University, Azusa Pacific University, and the Southern California School of Ministry.He has published in The Journal of Hip Hop Studies, and is a recipient of the Parish Pulpit Fellowship graduation prize and the Hooper/Keefe Preaching Award. He completed post-master's studies at the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas and the University of Oxford.He currently serves as senior pastor of The Message Center in Gardena, California, where he leads with his wife, DeShun Jones-Radcliff, who serves as the church's director of administration. He and his wife have two daughters. About the Thrive CenterLearn more at thethrivecenter.org.Follow us on Instagram @thrivecenterFollow us on X @thrivecenterFollow us on LinkedIn @thethrivecenter About Dr. Pam KingDr. Pam King is Executive Director the Thrive Center and is Peter L. Benson Professor of Applied Developmental Science at Fuller School of Psychology & Marriage and Family Therapy. Follow her @drpamking. About With & ForHost: Pam KingSenior Director and Producer: Jill WestbrookOperations Manager: Lauren KimSocial Media Graphic Designer: Wren JuergensenConsulting Producer: Evan RosaSpecial thanks to the team at Fuller Studio and the Fuller School of Psychology & Marriage and Family Therapy.
Double Consciousness, Piers Morgan, Condemnation, Racism, Whiteness, Self Determination, Capitalism, Liberation, Ethical Consumption, Edward Said, Decolonisation, Morality, Liberalism, Secularism, The West We touch on all these diverse topics with Dr. Yassir Morsi. Dr. Yassir Morsi's main area of research is the critical analysis of contemporary racism and Islamophobia. He is a lecturer at La Trobe University and also a Provisional Pyschologist at the Australian International Academy. Yassir has completed a PhD in Political Science and Islamic Studies at the University of Melbourne. Host: Tanzim Please email us your comments, feedback, and questions at: boysinthecave@gmail.com, and leave a review and 5-star rating on iTunes! Follow us on: Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/boysinthecave/ Instagram – @boysinthecave Twitter - @boysinthecave Become a Patreon today! https://www.patreon.com/boysinthecave --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The issue and need for racial diversity among police officers reflects an attempt to ease growing tensions that have emerged in the wake of racialized police violence and the Black Lives Matter movement. Underlying the question of whether officer racial diversity improves community-police relations is the question - How do Black Officers feel? How do they balance Blue Culture and Black Lives Matter? In this show, Sociologist and Professor, Dr. Kayla Preito-Hodge offers some answers. She draws upon recent findings from her important research “ Behind the Badge and the Veil: Black Police Officers in the Era of Black Lives Matter.” Her findings suggest that Black Officers possess a double consciousness that enables them to view and experience the world through both a radicalized and occupational lens. She is joined by Dr. Kalfani Turè, a black man, former police officer, and Senior Fellow in the Urban Ethnography Project at Yale Universities. Dr Ture will add a unique prospective on matters of race, place, and urban law enforcement. Listen in to a very important show.
The issue and need for racial diversity among police officers reflects an attempt to ease growing tensions that have emerged in the wake of racialized police violence and the Black Lives Matter movement. Underlying the question of whether officer racial diversity improves community-police relations is the question - How do Black Officers feel? How do they balance Blue Culture and Black Lives Matter? In this show, Sociologist and Professor, Dr. Kayla Preito-Hodge offers some answers. She draws upon recent findings from her important research “ Behind the Badge and the Veil: Black Police Officers in the Era of Black Lives Matter.” Her findings suggest that Black Officers possess a double consciousness that enables them to view and experience the world through both a radicalized and occupational lens. She is joined by Dr. Kalfani Turè, a black man, former police officer, and Senior Fellow in the Urban Ethnography Project at Yale Universities. Dr Ture will add a unique prospective on matters of race, place, and urban law enforcement. Listen in to a very important show.
Er gilt als einer der Vorläufer des Changüí und des Son Cubano, ist aber außerhalb Kubas kaum bekannt. In dieser Folge schauen wir uns daher einmal genau an, was der Nengón eigentlich ist, wie er klingt, was ihn auf einer instrumentalen und auf einer formalen Ebene auszeichnet und was das alles mit der heutigen Timba noch zu tun hat. Wir reden über “Guías” und “Reginas”, über “Coros” und “Estribillos”, über “Montuno” und Call & Response und vieles, vieles mehr.Musikbeispiele in dieser Folge:1, 2: Luis Torres Montejo, El Grupo Nengón del Cauto, “El Nengón”, 100 Sones Cubanos, Vol. 5, J&N Records 2010.3: La Familia Valera Miranda, Danilo Orozco, “Nengón para tí”, Antología integral del son (1983), Virgin Record 1999.4: Azúcar Negra, “La farándula me llama”, Bailar con tacones, Egrem 2013.5, 6: Poncho Sánchez, “Nengón”, Soul of the Conga, Concord Records 2000.7: Los Muñequitos de Matanzas, “Yo también soñé”, Rumba de corazón. 50 aniversario, Bis Music 2002Video-Empfehlungen:“Los 100 sones de Cuba (documental de Edesio Alejandro)”, Youtube: https://youtu.be/SIGGqhHef-E, insb. ab 15:40.“El Son Cubano en Washington, D.C., 1989: Con Compay Segundo”, Youtube: https://youtu.be/FEHSYoI0IJ0, insb. ab 2:20. Literaturempfehlungen:Gilroy, Paul, The Black Atlantic. Modernity and Double Consciousness, London/New York 1993.Orozco, Danilo, “Nexos globales desde la música cubana con rejuegos de Son y No son”, in: Boletín Música 38 (2014), S. 17-94.Perna, Vincenzo, Timba. The Sound of Cuban Crisis, Aldershot/Burlington 2005.Rodríguez Ruidíaz, Armando, Los géneros de la música popular cubana. Su origen y evolución, 2019.
Season 20 Episode 13 Listeners! Do not adjust your dials. The designers are upside down and inside out for the Avant Garde Challenge! Patricia is back in The Workroom to REFLECT on what rules even mean, the judges shoving around all the goal posts, and how Bishmina and Ramisha need their own spinoff. We love them. That's all. Join us! Special Links! This Week's Cheatsheet https://www.tumblr.com/theworkroompodcast/727666152399142912/ep184?source=share Patricia's exhibition doesn't have a link, but if you spot their work at Dulles Airport, let us know! Nayland's Fashion Collaboration with JCRT to Benefit Transgender Law Center https://www.jc-rt.com Silver Eye Center of Photography Exhibition: In Dreams I Walk With You https://silvereye.org/exhibitions/in-dreams-i-walk-with-you Souls of Black Folk by WEB DuBois (on Double Consciousness) https://www.gutenberg.org/files/408/408-h/408-h.htm We're On Patreon! www.patreon.com/theworkroompodcast Join us to support the podcast and get access to bonus episodes. Find The Workroom Podcast: The Workroom on Discord - A Little Project Runway Chat: https://discord.gg/xW7JpXKfx7 The Workroom on FB: facebook.com/theworkroompodcast The Workroom on IG: instagram.com/theworkroompodcast And, keep sending notes, gossip and hot takes to: intheworkroom@gmail.com Find Hernease: Website - herneasedavis.com Twitter — twitter.com/hernease IG - instagram.com/hernease Find Nayland: Website - naylandblake.net Blue Sky - Naylandblake.bsky.social Tumblr - tumblr.com/naylandblake Remember, Nayland is off Instagram! Find Patricia: Twitter - twitter.com/senseandsight IG - instagram.com/senseandsight Find Samilia: texstyleshop.square.site Listen to Linoleum Knife! https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/linoleum-knife/id403079737 Black Lives Matter Initiatives - blacklivesmatters.carrd.co Asian Americans Advancing Justice https://www.advancingjustice-aajc.org/get-involved thelovelandfoundation.org The donation helps to fund the initiatives of Therapy for Black Girls, National Queer & Trans Therapists of Color Network, Talkspace and Open Path Collective. Loveland Therapy Fund recipients will have access to a comprehensive list of mental health professionals across the country.
Season 20 Episode 11 We're ready to rant!! We are worked up in The Workroom! We are frustrated with a lot to say. Patricia is back to discuss just being yourself, Tresemme's hair miss, letting Rami LIVE and the relationship between the Double Bind and Double Consciousness. JOIN US!!!! This Week's Cheatsheet https://www.tumblr.com/theworkroompodcast/726398253652934656/ep182?source=share Patricia's exhibition doesn't have a link, but if you spot their work at Dulles Airport, let us know! The Souls of Black Folk by WEB DuBois (on Double Consciousness) https://www.gutenberg.org/files/408/408-h/408-h.htm Nayland's Fashion Collaboration with JCRT to Benefit Transgender Law Center https://www.jc-rt.com Hernease's Podcast Project with the Visual Studies Workshop https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/vsw-project-space-podcast/id1654594948 We're On Patreon! www.patreon.com/theworkroompodcast Join us to support the podcast and get access to bonus episodes. Find The Workroom Podcast: The Workroom on Discord - A Little Project Runway Chat: https://discord.gg/xW7JpXKfx7 The Workroom on FB: facebook.com/theworkroompodcast The Workroom on IG: instagram.com/theworkroompodcast And, keep sending notes, gossip and hot takes to: intheworkroom@gmail.com Find Hernease: Website - herneasedavis.com Twitter — twitter.com/hernease IG - instagram.com/hernease Find Nayland: Website - naylandblake.net Blue Sky - Naylandblake.bsky.social Tumblr - tumblr.com/naylandblake Remember, Nayland is off Instagram! Find Patricia: Twitter - twitter.com/senseandsight IG - instagram.com/senseandsight Find Samilia: texstyleshop.square.site Listen to Linoleum Knife! https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/linoleum-knife/id403079737 Black Lives Matter Initiatives - blacklivesmatters.carrd.co Asian Americans Advancing Justice https://www.advancingjustice-aajc.org/get-involved thelovelandfoundation.org The donation helps to fund the initiatives of Therapy for Black Girls, National Queer & Trans Therapists of Color Network, Talkspace and Open Path Collective. Loveland Therapy Fund recipients will have access to a comprehensive list of mental health professionals across the country.
Article referenced in the episode: https://visionmag.org/need-real-female-leadership/ Check out Franciska's new album: https://open.spotify.com/album/1dqLyjon9Fle1cETw3nPVk?si=BqKIvARLSRK9S1BeB93C_Q KOL ISHA About Our Guest: Sharona eshet-Kohen has spent several years developing a postcolonial approach to Jewish issues, with a special focus on applying transnational feminist theory to issues confronting Jewish women. Her doctoral studies at Ben-Gurion University focused on Marxist and Messianic ideologies within the Fighters for the Freedom of Israel (Leḥi) underground. While completing her Masters degree in theories of nationalism at UCLA, Sharona created the Doreinu program, aimed at facilitating deeper conversations for young professionals surrounding topics of Jewish identity and national consciousness. As an undergraduate student of economics and legal studies at UC Berkeley, she was a founder and president of Tikvah Students for Israel https://visionmag.org/author/sharona-e-k/ Would you like to be a SPONSOR? Reach out about new sponsorship opportunities for your brand & organizations - franciskakay@gmail.com Message Franciska to join the Whatsapp Discussion Group - franciskakay@gmail.com. Check out www.JewishCoffeeHouse.com for more Jewish Podcasts on our network.
Podcasts from the Unitarian Universalist Society of Oneonta, NY
How do we heal damage while making room for all? WEB DuBois and Goethe share this opinion. Universal dialectic.
The Modern Therapist's Survival Guide with Curt Widhalm and Katie Vernoy
What Therapists Should Know About Code-Switching: An Interview with Dr. Jameta Nicole Barlow Curt and Katie interview Dr. Jameta Nicole Barlow on code-switching. We explore what code-switching is, the mental health impacts of code-switching, and how therapists can support clients who code-switch. Transcripts for this episode will be available at mtsgpodcast.com! In this podcast episode, we talk about code-switching An important conversation about code-switching for therapists. What do we need to know and what can we do to support people who need to code switch? What is code-switching? Shifting how one speaks or behaves to fit into the current situation Often occurs with people who do not look like you or are culturally different from you Learning to operate differently in different spaces due to being judged based on appearance, behavior, and language Choosing which words to use, which has additional layers for multilingual folks Much deeper than just linguistic shifts Responding to the potential for violent harm when how you typically show up doesn't fit the current situation's prescribed norms The concept of “professionalism” and who set the standards Needing to push back on the norms What are the mental health effects of Code-switching? Anxiety and depression Not bringing full self into most spaces Hesitation, lack of learning and sharing Chronic health diseases connected to cortisol Identity concerns, unraveling of identity over time Fear of being found out or not being accepted High mental load Not everyone code switches Why are people code-switching in professional settings? Or is it still happening? Shifts in behaviors during the pandemic Letting go of certain social mores on zoom Not having to go to work and putting on a professional persona when working remotely What can mental health professionals due to support clients who code-switch? There are not enough Black therapists to see all of the Black clients, so therapists of other demographics need to make sure that they are addressing it Going beyond the client having to explain all of their experience or be a cultural translator Stay present to the story and clarify later, to allow client to stay in the vulnerability Being authentic yourself as a therapist, to create space for imperfection Providing reinforcement for the client showing up authentically, their accomplishments Getting to IDGAF attitude and testing it out in different spaces How does Dr. Jameta Barlow push back against the status quo related to code-switching? Land acknowledgement Grounding in family and cultural history Focusing on the history and the experiences of Black women No code-switching or requirement for being anything but your full self Resources for Modern Therapists mentioned in this Podcast Episode: We've pulled together resources mentioned in this episode and put together some handy-dandy links. Please note that some of the links below may be affiliate links, so if you purchase after clicking below, we may get a little bit of cash in our pockets. We thank you in advance! Dr. Barlow's Website: JametaBarlow.com Twitter: @allaboutafya Email: JametaWrites @ gmail.com Information on the concept of Double Consciousness from W.E.B. Du Bois Article on PsychCentral: Code-Switching: What it is and What it Costs Us Stay in Touch with Curt, Katie, and the whole Therapy Reimagined #TherapyMovement: Patreon Buy Me A Coffee Modern Therapist's Survival Guide Creative Credits: Voice Over by DW McCann https://www.facebook.com/McCannDW/ Music by Crystal Grooms Mangano https://groomsymusic.com/
The issue and need for racial diversity among police officers reflects an attempt to ease growing tensions that have emerged in the wake of racialized police violence and the Black Lives Matter movement. Underlying the question of whether officer racial diversity improves community-police relations is the question - How do Black Officers feel? How do they balance Blue Culture and Black Lives Matter? In this show, Sociologist and Professor, Dr. Kayla Preito-Hodge offers some answers. She draws upon recent findings from her important research “ Behind the Badge and the Veil: Black Police Officers in the Era of Black Lives Matter.” Her findings suggest that Black Officers possess a double consciousness that enables them to view and experience the world through both a radicalized and occupational lens. She is joined by Dr. Kalfani Turè, a black man, former police officer, and Senior Fellow in the Urban Ethnography Project at Yale Universities. Dr Ture will add a unique prospective on matters of race, place, and urban law enforcement. Listen in to a very important show.
The issue and need for racial diversity among police officers reflects an attempt to ease growing tensions that have emerged in the wake of racialized police violence and the Black Lives Matter movement. Underlying the question of whether officer racial diversity improves community-police relations is the question - How do Black Officers feel? How do they balance Blue Culture and Black Lives Matter? In this show, Sociologist and Professor, Dr. Kayla Preito-Hodge offers some answers. She draws upon recent findings from her important research “ Behind the Badge and the Veil: Black Police Officers in the Era of Black Lives Matter.” Her findings suggest that Black Officers possess a double consciousness that enables them to view and experience the world through both a radicalized and occupational lens. She is joined by Dr. Kalfani Turè, a black man, former police officer, and Senior Fellow in the Urban Ethnography Project at Yale Universities. Dr Ture will add a unique prospective on matters of race, place, and urban law enforcement. Listen in to a very important show.
The issue and need for racial diversity among police officers reflects an attempt to ease growing tensions that have emerged in the wake of racialized police violence and the Black Lives Matter movement. Underlying the question of whether officer racial diversity improves community-police relations is the question - How do Black Officers feel? How do they balance Blue Culture and Black Lives Matter? In this show, Sociologist and Professor, Dr. Kayla Preito-Hodge offers some answers. She draws upon recent findings from her important research “ Behind the Badge and the Veil: Black Police Officers in the Era of Black Lives Matter.” Her findings suggest that Black Officers possess a double consciousness that enables them to view and experience the world through both a radicalized and occupational lens. She is joined by Dr. Kalfani Turè, a black man, former police officer, and Senior Fellow in the Urban Ethnography Project at Yale Universities. Dr Ture will add a unique prospective on matters of race, place, and urban law enforcement. Listen in to a very important show.
The issue and need for racial diversity among police officers reflects an attempt to ease growing tensions that have emerged in the wake of racialized police violence and the Black Lives Matter movement. Underlying the question of whether officer racial diversity improves community-police relations is the question - How do Black Officers feel? How do they balance Blue Culture and Black Lives Matter? In this show, Sociologist and Professor, Dr. Kayla Preito-Hodge offers some answers. She draws upon recent findings from her important research “ Behind the Badge and the Veil: Black Police Officers in the Era of Black Lives Matter.” Her findings suggest that Black Officers possess a double consciousness that enables them to view and experience the world through both a radicalized and occupational lens. She is joined by Dr. Kalfani Turè, a black man, former police officer, and Senior Fellow in the Urban Ethnography Project at Yale Universities. Dr Ture will add a unique prospective on matters of race, place, and urban law enforcement. Listen in to a very important show.
Readers of our newsletter may be familiar with Joelle Milman, our poet-in-residence of 2022. She wrote a weekly poem in response to the weekly haftarah (prophetic) portion as an ongoing epic. In these poems, she transports us to a surreal world where the character she creates struggles with, for, and against God in direct thematic conversation with the language and story of the weeks' reading. Joelle reads selections of her work, explains her writing process, and explores her inspirations for it with Rabbi Zach Golden, followed by a Q and A. Joelle is from LA and lives in Tel Aviv, where she is writing her MA thesis on the mystic element in Mina Loy's poetry at Hebrew University in Jerusalem. She is joining the team at Breaking the Silence, an Israeli peace advocacy organization.
In a special episode of DITD, we have our first guest host joining! Dr. Joshua Wright is a professor at Trinity Washington University in Washington, DC, a graduate of Howard University; host of "Woke History", a new podcast series on NPR One and a two-time author. (Wake Up, Mr. West: Kanye West and the Double Consciousness of Black Celebrity, 2022 & Empire and Black Images in Pop Culture, 2018) He joins us to talk about Black Celebrity in the US, Kanye's unique status as "the ultimate contrarian" and where he stands after the month of craziness.If you haven't spun Episode 186, we encourage you to do so as we broach on those topics once more here. Also, Dr. Wright mentions The Journal of Hip-Hop Studies, I have linked his issue on Kanye & Christianity here, we highly recommend you dive into some true Hip-Hop academia. Thanks for listening. Below are the Social accounts for all parties involved.Music - "Pizza And Video Games" by Bonus Points (Thanks to Chillhop Music for the right to use)HHBTN (Twitter & IG) - @HipHopNumbers5E (Twitter) - @The5thElementUK5E Community DiscordChillHop (Twitter) - @ChillhopdotcomBonus Points (Twitter) - @BonusPoints92Other Podcasts Under The 5EPN:"What's Good?" W/ Charlie TaylorIn Search of SauceBlack Women Watch...5EPN RadioThe Beauty Of Independence
This episode is the first of a 2-part interview with my friend, Amy Daniels. I'd been wanting to interview her for a couple of years now, and she happened to be hanging out my place when we were like...let's do this! Amy is a superstar recruiter in the management consulting industry in the DC Metro area - sometimes called the "DMV" since it encompasses parts of Washington DC, Maryland, and Virginia. In this first part of her interview, Amy talks about navigating situations when people make assumptions about her identity, particularly as it pertains to her having been transracially adopted. Together we talk about the strange things folks do when they aren't sure "what you are" or "where you're from".Don't forget to follow or subscribe to the show so you don't miss Part 2, which will be coming out soon. If this is your first time with OTC, check out Season 1 Episode 1: START HERE for more background on the show.Our True Colors is sponsored by True Colors Consulting - Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion support that goes beyond compliance!References & ResourcesKey & Peele - Dating a Biracial GuyLee Atwater's Infamous 1981 Interview on the Southern Strategy (Contains strong language)"Double Consciousness and the Veil" by W.E.B. Du Bois: Summary and Analysis
After a bit of a summer break, Yolandie and I are back with our guest Ashnie Butler. Ashnie's story starts on the island of Trinidad with roots going back to Southern India. She has lived on the east and west coast of the United States, currently residing in Portland, Oregon, with her non-binary teenager. Her passion for cooking took her to culinary school and started her journey of learning about cultures and people through their food. Once Ashnie completed her B.A. in American Multicultural Studies, she began seeking to affect change through economic justice. Her training in Theater of the Oppressed, Courage Conversations, Mindfulness and Coaching allows her to hold various racial and cultural identities with awareness, skill and presence, pointing individuals, groups and folks with organizations to their own best selves.In this episode, Ashnie shares her experiences of exploring and coming to understand her identity as it manifest in different settings outside of and inside of the United States. Her story leads to a compelling conversation of self-realization and social identity. If this is your first time with OTC, check out Season 1 Episode 1: START HERE for more background on the show.Visit www.truecolorscast.com for more show info and join the community on Instagram to continue the conversations!Our True Colors is sponsored by True Colors Consulting - Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion support that goes beyond compliance!Related to the convo:"Double Consciousness and the Veil" by W.E.B. Du Bois: Summary and Analysis
In this episode of Anti-Capitalist Chronicles, Prof. Harvey continues his discussion of Brad DeLong's new book, "Slouching Towards Utopia," in which DeLong notes the contradiction between an emerging middle class over the last century through technological innovation and stagnant levels of happiness. To explain this dilemma, Harvey looks closer at how these technological advancements shape labor and function under capitalism. He argues that the purpose was never to lighten the load of labor, it was solely to increase profitability. Therein lies the central contradiction of capitalism: capital is great at creating new products, ideas, possibilities, and lifestyles, but it simultaneously produces alienation. It is no wonder that there is a deep dissatisfaction with our society. Alienation is a natural byproduct of capitalism when the ever-growing advancements are designed to produce more surplus rather than improve working people's lives.
Dr. Carol Lee, Professor Emeritus at Northwestern University, is my guest on today's episode. Carol is - and has been a tour de force in our field, a pioneer who has brought culture to the center of our investigation of learning. You may have seen or read her work on class syllabi, or heard one of her many speeches or remarks at conferences. But what are the life experiences that led her to where she is now? That's the focus of today's episode. We talk about her experience as an English teacher in Chicago Public Schools, her involvement with the Black Arts movement, and building, from the ground up, African centered schools – Carol has lived many lives and can tell you how each of these experiences formed her and her approach to studying learning. She recounts, from her perspective, what the beginnings of our field looked like, and what excites her about the future of the Learning Sciences. I love that Carol is, fittingly, a forever learner, who is still digging into new literature across disciplines like biology, philosophy, and neuroscience and pushing herself to think about how we can bring these disparate fields together to inform how we study learning. This is an episode you don't want to miss! Works discussed: Lee, C. D. (2010). Soaring above the clouds, delving the ocean's depths: Understanding the ecologies of human learning and the challenge for education science. Educational Researcher, 39(9), 643–655. Lee, C. D., Lomotey, K., & Shujaa, M. (1990). How shall we Sing our Sacred Song in a Strange Land? The Dilemma of Double Consciousness and the Complexities of an African–Centered Pedagogy. Journal of Education, 172(2), 45–61. https://doi.org/10.1177/002205749017200205 Nasir, Na'ilah Suad, Lee, Carol D., Pea, Roy, McKinney de Royston, Maxine. Handbook of the Cultural Foundations of Learning (2020). Routledge. https://www.routledge.com/Handbook-of-the-Cultural-Foundations-of-Learning/Nasir-Lee-Pea-Royston/p/book/9780415839051 As always, email us with your comments and questions. Our email is HumansLSpod@gmail.com.
Hosts Mofi and Tiese are joined by a special guest - Tahseen - to talk “staying woke”. What does it mean to us to be “woke”? This opening question from Mofi starts off a discussion on the importance of staying conscious and aware, thinking critically, and showing up with kindness and care for communities—even the one's we don't belong to. Join the conversation: Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts or wherever else you listen. Keep up with us on twitter & instagram @ourfavepods Mofi - @msbadmos | @mofisedition Tiese - @tiiese | samefootprints.com Tahseen - @hangrybrowngirl Intro & Outro - My Favorite Things by Idan --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
How do we even define Asian American and which ethnicities does it encompass? And what's the context that brought the first Asians to Austin? In this episode, we learn all that plus more about Dr. Eric Tang's own relationship to his Asian American identity, being a racialized subject and W.E.B. DuBois' Double Consciousness, and what the future holds for the Asian community in Austin with our special guest, Dr. Eric Tang, the Associate Professor of African and African Diaspora Studies and Director of the Center for Asian American Studies. Referenced Materials from the Episode: Dr. Eric Tang's Book "Unsettled: Cambodian Refugees in the NYC Hyperghetto" W.E.B. Du Bois' Double Consciousness Minor Feelings by Cathy Park Hong City of Austin's Master Plan of 1928 Sing Family - Austin Revealed: Pioneers from the East Asian American Organizations in AustinFollow us on Instagram: @AsianinATX Follow us on TikTok: @AsianinATX
Listening to the way Dr. Sall is enthralled by her work was absolutely exhilarating. Dr. Sall's research reframes debates about the participation and conversation of francophone women writers in the Negritude movement. I deeply resonate with Dr. Korka's calculated choice to centralize aspects of "humanness" when working to understand concepts like "Pan-African Solidarity," "Double Consciousness" and identity formation. Throughout this conversation, I gradually realized how imperative it is for individuals to be able to confidently refer to multiple pools of cultural frameworks.... There is beauty in choosing to shield aspects of our identity, and growth in choosing to open our mind to other modes of thinking & feeling. Similar to language analysis, studying the history of “Black hair” is a tool that can help us sit with the complexities of existing. Favorite Quote: "If you always hesitate about who you are then it will be hard for you to find the ground…. You need to be grounded first to know who you are, what you want, and why you want it.” Very excited to share this episode with you! Host & Founder: Lauren Stockmon Brown. Music: “Jealous,” Fireboy (Instrumental)
In this episode, Hip Hop Culture Historian, university professor and author, Dr. Joshua Wright, breaks down the duality of Kanye West's conscious, his impact on pop culture, and he shares how he connects the dots in his new book, "Wake Up, Mr. West: Kanye West and the Double Consciousness of Black Celebrity." See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
[Originally released Oct 2017] Zoe Samudzi is a black feminist writer whose work has appeared in a number of spaces including The New Inquiry, Warscapes, Truthout, ROAR Magazine, Teen Vogue,BGD, Bitch Media, and Verso, among others. She is also a member of the 2017/18 Public Imagination cohort of the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts (YBCA) Fellows Program, and she is a member of the Black Aesthetic, an Oakland-based group and film series exploring the multitudes and diversities of black imagination and creativity. She is presently a Sociology PhD student at the University of California, San Francisco in the Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences where academic interests include biomedicalization theory, productions of race and gender, and transgender health. She is a recipient of the 2016-17 Eugene Cota-Robles Fellowship. Her dissertation "'I don't believe I should be treated like a second citizen by anybody': Narratives of agency and exclusion amongst male and transgender female sex workers in Cape Town, South Africa" engages hegemonic gender constructs in South Africa as they affect identity construction and health of transgender women and cisgender men in sex work. Zoe sits down with Brett to apply critical race theory to our current US society. Topics Include: The Anarchism of Blackness, Double Consciousness, Zoe's experiences growing up as a black girl in the Midwest, the failures of white liberalism and the democratic party, Trump, racist and sexist tropes in film, the White Gaze, and much more! Here is Zoe's website: http://www.zoesamudzi.com/ Outro: "African Son" (featuring Chindo Man, Songa, Wise Man, Mic Crenshaw. Recorded at Watengwa Studios, Kijenge, Tanzania as part of the Afrikan Hiphop Caravan 2015) Support Rev Left Radio: https://www.patreon.com/RevLeftRadio
This Week on #TheSisterActPodcast; We're #ActingOut on a discussion of double consciousness with the #SisterInAct Katanji Brown Jackson and #GEMDROP of Gratitude so much more definitely a conversation you don't want to miss with the Sister Trio. Back Round Beat (Most High by Dillygotitbumpin) --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Greetings Glocal Citizens! This week in our final #herstory in our 2022 March series, I'm happy to welcome Black feminist researcher, writer, and curator Nydia Swaby. Nydia is a Jamaican-American and have called London home for the past decade. She has a PhD in Gender Studies (SOAS (https://www.soas.ac.uk)), an MA in Women's History [Sarah Lawrence College], and a BA in Anthropology and African American Studies [Rollins College]. Her practice builds on theories of racial, gendered, diasporic, and queer formation, Black feminism, Black studies, and my previous experience working at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. In her creative approach to knowledge production, she uses archives, ethnography, photography, film, and the imagination to curate programs and visual narratives, write essays and performance pieces exploring the gendered and diasporic dimensions of Black being and becoming. She also creates ancestral altars using family pictures and memorabilia, found photographs and archival images, West African textiles and wood carvings, crystals, fossils, stones, shells, and other curios. These practices converge in her forthcoming monograph, Amy Ashwood Garvey and the Future of Back Feminist Archives (Lawrence Wishart, Summer 2022 (https://www.nydiaswaby.com/amy-ashwood-garvey-and-the-future-of-black-feminist-archives)) and Caird Research Fellowship at The National Maritime Museum, ‘Curating Archives of Affect: Black Feminist Pasts, Presents, and Futures' (December 2021 - September 2020), and my ongoing visual series, ‘Becoming with Archive: Blackness, Gender, Diaspora (https://www.nydiaswaby.com/becoming-with-archive)' (2010 - Present). Alongside her practice-based research, Nydia work as the Curator of Learning at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London, where she collaborates with academics, curators, artists, and writers to develop a multi-disciplinary, practice-based research and learning program. She is also a member of Feminist Review's Editorial Collective and the Curator of Programmes, and co-edited a recent issue on queer, feminist, diasporic, and decolonial archives. Please read on and explore the topics of interest below for a thoughtfully curated account of the many individuals discussed in the episode. Where to find Nydia? www.nydiaswaby.com On LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/nydia-a-swaby-85a04132/) What's Nydia reading? The Sex Lives of African Women (https://read.amazon.com/kp/embed?asin=B08JHT3LNL&preview=newtab&linkCode=kpe&ref_=cm_sw_r_kb_dp_TQTYAW9KZ638NHQ5H6F8&tag=glocalcitiz09-20) by Nana Darkoa Sekyiamah Dear Science and Other Stories (https://read.amazon.com/kp/embed?asin=B08QGNPLDP&preview=newtab&linkCode=kpe&ref_=cm_sw_r_kb_dp_14YR1EYY3KX9J5MJHBMD&tag=glocalcitiz09-20) by Katherine McKittrick What's Nydia watching? Master (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt11286210/) Daughters of the Dust (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0104057/) Other topics of interest: Amy Ashwood Garvey (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amy_Ashwood_Garvey) Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_Negro_Improvement_Association_and_African_Communities_League) Pan African Movement (https://www.historians.org/teaching-and-learning/teaching-resources-for-historians/teaching-and-learning-in-the-digital-age/through-the-lens-of-history-biafra-nigeria-the-west-and-the-world/the-colonial-and-pre-colonial-eras-in-nigeria/the-pan-african-movement) Garveyism (https://www.history.com/topics/black-history/marcus-garvey) Jamaica Kincaid (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamaica_Kincaid) On Code Switching (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code-switching) Double Consciousness (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_consciousness) Girl, Woman, Other (https://smile.amazon.com/Girl-Woman-Other-Booker-Winner/dp/0802156983/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1648811909&sr=8-1#) by Bernardine Evaristo Ifeanyi Awachie (http://ifeanyiawachie.com/) Imani Perry (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imani_Perry) Lorraine Hansberry (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lorraine_Hansberry) Barby Asante (https://www.barbyasante.com) S. Pearl Sharp (https://spearlsharp.com) Akosua Adoma Owusu (https://akosuaadoma.com/home.html) Rita Gayle (https://www.midlands4cities.ac.uk/student_profile/rita-gayle/) Joan Morgan (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joan_Morgan_(American_author)) Brittney Cooper (https://www.amazon.com/Brittney-C.-Cooper/e/B01N6XZ20X%3Fref=dbs_a_mng_rwt_scns_share) The Politics of Pleasure (https://www.instagram.com/thepoliticsofpleasure/?hl=en) Special Guest: Nydia Swaby.
Simone de Beauvoir and Richard Wright embody what we could call, alluding to Paul Gilroy, 'Transatlantic Existentialism': they contributed to the circulation of ideas that constitute Black post-war thought. In this episode, Mickaëlle Provost explores the affinities between their analyses of oppression, and discusses the use of analogy in talking about patriarchy and anti-black racism. The discussion is moderated by Tivadar Vervoort, and this podcast is hosted by Ashika Singh and Liesbeth Schoonheim More reading.... Simone de Beauvoir. America Day by Day. Translated by Carol Cosman. Phoenix. Paul Gilroy. The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness. Verso. Mickaëlle Provost. 2021. “Undoing Whiteness: A Political Education of One's Experience.” Journal of Philosophy of Education 55 (1): 229–42. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9752.12548. Richard Wright. Native Son.
In this week's episode, Tracie and April reflect on the concept of Shleimut, Wholeness, and how it was a driving force for April when she created the Ko'ach Fellowship, supported by Rise Up. April shares more about the Ko'ach Fellowship and together with Tracie, they discuss how healing, wholeness, and peace are all interconnected. Check out our discussion/reflection questions for this episode: https://joyousjustice.com/blog/jews-talk-racial-justice-ep-66Find April and Tracie's full bios and submit topic suggestions for the show at www.JewsTalkRacialJustice.comLearn more about Joyous Justice where April is the founding and fabulous (!) director, and Tracie is a senior partner.: https://joyousjustice.com/Support the work our Jewish Black & Native woman-led vision for collective liberation here: https://joyousjustice.com/support-our-workLearn more about Rise Up: Nurturing the Soul of Jewish Justice here: https://www.riseupinitiative.org/Read Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr's. Letter from a Birmingham Jail here: https://www.csuchico.edu/iege/_assets/documents/susi-letter-from-birmingham-jail.pdfLearn more about the Ko'ach Fellowship here: https://joyousjustice.com/koach-fellowshipRead more about W. E. B. DuBois' concept of Double Consciousness here: https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1897/08/strivings-of-the-negro-people/305446/Read Tracie's Op-Ed from eJewishPhilanthropy here: https://ejewishphilanthropy.com/the-leadership-of-jews-of-color-the-future-is-now/ Learn more about The Inside Out Wisdom and Action Project here: https://www.insideoutwisdomandaction.org/Learn more about Musar here: https://www.myjewishlearning.com/article/the-musar-movement/
This week we discuss Souls of Black Folk by W.E.B. Dubois, exploring the concepts of The Veil and Double Consciousness. Come join the conversation. If you can, please consider supporting the podcast at: (https://www.patreon.com/imperfectallies (https://www.patreon.com/imperfectallies)) and/or leaving us reviews on iTunes! Read Booker T. Washington's book with us for the next 2 weeks. https://www.amazon.com/Up-Slavery-Dover-Thrift-Editions/dp/0486287386 (Up From Slavery)
In this first episode, Jennifer McWeeny elaborates on an important yet frequently mistranslated distinction found in Le Deuxième Sexe between saisir, se faire objetand se faire femme. Attending to the technical language of phenomenology that Beauvoir employs in these distinctions yields a new, 21st Century reading of Beauvoir's philosophy of woman with social and political implications. Hosted by Ashika Singh and Liesbeth Schoonheim More reading… Simone de Beauvoir, The Second Sex, trans. Constance Borde and Sheila Malovany-Chevallier, New York, Vintage, 2010 [1949], p. 283. Simone de Beauvoir, “Literature and Metaphysics,” trans. Veronique Zayteff and Frederick M. Morrison, in Simone de Beauvoir: Philosophical Writings, ed. Margaret A. Simons with Marybeth Timmerman and Mary Beth Mader, Urbana, IL, University of Illinois Press, 269-277. Simone de Beauvoir, “What Is Existentialism?” trans. Marybeth Timmermann, in Simone de Beauvoir: Philosophical Writings, ed. Margaret A. Simons with Marybeth Timmerman and Mary Beth Mader, Urbana, IL, University of Illinois Press, 323-326. Simone de Beauvoir, “A Review of The Phenomenology of Perception by Maurice Merleau-Ponty (1945),” trans. Marybeth Timmermann, in Simone de Beauvoir: Philosophical Writings, ed. Margaret A. Simons with Marybeth Timmerman and Mary Beth Mader, Urbana, IL, University of Illinois Press, 159-164. Emmanuel de Saint Aubert, “The Blood of Others: Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Simone de Beauvoir, Part I: I Exist, Therefore I Encroach,” trans. Jennifer McWeeny, Simone de Beauvoir Studies, vol. 30, no. 1, 2019, 33-66, p. 34. Emmanuel de Saint Aubert, “The Blood of Others: Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Simone de Beauvoir, Part II: Between Birth and Death: Freedom Struggling with Existentialist Divinities,” trans. Jennifer McWeeny, Simone de Beauvoir Studies, vol. 30, no. 2, 2019, 341-366. W.E.B. Du Bois, The Souls of Black Folk, Boston, Bedford Books, 1997. Lewis Gordon. 1995. Bad Faith and Antiblack Racism. New York: Humanity Books. Sara Heinämaa. 2003. Toward a Phenomenology of Sexual Difference: Husserl, Merleau-Ponty, Beauvoir. New York: Rowman & Littlefield. Deborah King, “Multiple Jeopardy, Multiple Consciousness: The Context of Black Feminist Ideology,” Signs 14 (1) (1988), pp. 42-72. Jennifer McWeeny, “The Second Sex of Consciousness: A New Temporality and Ontology for Beauvoir's ‘Becoming a Woman,'” “On ne naît pas femme: on le devient…”: The Life of a Sentence, ed. Bonnie Mann and Martina Ferrari, 231-273 (New York: Oxford University Press, 2017). Jennifer McWeeny, “Varieties of Consciousness under Oppression: False Consciousness, Bad Faith, Double Consciousness, and Se faire objet,” in Phenomenology and the Political, ed. S. West Gurley and Geoffrey Pfeifer, 149-163 (London: Palgrave MacMillan, 2016).
Additional Reading:David Roediger, Working Toward Whiteness: How America's Immigrants Became White: The Strange Journey from Ellis Island to the Suburbs (2018).Michael Gomez, Reversing Sail: A History of the African Diaspora (2005)Paul Gilroy, The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double-Consciousness (1993).David Levering Lewis, W. E. B. Du Bois, 1868-1919: Biography of a Race (1994).Benjamin Quarles, Allies for Freedom and Blacks on John Brown (1974).Cedric Robinson, Black Marxism (1983).Lewis Gordon, Freedom, Justice, and Decolonization (2020).Manning Marable, W.E.B. Du Bois: Black Radical Democrat (2004).Host Suggestion:Randall Westbrook, Education and Empowerment: The Essential Writings of W.E.B. DuBois (2013).Almost all of W.E.B. Du Bois's writings from the late nineteenth and early twentieth century are in the public domain. Internet Archive offers access to these texts for free. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Poet Honoree Fanonne Jeffers produced a stunning debut novel. Before its publication, The Loves Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois was already named by Oprah as her next book club pick. The novel, clocking in at 816 pages, is a sweeping ancestral saga chronicling the American South from before the Civil War to present day. Scholar W.E.B. Du Bois wrote about the problem of race in America, and what he called “Double Consciousness,” the sensitivity that every African American possesses to survive. The novel's protagonist feels these words deeply as she navigates her history while trying to create her future.Jeffers joins Marrie Stone to share the history behind the novel, how it grew to over 800 pages, and her struggles along the way. She talks about her attempt to shed her poetic voice, and then reclaim it again. She also hints that she may not be done with these characters. @font-face {font-family:"Cambria Math"; panose-1:2 4 5 3 5 4 6 3 2 4; mso-font-charset:0; mso-generic-font-family:roman; mso-font-pitch:variable; mso-font-signature:3 0 0 0 1 0;}@font-face {font-family:Calibri; panose-1:2 15 5 2 2 2 4 3 2 4; mso-font-charset:0; mso-generic-font-family:swiss; mso-font-pitch:variable; mso-font-signature:-536859905 -1073732485 9 0 511 0;}p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal {mso-style-unhide:no; mso-style-qformat:yes; mso-style-parent:""; margin:0in; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:12.0pt; font-family:"Calibri",sans-serif; mso-ascii-font-family:Calibri; mso-ascii-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-fareast-font-family:Calibri; mso-fareast-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-hansi-font-family:Calibri; mso-hansi-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-bidi-font-family:"Times New Roman"; mso-bidi-theme-font:minor-bidi;}.MsoChpDefault {mso-style-type:export-only; mso-default-props:yes; font-family:"Calibri",sans-serif; mso-ascii-font-family:Calibri; mso-ascii-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-fareast-font-family:Calibri; mso-fareast-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-hansi-font-family:Calibri; mso-hansi-theme-font:minor-latin; mso-bidi-font-family:"Times New Roman"; mso-bidi-theme-font:minor-bidi;}div.WordSection1 {page:WordSection1;}Download audio. (Broadcast date: August 18, 2021)
در این اپیزود قصد دارم تا دومین رمان خانم مین جین لی، یعنی پاچینکو را به شما معرفی کنم. این رمان بسیار زیبا، که به موضوعات مهمی از جمله مهاجرت، هویت، عشق و ... میپردازد در سال ۲۰۱۷ منتشر شد و توانست جز ۵ اثر داستانی تاثیرگذار سال باشد. در این قسمت، رمان خانم پاچینکو را از دید نظریهی هویت دوگانه (Double Consciousness) مهاجرین بررسی میکنیم. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
In this episode the homies (Eric, Jason, Drew Twon and Napoleon) talk about the Kanye Experience and WEB Dubois concept of double consciousness.Originally, double consciousness was specifically the psychological challenge African Americans experienced of "always looking at one's self through the eyes" of a racist white society and "measuring oneself by the means of a nation that looked back in contempt".[1] The term also referred to Du Bois's experiences of reconciling his African heritage with an upbringing in a European-dominated society.
7-16-21 | Biden Family Checks Sent Out | The Algorithm of Misinformation | Double-Consciousness WEB DuBois spoke of the double-consciousness of being Black in America. Many of us discuss this from the perspective of "code-switching", but what happens when that code-switching maintains the exact system we are fighting against?Georgia Fort goes On The Clock to discuss the Biden checks being sent out and the incessant presence of misinformation particularly as it pertains to COVID-19. Then we discuss how that misinformation is driven by the very algorithms that drive social media. Anthony Galloway joins Georgia, James, and myself to discuss Joe Biden calling out "socialism." Then, the team gets a little personal discussing how each of us has had to navigate our experiences in corporate America as Black people. We've got another KAREN video. Perhaps one day we will see a Karen realize what is happening in real-time and instead of escalating like the Walmart Karen in our video, they will, instead, correct their behavior and let that positive moment go viral. We can hope, right?Finally, Mama Gwen joins us (DJXXXClusive's mother) and she discusses raising Black kids in the south!
Chase Brantley is a jack of all trades and master at all: comedian, director, writer, business owner, theater teacher, musician, and long distance thru-hiker. In Athens, Georgia, most people know Chase as the founder of Moonlight Theater which was founded after he graduated from École Philippe Gaulier, a French clown school. Inspired by the school's philosophy of playfulness and games, the Theater grew into an award-winning program that hosted over 182 performances in under two years. During that time, Chase also founded a residency program that hosted twelve professional artists from seven countries, directed twenty original comedy shows, and performed in over forty comedy productions. He hopes after COVID to continue building spaces that help artists grow. In addition to all of the above, Chase is also a Covid-survivor, which is pretty scary considering it gave him asthma, swollen underarm lymph nodes, & potential blood clots... 6 months AFTER having it. The more we talk to people the more unsettling this virus appears. Chase currently co-hosts “To white Folks”, a podcast that discusses the legal and political history of white supremacy in Athens, GA. He most recently directed “Double Consciousness” starring David Perdue and Adán Bean at the Morton Theater. He is also a producer and writer for the upcoming (Fall 2022) Shakespeare sitcom “Infinite Jest”.
Welcome to episode two of Diversity Ever After: A Baker Donelson D&I Podcast. In season one, we are focusing on the topic of Code Switching, and how it is an ever-present reality for many of us in the workplace, in school, and in so many aspects of our lives. Yet, one thing is for certain when discussing Code Switching: the past informs the present.In episode two, our hosts and special guest host explore the historical roots of code switching and how the concept gained traction throughout history, beginning in 1903, with the concept of Double Consciousness coined by W.E.B. DuBois, which describes the sense of hyper awareness of how we are perceived by others and the desire to adjust and adapt our speech and the way we present seamlessly to tackle those perceptions.In this episode, our guest host, Brianna Gaddy, discusses her recently-published essay, What's Hair Got to Do with It?: How School Hair Policies Violate the United States Constitution, which takes a deep dive into issues surrounding Black hair, how personal grooming policies in school can have a disproportionate impact on students who style their hair in a way that is natural and authentic to them, and legislative efforts to address this issue. We also discuss how these concepts spill over into workplace settings and can disproportionately impact Black women in the workplace and other professional settings based on their hair texture. Join us for a walk through the history of Code Switching in episode two!We release a new episode every other week. Look for our next episode on Friday, July 9.Our Hosts this Week:Reba Letsa, Associate(https://www.bakerdonelson.com/Reba-Letsa)Torrey Feldman, Associate(https://www.bakerdonelson.com/torrey-m-feldman)Nakimuli Davis-Primer, Shareholder(https://www.bakerdonelson.com/Nakimuli-Davis-Primer)Author and Special Guest Host:Brianna Gaddy, Esq., Law Clerk, Circuit Court For Baltimore City(https://www.linkedin.com/in/briannagaddy/)Resource Guide:Check out Brianna Gaddy's essay here:http://www.administrativelawreview.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/ALR-Accord-6.3_Gaddy-FINAL-FORMATTED-w.-Blank-Page.pdfFor more information on the CROWN Act, visit: https://www.thecrownact.com/For more information on the concept of Double Consciousness, visit:https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/double-consciousness/https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1897/08/strivings-of-the-negro-people/305446/Reach Us:Learn more about Diversity & Inclusion at Baker Donelson at https://www.bakerdonelson.com/diversitySend your feedback and topic ideas to D&ISocialCommunications@bakerdonelson.com
Vinichi Paul and His co-host Sev7en Taylor Discuss W.E.B. Du Bois's " Double Consciousness" and it's historic relationship with black people. They also dive deep into healing and un-working lazy energy / sprits / Sev7en's new book " Blood Moons: Conversations With My Ancestors" / Their collaboration book " THE SEVEN DAY BATH..." and so much more! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/spirituallysci-fi/support
This week on the podcast, hosts Dr. Janelle S. Peifer, Ph.D., and Brandon Kyle Goodman dive headfirst into the discussion of safety, spanking, and the stakes of growing up black in America. In week 3 of In Treatment, Dr. Brooke has an intense session with teenager Laila that brings up feelings and fears for both the therapist and the patient. Our hosts unpack the session as well as the controversial choices faced by parents—and how mindsets can change. This podcast is produced by HBO in conjunction with Pineapple Street Studios. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Here's a list of resources mentioned in this week's episode: Intersectionality for Black women: Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence Against Women of Color (Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw) Crenshaw, K. W. (2017). On intersectionality: Essential writings. The New Press. Double Consciousness: https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1897/08/strivings-of-the-negro-people/305446/ Spanking + Abuse: https://www.instagram.com/mrchazz/?hl=en https://open.spotify.com/episode/5H1slC912HSVD4OrXKinUa?si=o39LVxteSJ-yVbfA5Qm3rg&nd=1 Black families, racial trauma https://www.apa.org/pi/families/resources/newsletter/2017/04/racial-trauma Black youth mental health https://www.blackgirlssmile.org/resources LGBTQ+ Mental Health https://www.thetrevorproject.org/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In our third episode for Black History Month, we speak with music promoter and educator Eric Holt on the topic of W. E. B. Du Bois. We dive into "Double Consciousness," the veil, and touching the shadow of slavery in the 21st century. We also reference "The Souls of Black Folk" and Fisk University. Thank you to Eric Holt for leading this discussion. For more information on Mr. Holt, check out LOVENOISE. He also teaches courses on venue management and entrepreneurship at Belmont University (to name a few).
This week on The Live Exchange, "Double Consciousness”. Dr. Pamela will discuss W.E.B Dubois's writings on Double Consciousness. This concept explains how black individuals have the pressures of existing in two different worlds and realities. One of which is a white world and conforming to what makes one acceptable to society and the other being a black world where it may be perceived to be safe to be oneself but is also challenged with what it means to be black or what some may consider “too white”.
In this episode of The Pool, Philip talks to Chequan Lewis, Chief Equity Officer, Pizza Hut. In their conversation, Philip and Chequan discuss his career journey, the reality of “Double Consciousness” and its effect on Black professionals, the importance of equity as an organizing value and how organizations can become resilient.
Link to my blog along with sources is here: https://janellegrant.wordpress.com
Dans cet épisode, nous accueillons la chercheuse Anne-Marie Veillette, dont les recherches portent sur les modes de résistances des femmes dans les favelas à Rio de Janeiro au Brésil. Anne-Marie Veillette partage avec nous ses lectures, ses expériences de recherche sur le terrain et ses réflexions actuelles. La première partie du balado porte sur l'androcentrisme et l'eurocentrisme de certaines catégories analytiques. Elle revient ensuite sur le concept de “féminisme populaire racialisé ”, qu'elle emploie dans son travail sur les résistances des femmes face aux violences policières dans les favelas. Nous vous souhaitons une excellente écoute.Les références citées dans ce balado (par ordre d'écoute):hooks, bell. 2003. "Choosing the Margin as a Space of Radical Openness." Dans The Feminist Standpoint Theory Reader. Sous la direction de Sandra Harding, 153-159. New York/London: Routledge.---. 2017 [1984]. De la marge au centre: théorie féministe. Paris: Éditions Cambourakis. Le passage de bell hooks cité : « À vivre comme nous le faisions – en périphérie, sur les bords, sur le fil – nous avons développé une manière particulière de voir la réalité. Nous la regardions à la fois de l'extérieur et de l'intérieur. Nous concentrions notre attention aussi bien sur le centre que sur la marge. Nous comprenions les deux. Cette façon de voir les choses nous rappelait l'existence d'un univers entier, d'un corps principal constitué à la fois d'une marge et d'un centre. Notre survie dépendait de notre conscience ostensible permanente de la séparation entre la marge et le centre, et notre conviction individuelle profonde que nous étions une part vitale et nécessaire de cet ensemble. (2017 [1984], 59) »Gilroy, Paul. 1993. The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double-Consciousness. Londres/New York: Verso.Alvarez, Sonia E. 2014. "Enacting a Translocal Feminist Politics of Translation." Dans Translocalities/Translocalidades : Feminist Politics of Translation in the Latin/a Américas. Sous la direction de Sonia E. Alvarez, Claudia de Lima Costa, Verónica Feliu, Rebecca J. Hester, Norma Klahn et Thayer Millie, 1-18. Durham/Londres: Duke University Press.Boudreau, Julie‐Anne, Nathalie Boucher et Marilena Liguori. 2009. "Taking the Bus Daily and Demonstrating on Sunday: Reflections on the Formation of Political Subjectivity in an Urban World." City 13 (2-3): 336-346.Di Marco, Graciela 2017 “Social Movement Demands in Argentina and the Constitution of a ‘'Feminist People'',” pp. 122–140 in Sonia E. Alvarez, Jeffrey W. Rubin, Millie Thayer, Gianpaolo Baiocchi and Agustín Laó-Montes (eds.), Beyond Civil Society: Activism, Participation, and Protest in Latin America. Durham/London: Duke University Press. Co-animation : Zainab El-Guerrab et Fella Hadj Kaddour.Réalisation : Fella Hadj KaddourMusique : Gilles Ganassa et Lucie Ganassa
Yujiao Bi informs us how double consciousness can be Asian American as well.
In this episode I talk about double consciousness and how our insecurities connect. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/dislabledguy/support
Paul joined us discuss how his analysis in the Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double-Consciousness and Between to Camps: Nations, Cultures and the Allure of Race can speak to the resurgence of anti-racist movements.
Paul joined us discuss how his analysis in the Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double-Consciousness and Between to Camps: Nations, Cultures and the Allure of Race can speak to the resurgence of anti-racist movements.
In this episode #19, we talk about being aware of possible threats to the voting process ( https://workersdefensealliance.org/sites/default/files/2020-07/TCFashFieldGuide7-13-20_0.pdf ), and Jade Simmons ( https://jadesimmons.mykajabi.com/operationrestoration2020) and how to address your own double consciousness.... --- 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/3drestorativesolutions/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/3drestorativesolutions/support
David Halbert is the Outreach Manager at The Educational Justice Institute (EJI) at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). The mission of EJI is to bring about positive policy reform to correctional institutions through the introduction of education and education-based technology into prisons and jails. Before working at EJI, David held an array of positions including working in Boston City Government as well as serving as the Deputy Director of Community Affairs at the Middlesex Sheriff's Office. The post 620: What Double Consciousness Means For Black Americans With David Halbert, EJI [K-Cup DoubleShot] appeared first on Time4Coffee.
Today the fellas sit down with Dr. Joshua K. Wright to y’all about education in our past currently and moving forward. Joshua K. Wright, Ph.D. is an associate professor of history in the Global Studies Department at Trinity Washington University in Washington, DC. He teaches courses in American History, African Diaspora and Black Studies, International Affairs, and Political Science. He is the author of Wake Up, Mr. West: Kanye West and the Double Consciousness of Black Celebrity (2021) and Empire and Black Images in Pop Culture (2018). Dr. Wright also hosts Woke History, a new podcast series that will begin streaming on the National Public Radio (NPR) One app and local NPR affiliates in Maryland, Delaware, and Virginia in 2021. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
This episode examines WEB DuBois's notion of "double consciousness," which he defines as a way in which Blacks have both the opportunity and the curse of seeing the world in a manner he suggests was unavailable to Whites. I read from the two essays in which DuBois employs the term and address some of the difficulties facing its interpretation. I then employ the term to examine the participation of Black performers in Blackface minstrelsy, specifically James Bland and Bert Williams. Our focus turns to Williams's signature character, the Jonah Man, which I construe as a subtle and sly critique of social indifference.
On this night, Denise Nealon, MiraCosta professor and alum, is in the house contributing to a conversation regarding how we all teach sociological theory (15:18 Theory, 19:56 Denise Nealon)Other topics that were discussed:- RIP Chadwick Boseman (1:45)- Black Panther (5:04)- Double Consciousness (8:49- Basketball and Black Lives Matter (12:00)- Bruce Lee (30:55)
With tensions high in Wisconsin, Gio and Bash share their opinions on the riots, and protesting in support of Jacob Blake. This trickled down the NBA players walking out on their playoff games. How did the RNC respond to these events? Also, they guys talk about the DC Fandome reveals, and more! Enjoy!
With tensions high in Wisconsin, Gio and Bash share their opinions on the riots, and protesting in support of Jacob Blake. This trickled down the NBA players walking out on their playoff games. How did the RNC respond to these events? Also, they guys talk about the DC Fandome reveals, and more! Enjoy!
The #CitylineReal On Race series gives us an opportunity to dive into important conversations. Unfiltered. Unedited. Unflinching. Cityline host Tracy Moore leads honest discussions about race, privilege, and how to achieve systemic change. Panelists will include historians, academics, activists and young leaders. This episode features: Dr. Afua Cooper (Historian and author), Cicely Blain (Founder, Black Lives Matter Vancouver), and Joseph Smith (PhD (ABD), TDSB Educator). This panel discussion focuses on Anti-Black racism in Canada, starting with an overview of how we got to where we are today by understanding our deep-rooted and longstanding racism towards the Black community. Articles: https://www.welcometostratagem.com/po… https://mooreinstitute.ie/2020/06/09/… https://www.toronto.com/opinion-story… https://www.thestar.com/news/atkinson… Reports: Afua Cooper, Report on Lord Dalhousie's History on Slavery and Race (2019) https://www.dal.ca/dept/ldp/findings…. Nova Scotia Human Rights Commission/Scott Wortley, Halifax, Nova Scotia: Street Checks Report (2109) https://humanrights.novascotia.ca/sit… https://www.theblackexperienceproject.ca Books: Stamped From the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America by Ibam X. Kendi The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness by Paul Gilroy The Mis-Education of the Negro by Carter G. Woodson Films: Speakers for the Dead (the National Film Board) Speak it from the Heart of Black Nova Scotia (NFB) Journey to Justice (NFB) Long Road to Justice: The Viola Desmond Story (Nova Scotia Govt.) Ted Talks: https://www.ted.com/talks/chimamanda_… Activism is Changing Your Community for the Better: Discussion of intersectionality, intergenerational trauma. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8mEu2…
In this episode of Corporate Coffee, we discuss the concrete ceiling, double conscience and the psychological effects of diminishing oneself in Corporate America.
Trisha and Ambar talk about the b*tch of double-consciousness, PWIs, and the lifelong lesson of staying in your own lane.
Carl H Smith's work is at the intersection of VR, psychedelics, and esoteric contemplative practices. He's the director of the Learning Technology Research Center at the Ravensbourne University London, co-founder of The Cyberdelic Society, co-founder of The London Experimental Psychonautics Club, and founder of Holotechnica Academy as well as Technomancy.club. Smith has been researching different experiences of Double Consciousness, including lucid dreaming as well other liminal states of consciousness, as he's trying to explore the extent of our consciousness through the combination of immersive tech, psychoactive substances, and ancient wisdom traditions.
In this episode of The Forum Podcast, Femina Ajayi-Hackworth (independent consultant, D&I author, and trainer) talks about double consciousness, dominant culture, and how it affects your authentic self. Participants will acquire understanding about what dominant culture is and how it affects their authentic selves—how they choose to present their authentic selves at work and in society by recognizing their own self-minimization and self-modification. This dialogue is an extension of greater discussions around bias and the authentic self. The discussion is mainly based on the studies from W.E.B. DuBois. Prerequisite: Participants should understand the definition of double consciousness or code switching as originally developed by W.E.B. DuBois in “Souls of Black Folk.” Learning Outcomes What does dominant culture mean for me? When and why do I choose to minimize or modify myself? How does my cultural lens impact my authentic self? Additional Resources Double Consciousness and the Authentic Self handout --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/fwi/support
Join Natasha for an interview with the fabulous Mica McGriggs about racial equality and social impact. Dr. McGriggs defines racism, white fragility and white supremacy and why Mormons are more vulnerable to racism. They discuss “systems” and what we as white people can do to not be complicit. Dr. McGriggs will be offering a class for anyone to join. To find out more, please visit: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/racial-equity-social-impact-tickets-104768040028?fbclid=IwAR1QCgrdBfD_efgtLQCOfeOGYn12SGw11Q-TXFP-5uJ2T0wW9yFvYGN8Azk Resources discussed in this episode: “Religion of a Different Color: Race and the Mormon Struggle for Whiteness” by Paul Reeve https://www.amazon.com/Religion-Different-Color-Struggle-Whiteness/dp/0199754071 “The Bridge Poem” by Donna Kate Rushin https://www.historyisaweapon.com/defcon1/thebridgepoem.html W.E.B. Du Bois and “double consciousness” First used in an Atlantic Monthly article, “Strivings of the Negro People” in 1897: https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1897/08/strivings-of-the-negro-people/305446/ More information on “Double Consciousness” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_consciousness NAACP Legal Defense Fund https://www.naacpldf.org “Mormonism and White Supremacy: American Religion and The Problem of Racial Innocence” by Joanna Brooks https://www.amazon.com/Mormonism-White-Supremacy-American-Innocence-ebook/dp/B08761ZHCP President Russel M. Nelson’s social media statement condemning racism and pleading for peace https://www.facebook.com/russell.m.nelson/posts/3015443371856412 Deseret News article on President Nelson’s social media statement https://www.thechurchnews.com/leaders-and-ministry/2020-06-01/president-nelson-addresses-race-in-social-media-post-185657 To donate to the NAACP, visit: https://secure.actblue.com/donate/naacp-1 To donate to Black Lives Matter, visit: https://secure.actblue.com/donate/ms_blm_homepage_2019
ALWAYS SEEING THEMSELVES THROUGH THE EYES OF OTHERS. BEING DEFINED BY WHITE FOLKS.
In the last leg of our chat we are joined by Monica Samuel, Founder and Executive Director for Black Women in Motion. We discuss the different ways in which Black Women are burdened by a white supremacist and patriarchial narrative, and how we can facilitate a process of learning and un-learning to be our authentic selves, our best selves for each other and by extension the Black community. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/point-black/message
This is the fourth installment in our ongoing collaboration with Unity and Struggle. This Rev Left mini-series will trace and engage with the development of Unity and Struggle's deep study of race through the lens of Marxist historical and dialectical materialism. In this fourth edition, Breht is joined by Eve and Wren to cover colonized racial dynamics and its relationship to alienation. Here is our Red Menace episode on Marx's Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844 in which he lays out his complete argument regarding alienation: https://redmenace.libsyn.com/economic-and-philosophic-manuscripts-of-1844-karl-marx Check out, and contribute to, Unity and Struggle's study here: http://www.unityandstruggle.org/2019/11/racestudypart1/ Check out more from Unity and Struggle here: http://www.unityandstruggle.org/ Follow them on twitter @unityandstrug Outro Music: 'Gloomy Sunday' by Billie Holiday ------ LEARN MORE ABOUT REV LEFT RADIO: www.revolutionaryleftradio.com
This week, we rap up our interview with Desmond Cole on Double Consciousness. We take a brief look at it's relationship to youth and the formation of their identities, as well as women who are doubly marginalized in a white supremacist and patriarchal society. We also launched our book club, Between The Covers and invite you, our audience, to read with us! Our book for this month is "Why I'm No Longer Talking to White People About Race" by Reni Eddo-Lodge. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/point-black/message
In this week's episode we discuss the need for a double consciousness as black people here in the United States and how we had a community healing space with Erykah Badu and Jill Scott's IG live!
In this episode we turn our attention to the concept of double consciousness as coined by W.E.B. Dubois in describing the experience of being black in America. We wanted to explore this phenomenon in the contemporary Canadian context and more specifically in the context of identifying both as black and a woman. Joining the discussion is Desmond Cole, an award-winning journalist, radio host, and a leading Black activist and critic of systemic racial injustice. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/point-black/message
Join us as we talk Double Consciousness and how it affects us in Corporate America, our thoughts on the Trails of Gabriel Fernandez and our updates as we experience social distancing and quarantine life.
Ro and Alysia chat with Ayesha McGowan , first African American Professional Cyclist about her journey, her advocacy for people of color in Cycling and how she created space for herself in this sport as well as celebrating the differences in the cycling world. Molly is off werkin out.6- Ayesha’s Background: how she got into sports and cycling-into track, field hockey and basketballWent to school in Central New Jersey-Piscataway 9- Ayesha’s mission to diversify road cycling. She recently became Pro w contract w Liv (she is Category II). Also fighting for representation in the cycling industry espn article14-womens cycling is being restructured-Women still only just now mandated to be paid at top level of cycling!She is not on team as it may limit her autonomy/ability to do advocacy work17- Ayesha’s influence in making space in the world as a black woman : Serena Williams, Kittie Knox21- her piece on people for bikes24-Cycling has such diverse participants: performance based cyclists, commuters, recreational cyclists. There feels to be judgement between groups.25: “I think the hardest thing about my work is trying to encourage people to learn how to celebrate differences instead of using them as tools for division and judgement and negativity. ...I don’t want you to not see that I’m a black woman. ….I want you to embrace that I’m a black woman and understand how that’s a good thing for this community and understand how that can be an asset to pushing the sport forward and growing cycling. But instead it becomes a negative thing. I feel like that’s how humans have learned to look at differences in general...I feel like cycling is this micro version of the world because you have people from all over...doctors and delivery workers...the range is massive...people from all different cultures and colors and whatever and so it’s a big reflection of the world and it feels like a huge opportunity to teach some of these larger points that extend beyond cycling but use cycling as that commonality”28-barriers Ayesha has faced-understanding the confusing structure herself ,ignorance of others in regards to her humanity, explaining diversity, getting into a community’s bubble, angry people , people who are upset to be told they’re doing things wrong31-Double Consciousness, W.E.B Dubois“How much of myself can I be?”35- Ayesha-wants to create more opportunities for other people this yearFollow these accounts!@Allmountainbrothers@pedal2thepeopleAyesha doesn’t just want a black person to be used as an inclusivity project -she wants to show the diverse people who already come to the sport/ to show the people who are doing their thing already. She doesn’t want to be THE diversity. She wants a broader representation of black people. Where to find Ayesha: blog www.aquickbrownfox.comPodcast - Quick Brown Foxinstagram/twitter- @Ayesuppose
In this episode, the So-Called Oreos podcast discusses moving between black and white spaces based off the concept of "double consciousness" by W. E. B. Du Bois. Rachel speaks on the challenges of coming from a majority black community to going to a PWI for school, Kia explains how she has come to terms calling her all white town "home" after 20 years, while Amari and Janae express not feeling a deep connection to their hometown and having internal displacement. The four women talk about code switching in order to survive in corporate America as well as to fit in with black people who already have a preconceived notion of you. The question arises whether you can be 100 percent yourself with a nonblack partner before Rachel gives tips on mentally preparing yourself before entering a new space and Janae addresses a letter on making friends as an adult when all your friends are in relationships. Make sure you tune in until the end to see how the hashtag #CheatOnHim2020 came to be about! Thank you for your support and as always please continue to subscribe, share and follow us on social media!Email: socalledoreos@gmail.comTwitter: @socalledoreosInstagram: @socalledoreosFacebook: www.facebook.com/socalledoreos/YouTube: https://bit.ly/3nutxC2Audience Survey: bit.ly/2vOYtH9
Controversy over Jay-Z 's recent NFL partnership has many of his fans questioning whether he is betraying the black freedom struggle or in a better position to support it.
On this episode Liquor Talk -We pay our respect to the late Nipsey Hussle -Trending Celebrity news -How long to wait before shooting shot at someone who is widowed -How soon do you pull out everything for a person -Random fact about hosts -Six Brown chicks Wednesday wisdom Questions -Main Topic: Double Consciousness -The List -Postion of the night --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/liquortalkpodcast/support
In this Episode I will discuss double Consciousness in relation to Africans in the Diaspora. Do you ever feel like you have more than one identity because of your upbringing and heritage? Join the conversation as we talk about our stories, side effects and solutions to Double Consciousness. Mentioned in this episode; https://www.salon.com/2017/09/17/triple-consciousness-to-be-black-and-an-immigrant-in-america/. https://asianamericanyc.hunter.cuny.edu/?portfolio=how-experiencing-double-consciousness-influences-the-development-of-identity --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sherinah/message
Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Frederick Sermons (UUCF)
Rev. Dr. Carl Gregg February 21, 2016
Min Jin Lee explains the racism she experienced as a Korean-American living in Japan, and how that pulled at both her Korean and American selves. Look out for Episode 5 on February 1st, 2018! Find Us Online: Hear the full interview with Younghill Kang. Website: http://wfmt.com/bughouse Twitter: @StudsArchive Eve L. Ewing: @eveewing, https://eveewing.com/ Min Jin Lee is a recipient of fellowships in Fiction from the Guggenheim Foundation (2018) and the Radcliffe Institute of Advanced Study at Harvard (2018-2019). Her novel Pachinko (2017) was a finalist for the National Book Award for Fiction, a runner-up for the Dayton Literary Peace Prize, winner of the Medici Book Club Prize, and a New York Times 10 Best Books of 2017. A New York Times Bestseller, Pachinko was also a Top 10 Books of the Year for BBC, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, and the New York Public Library. Pachinko was a selection for “Now Read This,” the joint book club of* PBS NewsHour and The New York Times. It was on over 75 best books of the year lists, including NPR, PBS, and CNN. Pachinko will be translated into 27 languages. Lee’s debut novel Free Food for Millionaires (2007) was a Top 10 Books of the Year for The Times of London, NPR’s Fresh Air, USA Today, and a national bestseller. Her writings have appeared in *The New Yorker, NPR’s Selected Shorts, One Story, The New York Review of Books, The New York Times Magazine, The New York Times Book Review, The Times Literary Supplement, The Guardian, Conde Nast Traveler, The Times of London, and Wall Street Journal. *She served three consecutive seasons as a Morning Forum columnist of the ChosunIlbo of South Korea. In 2018, Lee was named as an Adweek Creative 100 for being one of the “10 Writers and Editors Who are Changing the National Conversation” and a Frederick Douglass 200. She received an honorary degree of Doctor of Humane Letters from Monmouth College. She will be a Writer-in-Residence at Amherst College from 2019-2022. About Us: WFMT is Chicago’s classical and fine arts radio station, with a long tradition of award-winning broadcasting since 1951. Through the WFMT Radio Network, the station offers programming to over 650 outlets in the U.S. and around the world Studs Terkel Radio Archive, an audio archive managed by THE WFMT Radio Network, based at Studs’ long time radio home, in partnership with the Chicago History Museum, which houses the archive. Multitude is a podcast collective and consultancy based in New York City. Their mission is to make, elevate, and market great shows. Credits: Our producer is Katie Klocksin and our composer is Ayanna Woods. Thank you to Project Manager Heather McDougall, Archivist Allison Schein Holmes, Production and Distribution Manager Stacy Gerard, Multitude Productions, and Erin Glasco, Maria Cooper and Mark Baletto on our transcription team. Archival audio was digitized by the Library of Congress, Division of Recorded Sound. Bughouse Square with Eve Ewing is made possible in part by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities - Exploring the Human Endeavor.
This week I have a Georgia native now a Chicago transplant, Donte Thrasher. He is a young educator teaching at a charter school on the Southside. We dove into the concept coined by DuBois, Double Consciousness. Thrasher just like DuBois attended both a PWI and HBCU, these two experiences create the best human to express how it is to be constantly aware of your blackness and what that means in every environment... Follow on IG: @dlthrasher (I do not own music/clips used in production)
In honour of World Mental Health Day - observed on Wednesday October 10, 2018 - this episode is a discussion of how the experience of anxiety, depression and suicide are different for migrant communities, African migrant communities in particular.
On this latest episode of Cipher of the Master Teachers, Queen Benu talks about the social philosophical concept Double Consciousness... being from the streets and having the opportunity to navigate thru other spaces...
Women make up about half the U.S. population – and half of this podcasting roundtable – but gender representation in the U.S. government lags behind more than 100 other countries. Toussaint Morrison, Kathryn Pearson, Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Minnesota, producer Josef Lorenzo, and Joetta Wright, educator, actor and Toussaint’s podcasting partner on “Double Consciousness,” discuss what could be different if we were building "America From Scratch" today and required an even gender split.
Here is a link to the "Love Jones" article I mentioned.Here is a link to one of Angelica Jade Bastién's "Luke Cage" season one episode recaps. Correction: The Rebecca Walker book I referenced isn't titled "A Hundred Shades of Blackness." The actual title is: "Black Cool - One Thousand Streams of Blackness." Cop it here. Paul Gilroy's "The Black Atlantic - Modernity and Double Consciousness" is an indispensable book. Cop it here.Here is the trailer for Besouro:
Welcome to the Woke-ish Podcast! We're just two hood-adjacent academics discussing current events and socio-political topics relevant to the community. Thanks for listening! This week we're talking Kanye, Candace Owens, Double-Consciousness, and Class. This is part 1 for Episode 6. Send us your questions and comments: woke.ishpodcast@gmail.com Follow us on social IG: wokeishpodcast Tweet us @wokeishpod
Toussaint tries to sing Fifth Harmony, Joetta still questions using a wig in auditions... stay tuned to see what happens next on Double Consciousness!
We discuss a quote from "The Souls of Black Folk" by W.E.B. Dubois that discusses black people navigating the world with a sort of double consciousness or "two-ness". Let us know your thoughts at askmindset@gmail.com or on Twitter (or Instagram) @MindSet_Pod using the hashtag #askmindset and #podin. Please share, rate, and review our podcast!
Zoe Samudzi is a black feminist writer whose work has appeared in a number of spaces including The New Inquiry, Warscapes, Truthout, ROAR Magazine, Teen Vogue, BGD, Bitch Media, and Verso, among others. She is also a member of the 2017/18 Public Imagination cohort of the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts (YBCA) Fellows Program, and she is a member of the Black Aesthetic, an Oakland-based group and film series exploring the multitudes and diversities of black imagination and creativity. She is presently a Sociology PhD student at the University of California, San Francisco in the Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences where academic interests include biomedicalization theory, productions of race and gender, and transgender health. She is a recipient of the 2016-17 Eugene Cota-Robles Fellowship. Her dissertation "'I don’t believe I should be treated like a second citizen by anybody': Narratives of agency and exclusion amongst male and transgender female sex workers in Cape Town, South Africa" engages hegemonic gender constructs in South Africa as they affect identity construction and health of transgender women and cisgender men in sex work. Zoe sits down with Brett to apply critical race theory to our current US society. Topics Include: The Anarchism of Blackness, Double Consciousness, Zoe's experiences growing up as a black girl in the Midwest, the failures of white liberalism and the democratic party, Trump, racist and sexist tropes in film, the White Gaze, and much more! Here is Zoe's website: http://www.zoesamudzi.com/ Follow Zoe on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ztsamudzi Our Outro Music is "African Son" (featuring Chindo Man, Songa, Wise Man, Mic Crenshaw. Recorded at Watengwa Studios, Kijenge, Tanzania as part of the Afrikan Hiphop Caravan 2015): https://soundcloud.com/mic-crenshaw/african-sonprod-double Check out Mic Crenshaw, who was our guest for the Anti-Racist Action episode, and his music here: https://www.miccrenshaw.com/ Please support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/RevLeftRadio and follow us on Twitter @RevLeftRadio Follow us on FB at "Revolutionary Left Radio" Theme song by The String-Bo String Duo which you can find here: https://tsbsd.bandcamp.com/album/smash-the-state-distribute-bread
The Christmas Episode. We got together this week to discuss topics like Kanye West visiting Trump straight out of therapy, Double Consciousness, Bernard Hopkins KO, ruining Santa for kids, Chance the Rapper & Childish Gambino, group dynamics in music, Gucci Mane's interview on the Breakfast Club and much more... Tell a friend to tell a friend. Until next week.. www.gofundme.com/mostunknownpod for donations mostunknownpodcast@gmail.com for promo, comments and questions Intro Song: Amine - Caroline Outro Song: Kevin Gates - Wish I Had
2016-17 Frankel Institute Israel Histories, Societies, and Cultures: Comparative Approaches Fellow, Bryan Roby Project Title: Blackness and the Double-Consciousness of Arab Jews: A Comparative History of the Mizrahi and African-American Experience
Anti-Trash continues with the 1977 Best Picture winner: Woody Allen's Annie Hall. We also discuss out favorite onscreen couples and as always, we talk about pop culture. Further ReadingsCoining the term "Manic Pixie Dream Girl": Rabin, Nathan. "The Bataan Death March." A.V. Club. 2007. Rabin apologizes for coining the term:Rabin, Nathan. "I'm sorry for coining the term..." Salon. 2014.More studies on the Manic Pixie Dream Girl:DeGhett, Torie Rose. "The Male Gaze and the Manic Pixie." Somersault Magazine. 2012.For more on W.E.B. DuBois' theory on Double Consciousness: "Double Consciousness." Duboispedia. UMass. 2013.