Podcast appearances and mentions of douglas blackmon

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Best podcasts about douglas blackmon

Latest podcast episodes about douglas blackmon

Trial Tested
Special Juneteenth Episode: “Slavery by Another Name” with Professor Douglas Blackmon

Trial Tested

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2024 51:38


In this special Juneteenth episode, Professor Douglas Blackmon joins host Dave Thomas to delve into what drove Blackmon to write his Pulitzer Prize-winning book, "Slavery by Another Name," which details the manipulation of the criminal justice system to terrorize and inflict forced labor onto African American men in the South after the Civil War. Blackmon discusses how World War II catalyzed the dismantling of such practices while acknowledging the ongoing issue of mass incarceration and current societal disparities.  

City Lights with Lois Reitzes
“The Harvest” Douglas Blackmon/ OSKIADE Jaleel/Holiday Roundtable

City Lights with Lois Reitzes

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2023 51:16


Pulitzer Prize-winning author Douglas A. Blackmon discusses his new documentary “The Harvest.” In the film, he looks back at how school integration transformed his hometown of Leland, Mississippi. Plus, we spotlight local artist OSKIADE Jaleel in our series “Speaking of Art.” Also, the “City Lights” team gathers to talk about holiday concerts happening in the month of December.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

WGTD's The Morning Show with Greg Berg
9/12/23 "The Harvest"

WGTD's The Morning Show with Greg Berg

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2023 48:54


Pulitzer Prize-winning author Douglas Blackmon discusses his film "The Harvest," which airs tonight on the PBS series American Experience. Blackmon was a first grader in the fall of 1970 when the U.S. Supreme Court forced the public schools of Mississippi to desegregate. Blackmon and his classmates were the first youngsters to experience desegregated public education in the small community of Leland, Mississippi.

Now You're Talking with Marshall Ramsey
Douglas A. Blackmon | The Harvest

Now You're Talking with Marshall Ramsey

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2023 48:24


Douglas Blackmon, Pulitzer-Prize winning author, journalist, and filmmaker, started his career at, get this, the age of twelve when an article he wrote published in his local newspaper, and he has not stopped since… Fast forward to his current project, PBS American Experience “The Harvest,” a documentary examining public school integration and the consequences, 50 years later, premiering September 12th, and you'll understand why his passion for revealing the truth has yet to cease. He joins me on the line today to discuss his documentary, his career, future projects and why we should not forget our past. Marshall Ramsey, a nationally recognized, Emmy award winning editorial cartoonist, shares his cartoons and travels the state as Mississippi Today's Editor-At-Large. He's also host of a "Now You're Talking" on MPB Think Radio and "Conversations" on MPB TV, and is the author of several books. Marshall is a graduate of the University of Tennessee and a 2019 recipient of the University of Tennessee Alumni Professional Achievement Award. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

university conversations tennessee harvest acast pulitzer prize editor at large douglas a blackmon marshall ramsey mpb think radio douglas blackmon
Joe Madison the Black Eagle
Celebrate Juneteenth By Demanding An End To The "Slavery Clause"

Joe Madison the Black Eagle

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2022 47:02


Joe Madison, Congresswoman Nikema Williams and historian Douglas Blackmon educate listeners and demand an end to the exception in the Constitution that still permits slavery in the United States. 

The Waiting Room with Nadine Graves
No Pretender: S1, E7

The Waiting Room with Nadine Graves

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2020 58:42


In this episode, Mary Moriarty, career Public Defender (PD) and chief of the Hennepin County PD's Office in Minneapolis, provides a much needed perspective into the work of a PD, countering the public perception of PDs being public pretenders. Additionally Mary offers insight as to role prosecutors and judges can play in holding officers accountable and criminal system reform. Mary also talks briefly about the good trouble she's gotten herself into speaking out about problems within the criminal system as well as racial disparities. Mary is an avid reader and has provided a list of must read books that she first thinks anyone working in the system should read as well as visitors to The Waiting Room.  Mary's Reads:  “The Warmth of Other Suns” - Isabel Wilkerson    This is a beautifully written narrative about three black families who moved from the south to northern cities during the great migration movement of the 20th century.  Winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award, this work is essential reading for Minnesotans who want to understand the challenges that African-Americans faced when they moved here, and still face today.  "Locking Up Our Own" – George Forman Jr.      This Pulitzer Prize winning book, written by the son of a prominent leader in the civil rights movement, tells the story of how black politicians (including Eric Holder), judges, and police chiefs embraced tough on crime initiatives that devastated communities of color in Washington D.C. during the war on drugs. A former public defender, James Foreman, Jr. uses his clients' stories to show how punitive these measures were.    "Locked In" – Jon Pfaff Much of what we read attributes mass incarceration to the war on drugs, but this book challenges that assumption by pointing out that even if we released everyone jailed on drug offenses, the U.S. would still have the highest incarceration rate in the world. John Pfaff focuses instead on the charging and negotiation practices of prosecutors, and demonstrates that if we are serious about reducing our prison population, we need to address sentences for violent crimes.   "Picking Cotton" – Erin Torneo, Jennifer Thompson-Cannino, and Ronald Cotton This book was written by rape victim Jennifer Thompson, and the man she wrongfully accused of attacking her, Ronald Cotton.  Cotton spent 12 years in prison before DNA revealed the true perpetrator, leading Jennifer Thompson to search for the reason her identification was wrong despite being absolutely convinced she was correct. Cotton and Thompson alternate chapters telling the story from their unique perspectives. This is an excellent book for those who want to understand how the frailties of human memory can lead determined victims and well-meaning cops to create a dynamic leading to wrongful convictions.     "Just Mercy" – Bryan Stevenson  Bryan Stevenson, founder of the Equal Justice Initiative in Alabama, movingly writes about his experiences as a black man representing poor men and women caught in an unjust system. EJI is a non-profit committed to changing the narrative about race in America. Stevenson most recently completed construction of The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, the country's first memorial dedicated to the legacy of enslaved black people. His work connects slavery to mass incarceration.    "Insane" – Alisa Roth So many people in the criminal justice system struggle with mental health issues because we have simply criminalized mental illness instead of properly funding mental health resources. Alisa Roth explains how those with mental illness have been treated since colonial times, long before people were released from asylums without a proper safety net in the 60s.  Using compelling case studies from around the country, she reveals the devastating consequences of incarceration on the mentally ill and their families, and argues for more successful and humane alternatives.    "Slavery by Another Name" – Douglas A. Blackmon Many people believe that slavery ended with the civil war, but Douglas Blackmon's book documents the forced labor of black men and women, who were jailed on made-up crimes so they could be leased to do the work of formerly enslaved people.  Blackmon writes of “Black Codes,” laws passed by legislatures to justify pretext arrests to fill the jails with people who were then leased to private corporations and landowners. This work is critical to understanding one way in which the legal system was used to sustain white supremacy.   "The New Jim Crow" – Michelle Alexander  Michelle Alexander's book connects slavery, Jim Crow, and the war on drugs as racist systems of control.  She provides historical context for policies that allowed police to operate with little oversight – stopping, searching, and seizing people of color at will.  Ms. Alexander effectively demonstrates that the war on drugs was intended to be a war on black people, whom republicans viewed as more likely to vote for democrats.  This award winning book, published in 2010, changed the way many view race and the criminal justice system.     "Charged" –  Emily Bazelon Emily Bazelon beautifully tell the stories of a teenage girl accused of murdering her mother and a young man who possessed a gun to demonstrate the relatively unchecked power prosecutors have in the criminal justice system. Prosecutors decide whether a person will be charged and with what offense.  They have complete control over whether to offer a plea negotiation, the details of which may impact the client the rest of his or her life.   "My Grandmother's Hands" – Resmaa Menakem Minneapolis therapist Resmaa Menakem writes that racism has caused physical trauma in everyone and that the path to wellness is understanding the trauma that resides deep within our bodies. Although the reasons why white, black and blue (police) bodies have experienced trauma from white supremacism differ, we will not work through our racial divide until we heal from the generational impact of trauma.  At the end of each chapter, Dr. Menakem offers exercises and practices designed to heal our bodies from trauma.    "Colony in a Nation" – Chris Hayes Journalist Chris Hayes uses the framework of a Nation and a Colony to discuss why measures of racial inequality – incarceration, income, employment, home ownership – haven't improved since 1968.  Within our Nation exists a Colony, where fear leads to aggressive policing, which infringes on civil rights.  Policing in the Colony resembles occupation, which has led to the conditions that lead to the uprisings in Baltimore and Ferguson.   "Unwarranted: Policing Without Permission" – Barry E. Friedman Barry Friedman's book outlines the problems we have created by refusing to police the police.  Illegal searches, warrantless stops, and invasive surveillance, enabled by sophisticated technology, are just a few of the issues that plague our country.  Add race and class to the mix and we need serious reform, which starts with the question, “What do we want the police to do?”     "Between the World and Me" – Ta-Neisi Coates This book is a letter to the author's 15 year old son about how to live in a black body in this country.  The death of one of Ta-Neisi Coates's classmates, at the hands of the police, caused him to reflect on this country's history of destroying black bodies. The heart of the narrative is that race is a social construct and that people who identify as white do not believe they benefit from white privilege. If they achieve what he calls the “dream,” it is because of their own abilities and efforts.      "Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI" - David Grann   David Grann's book investigates one chapter of white genocide against Native Americans.  After oil was discovered under their land, making them among the richest people per capita in the world, members of the Osage Indian Nation in Oklahoma Nation began to be murdered.  As the death toll climbed, the FBI began its first major homicide investigation, which it botched.  Although official records claim about twenty people were murdered, Grann's detailed reporting reveals hundreds of victims.  "Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How our Government Segregated America" - Richard Rothstein Richard Rothstein's book explains clearly how government policies, not individual choices, intentionally promoted residential racial segregation.  Rothstein dismantles many of the current myths about racial discrimination, such as black homeowners causing white homeowners property values to fall.  After documenting the intentional choices made by the government, Rothstein argues, contrary to the thinking of the U.S. Supreme Court, that there are constitutional remedies available to address these purposeful, discriminatory policies.         

Q Talks Podcast
Race and Starting from Different Places

Q Talks Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2020 38:09


Wayne Kimball, Jr. (MBA ‘14) sits down with Rick Sindt to discuss how his perception of race developed as he was growing up, the ripple effects he sees in society, and how race has shaped–and should be addressed–in the workplace. Wayne also endorses So You Want to Talk About Race by Ijeoma Oluo and Slavery by Another Name by Douglas Blackmon that have been recommended in past episodes. 

Q Talks Podcast
Race and Parenting

Q Talks Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2020 35:02


Pettis Kent, professor of supply chain management, sits down with Rick Sindt to discuss his personal experiences as a Black man with race-related incidents, protests, professional environments, and how he parents his adolescent Black son. Listeners interested in diving deeper are encouraged to read the book Slavery by Another Name by Douglas Blackmon or view the documentary 13th on Netflix 

Past Present
Episode 115: Tonya Harding, Prison Book Bans, and the Clinton-Lewinsky Scandal

Past Present

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2018 57:00


In this episode, Neil, Natalia, and Niki debate Tonya Harding’s comeback, book bans in prison, and the 20th anniversary of the Bill Clinton-Monica Lewinsky scandal. Support Past Present at Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pastpresentpodcast Here are some links and references mentioned during this week’s show: I, Tonya, is now in theaters and has prompted a new wave of interest in the 1990s scandal involving skaters Nancy Kerrigan and Tonya Harding. Natalia referenced Chloe Angyal’s New York Times piece on “gymnastics feminism” and Niki referred to the 1995 book Women on Ice: Feminist Responses to the Nancy Kerrigan/Tonya Harding Spectacle. Michelle Alexander’s book The New Jim Crow was effectively banned from New Jersey jails, raising questions about how such decisions are made. Niki referred to another banned book, Douglas Blackmon’s Slavery by Another Name. Natalia mentioned Heather Thompson’s book about the Attica Uprising, Blood in the Water. It has been twenty years since the Bill Clinton-Monica Lewinsky scandal. Natalia referred to Lewinsky’s 2014 interview in Vanity Fair and her TED talk on cyberbullying. Niki wrote about how the Lewinsky scandal shaped modern American politics in her column for The Age. In our regular closing feature, What’s Making History: Natalia shared the Amazon Originals show The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. Neil discussed this Atlas Obscura article on when the Soviet Union paid Pepsi in warships. Niki commented on the New York Times article on how an African-American character, Franklin, was introduced to the Peanuts cartoon.

Hawes Spencer, Journalist
Historian John Farrell talks about Richard Nixon's peace talk tampering

Hawes Spencer, Journalist

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2017 53:04


It's one of the darker chapters in American electoral history: the alleged tampering with Vietnam peace talks in the fall of 1968 by candidate Richard Nixon. We hear author John A. Farrell discussing the so-called smoking-gun memo that appears to implicate Nixon. This interview was conducted April 18 at the Miller Center at the University of Virginia by Douglas Blackmon. Total Run Time: (53:00)

Sign on the Window
002 - "I Wanna Be Your Lover"

Sign on the Window

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2017 35:58


Shhhhh! It's Sign on the Window | Three's no crowd | Take 2 | The same two Rainiers as “last week” | “Paradise Is You” by La Roux | This is a Bob Dylan podcast btw | Quintessential | Did you Google garage rock? | “Hate To Say I Told You So” by The Hives | “upbeat” and “mumble,” “jangly guitars” and “organs” | blurry Bob | Spotify playlist | I'm Not There | “I Want to Be Your Man” by The Beatles | “Please make it stop. Please someone be his man.” | Dimensional musings mixed with dental hygiene | Gay undertaker is gay | Gay masked man is gay | Biograph nonsense and longing for lost cuts… sorry Daniel, “Abandoned Love” ain't gonna make Desire, deal | Blonde on Blonde radar | “Coma Girl” by Joe Strummer and the Mescaleros | “IT'S ME HAIR ISLAND. ME HAIR ISLAND.” | Phrasing | Alan Lomax | “Parchman Farm” by Bukka White | “Jumpin' Judy” recorded live by Alan Lomax | “Hundreds of forced labor camps came to exist, scattered throughout the South—operated by state and county governments, large corporations, small-time entrepreneurs, and provincial farmers. These bulging slave centers became a primary weapon of suppression of black aspirations. Where mob violence or the Ku Klux Klan terrorized black citizens periodically, the return of forced labor as a fixture in black life ground pervasively into the daily lives of far more African Americans.” - Douglas Blackmon, Slavery By Another Name | Lomax the Songhunter | “Folklore can show us that this dream is age-old and common to all mankind. It asks that we recognize the cultural rights of weaker peoples in sharing this dream. And it can make their adjustment to a world society an easier and more creative process. The stuff of folklore—the orally transmitted wisdom, art and music of the people can provide ten thousand bridges across which men of all nations may stride to say, “You are my brother.” - Alan Lomax | Mississippi Blues Trail | “Jumpin' Judy” by Odetta | Rasputin | @sotwpod | sotwpod@gmail.com | Phaedra | Recounting our loves from a park bench | Hungry? | SotW Halloween party! | Kelly's recommendations: Community gas leak season and Man In the High Castle | Lost and DRINK | Daniel's recommendation: After the Party by The Menzingers | Random noise | 1-661 | 213: “Tangled Up in Blue” | Guitar Hero | Goodbye fans and mom! As always, full show notes at our website. You can also follow along with our weekly real-time Spotify playlist – See That My Playlist is Kept Clean – and join the conversation on Twitter, message us on Facebook, and like on Instagram. And if you're loving us, consider our Patreon. For as little as one dollar you get early access to every episode we do as soon as they're edited (and a dedicated feed just for you) and exclusive content that'll only ever be on Patreon. Thanks!

Author Douglas Blackmon talks to Conversations

"Conversations LIVE!" with Cyrus Webb

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2008 30:00


Author Douglas Blackmon, author of SLAVERY BY ANOTHER NAME

conversations slavery by another name douglas blackmon
Bill Moyers Journal (Video) | PBS

Bill Moyers interviews Douglas Blackmon, the Atlanta bureau chief of the WALL STREET JOURNAL, about his latest book, SLAVERY BY ANOTHER NAME, which looks at an "age of neoslavery" that thrived from the aftermath of the Civil War through the dawn of World War II.

Bill Moyers Journal (Audio) | PBS
Racial Inequality.

Bill Moyers Journal (Audio) | PBS

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2008 56:40


This week, as many Americans celebrate "Juneteenth," a special day of recognition commemorating the end of slavery in the United States, Bill Moyers Journal examines racial inequality in America through the prisms of the legacy of slavery and the current socio-economic landscape. Bill Moyers interviews Douglas Blackmon, the Atlanta bureau chief of the Wall Street Journal, about his latest book Slavery by Another Name, which looks at an "age of neoslavery" that thrived from the aftermath of the Civil War through the dawn of World War II. And Moyers get perspective from historical and cultural sociologist Orlando Patterson and Glenn C. loury, an economist and expert on race and social division.