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First Person Narratives on the Passion
In this episode Jennie and Dianne honor Veterans Day and celebrate National Native American Heritage Month along with guests Charlie Johnson and Connie Kellwood Pitt. Connie's father, Joe Hosteen Kellwood was one of the renowned Navajo Code Talkers of WWII. Connie has made it her mission to share not only her father's personal story, but the stories of the 420 Ordinary Extraordinary Navajo men who participated in every major Marine operation in the Pacific theater. They translated hundreds of thousands of messages using the Navajo language between 1942 and the end of the conflict in 1945, and not one message was ever decoded by the Japanese. Upon returning home at the end of the war, the men were forbidden to tell of their heroic deeds until the mission was finally declassified by the military in 1968. Connie paints a vivid picture of courage and the strength and determination of true Navajo warriors who fought to protect their fellow Marines, their families and their country. To all of America's veterans, thank you. To learn more about the Navajo Code Talkers, follow these links graciously shared by Connie Pitt:Peter MacDonald Video: https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=185510686096640Library of Congress Video: https://guides.loc.gov/navajo-code-talkers/profiles/joe-kellwood Navajo Code Talkers: A Guide to First-Person Narratives in the Veterans History Project Biography of Navajo Code Talker Joe Kellwood, together with a video recording of his oral history interview from the Veterans History Project archivesDad's Passing (Joe Kelleood) - CNN: https://www.cnn.com/2016/09/07/us/navajo-code-talker-joe-hosteen-kellwood-obit/index.htmlObituary: https://funeralinnovations.com/obituaries/view/365395/2https://navajocodetalkers.org/ (lots of information)Additional resources used to research this episode include:, Intel.Gov. "1942: NAVAJO CODE TALKERS ." https://www.intelligence.gov. www.intelligence.gov/people/barrier-breakers-in-history/453-navajo-code-talkers#:~:text=The%20U.S.%20Marines%20knew%20where,key%20phrases%20and%20military%20tactics. Accessed 5 Nov. 2023.Operations, Intelligence And. "Navajo Code Talkers and the Unbreakable Code ." https://www.cia.gov. 6 Nov. 2008. www.cia.gov/stories/story/navajo-code-talkers-and-the-unbreakable-code/. Accessed 5 Nov. 2023.Jevec, Adam. "Semper Fidelis, Code Talkers ." https://www.archives.gov. 1 Jan. 2001. www.archives.gov/publications/prologue/2001/winter/navajo-code-talkers.html. Accessed 5 Nov. 2023. United States . VA Cemeteries . American Indian Code Talkers, World War ll.Nez, Chester, and Judith Schiess Avila. Code Talker. 1st ed., New York , Berkley Publishing Group, 2011, pp. 1 - 242.
First-Person Narratives based on the Passion Story
There is no replacement for the first-person narrative. The best lessons are the ones that connect with audiences on a personal level. As fundraisers, it's important to make these connections and relate with your supporters from a personal level. Nneka Allan considers herself a Griot, an African term for historian and storyteller. She has made it her mission to create spaces to share the history and experiences of black fundraisers. As the founder of the Empathy Agency and co-writer of the Bright papers and her newest book, Collecting Courage, Nneka has lived up to her Griot title. In our interview, we dive into important topics in storytelling, such as - The power of the first-person narrative in building empathy - How the bright papers and collecting courage came to be, and how she settled on the theme of the book - The challenges she faced in creating collecting courage during a pandemic - How to open up and accept vulnerability in storytelling Read the Full Transcript https://www.trustdriven.com/blogs/nne... Learn More about Driven https://trustdriven.com The Empathy Agency https://theempathyagency.ca/ Read Collecting Courage https://www.collectingcourage.org/ The Bright Papers: Our Right To Heal https://afpglobal.org/ourrighttoheal Connect With Us On Social https://linktr.ee/TrustDriven
First Person Narratives about the Passion of Christ
It All Started With A Creative Writing Project: 20 Year Later We Are Still Collecting & Telling The Unheard Stories and Writing & Archiving The Unwritten History of Unsung. Heroes On this Podcast, BriGette McCoy talks with Lisa Daniels about her creative writing project, aka her “labor of love”, Unsung Heroes. Lisa created Unsung Heroes over 20 years ago. Her project’s inspiration, her grandmother, a women of color who supported the war mission, continues to motivate her to keep gathering stories and authoring the history of the many who are left out of the books, such as: men of color who served, women of color who supported the war mission, and women of color who served. Listen in as BriGette …
It All Started With A Creative Writing Project: 20 Year Later We Are Still Collecting & Telling The Unheard Stories and Writing & Archiving The Unwritten History of Unsung. Heroes On this Podcast, BriGette McCoy talks with Lisa Daniels about her creative writing project, aka her “labor of love”, Unsung Heroes. Lisa created Unsung Heroes over 20 […]
Pam speaks about her 11 years of military service as an Intelligence Analyst in the Air Force, her work now as a Foreign Policy Strategist, and the “superpower” she uses as a Community Organizer. Pam tells the story of how her mom, a patriotic immigrant, encouraged and inspired her to enlist in the military right out of High School; find out about her interesting trip to the recruiting office. Pam shares how she nurtured and continues to develop her desire to serve and contribute to the community through her time in the military, afterwards during her time as a female student veteran, and now as a civilian who promotes transformation as a Foreign Policy Strategist and community activist. Listen in …
David Mack: Collateral Damage. Eight years ago, Captain Jean-Luc Picard was party to events that led to the ouster and eventual assassination of disgraced Federation President Min Zife. Now, he must return to Earth to face the music in a hearing called to determine his culpability in those events. Meanwhile, the Enterprise, under the command of Worf, must deal with a determined enemy in possession of a weapon capable of inflicting unimaginable damage on the Federation. In this episode of Literary Treks, hosts Dan Gunther and Bruce Gibson are once again joined by author David Mack to discuss his most recent novel Collateral Damage. We talk about wrapping up the loose ends of Tezwa, the inspiration for the Nausicaans' plight, the unique literary devices used in this novel, a Starfleet Intelligence spin-off, Worf's development as a character, Lieutenant Aneta Šmrhová, Picard's hearing and eventual fate, and wrap up with where David can be found online and what he is working on now. At the top of the show, we respond to listener feedback from The Babel Conference with your thoughts on Literary Treks 284: Smoothing Over the Rough Edges of Canon. News Listener Feedback (00:02:29) Feature: David Mack There Is A Plan (00:08:24) Tying Up Loose Ends (00:12:07) The Forgotten Nausicaans (00:24:54) First-Person Narratives (00:39:29) Agent Thadiun Okona (00:45:12) Worf and Aneta Šmrhová (00:54:21) The Hearing of Picard (01:07:13) Star Trek: Picard (01:22:41) More from David (01:26:37) Final Thoughts (01:35:13) Hosts Dan Gunther and Bruce Gibson Guest David Mack Production Bruce Gibson (Editor and Producer) Dan Gunther (Producer) C Bryan Jones (Executive Producer) Ken Tripp (Executive Producer) Matthew Rushing (Executive Producer) Richard Marquez (Production Manager) Brandon-Shea Mutala (Patreon Manager) Ken Tripp (Associate Producer) Brandon-Shea Mutala (Associate Producer) Justin Oser (Associate Producer) Norman C. Lao (Associate Producer) Greg Rozier (Associate Producer) Jeffery Harlan (Associate Producer) Casey Pettitt (Associate Producer)
This week, MIA Radio presents the fifth in a series of interviews on the topic of the global “mental health” movement.” This series is being developed through a UMASS Boston initiative supported by a grant from the Open Society Foundation. The interviews are being led by UMASS PhD students who also comprise the Mad in America research news team. We interview Dr. Gail Hornstein, a Professor of Psychology at Mount Holyoke College in South Hadley, Massachusetts. She is the author of To Redeem One Person is to Redeem the World: The Life of Frieda Fromm-Reichmann and, most recently, Agnes’s Jacket: A Psychologist’s Search for the Meanings of Madness. In her work, she chronicles both the personal narratives of people with lived experience of being treated as “mad,” and also the growing movement of survivor and service-user activism. Her Bibliography of First-Person Narratives of Madness in English (now in its 5th edition) lists more than 1,000 books by people who have written about madness from their own experience; it is used by researchers, clinicians, educators, and peer groups around the world. She is now director of a major research and training project investigating how hearing voices peer-support groups work, supported by a grant from the Foundation for Excellence in Mental Health Care. This project is training dozens of new hearing voices group facilitators across the US and sponsors research to identify the key mechanisms by which this approach works.
Every month Beth Lisick and Arline Klatte organize Porchlight, a venue for unscripted and unrehearsed storytelling. The Spark episode "First-Person Narratives" follows Lisick and Klatte as they put together an evening of testimonials at San Francisco's Café du Nord that share the theme "I Quit."
Selim KarahasanoğluSadreddinzade günlüğünden örnek sayfalarKaynak: BOA, KK 7500, 158-159Osmanlı tarihyazımında cevabı aranan önemli bir soru da Osmanlı kültüründe günlük, anı, hatırat gibi ben anlatılarının bulunup bulunmadığıdır. Bu bölümümüzde Selim Karahasanoğlu ile son çalışması Sadreddinzade Telhisi Mustafa Efendi ceridesi hakkında konuştuk. 18. yüzyılın önde gelen ulema ailelerinden birine mensup bu Osmanlı kadısının 24 yıl boyunca düzenli olarak tuttuğu bu günlüğün tarihsel kaynak olarak değerine ve Avrupa'daki diğer örneklerle arasındaki fark ve benzerliklere değindik. Ayrıca, yazma kütüphanelerinde karşılaşılan kurumsal zorlukların nasıl Osmanlı kültür tarihi araştırmalarının önünü tıkadığının altını çizerek, bir kaç eser üzerinden genellemeler yapmanın zorluğundan bahsettik.Stream via Soundcloud (US / preferred) Stream via Hipcast (Turkey / Türkiye)18. yüzyıl Osmanlı tarihi üzerine uzmanlaşan Dr. Selim Karahasanoğlu İstanbul Medeniyet Üniversitesi'nde öğretim üyeliği yapmaktadır. (see his page)Yeniçağ Akdeniz ve Osmanlı İmparatorluğu üzerine uzmanlaşan Dr. Emrah Safa Gürkan İstanbul 29 Mayıs Üniversitesi'nde öğretim üyeliği yapmaktadır. (see academia.edu)SEÇME KAYNAKÇASelim KarahasanoğluAkçetin, Elif. “A Frustrated Scholar of the Post-Conquest Generation: Wang Jingqi (1672-1726) and his Casual Jottings of my Journey to the West (1724).” Basılmamış Makale. Behrendt, S. D. A. J. H. Latham, D. Northrup. The Diary of Antera Duke, an Eighteenth-Century African Slave Trader (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010).Beydilli, Kemal. Osmanlı Döneminde İmamlar ve Bir İmamın Günlüğü (İstanbul: TATAV, 2001). Çeçen, Halil, haz. Niyazî-i Mısrî’nin Hatıraları (İstanbul: Dergah Yayınları, 2006).Çelebi, İlyas. “Rüya.” DİA, cilt: 35 (İstanbul: Türkiye Diyanet Vakfı, 2008), 306-309.Di Cosmo, Nicola. haz., The Diary of a Manchu Soldier in Seventeenth-Century China: “My Service in the Army,” by Dzengšeo (London: Routledge, 2007). Elger, Ralf ve Yavuz Köse. eds. Many Ways of Speaking About the Self: Middle Eastern Ego-Documents in Arabic, Persian, and Turkish (14th-20thcentury) (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 2010).Erünsal, İsmail E. “Bir Osmanlı Efendisi’nin Günlüğü: Sadreddinzâde Telhisî Mustafa Efendi ve Cerîdesi.” Kaynaklar, 2 (1984): 77-81.“Türk Edebiyatı Tarihinin Arşiv Kaynakları III: Telhisî Mustafa Efendi Ceridesi,” Ege Üniversitesi Edebiyat Fakültesi Türk Dili ve Edebiyatı Araştırmaları Dergisi, 2 (1983): 37-42. Hassam, Andrew. Writing and Reality: A Study of Modern British Diary Fiction (Wesport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1993)._____. “Reading Other People’s Diaries.” University of Toronto Quarterly, 56: 3 (1987): 435-442.Houldbrooke, Ralph, ed. English Family Life, 1576-1716: An Anthology from Diaries (New York: Basil Blackwell, 1989).Huff, Cynthia A. “Reading a Re-Vision: Approaches to Reading Manuscript Diaries.” Biography, 23: 3 (2000): 504-523.Işıközlü, Fazıl. “Başbakanlık Osmanlı Arşivinde Yeni Bulunmuş Olan ve Sadreddin Zâde Telhisî Mustafa Efendi Tarafından Tutulduğu Anlaşılan H. 1123 (1711)-1148 (1735) Yıllarına Ait Bir Ceride (Jurnal) ve Eklentisi.” 7. Türk Tarih Kongresi: Kongreye Sunulan Bildiriler, cilt: 2 (Ankara: TTK, 1973), 508-534.Jarrick, Arne. Back to Modern Reason: Johan Hjerpe and Other Petit Bourgeois in Stockholm in the Age of Enlightenment (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 1999).Jones, Susan E. “Reading Leonard Thompson: The Diary of a Nineteenth-Century New Englander.” Atenea, 24: 2 (2004): 117-127.Kafadar, Cemal. “Self and Others: The Diary of a Dervish in Seventeenth Century Istanbul and First-Person Narratives in Ottoman Literature.” Studia Islamica, 69 (1989): 121-150.Káldy Nagy, Gy. “Kādī: Ottoman Empire.” EI2, cilt: 4 (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1978), 375. Karahasanoğlu, Selim. “A Tulip Age Legend: Consumer Behavior and Material Culture in the Ottoman Empire (1718-1730).” Basılmamış Doktora Tezi, State University of New York at Binghamton, 2009._____. “Osmanlı Literatüründe Ben-Anlatılarına (Ego-dokumente) Katkı: Sadreddinzade Telhisi Mustafa Efendi Günlüğü (1711-1735).” 20th Ciépo Symposium, New Trends in Ottoman Studies: Programme&Abstracts(Rethymno: Grafotehniki, 2012), 87-88._____. “1700′lerin başında Kadı Mustafa Efendi’nin Günlüğünden: Cariyeyi Rızasız Eve Kapayan Doktor Dükkânı Önünde Asıldı.” Atlas Tarih, 12 (2012): 45._____. "İstanbul'un Lale Devri mi?: Tarih ve Tarih Yazımı." Tarih İçinde İstanbul Uluslararası Sempozyumu: Bildiriler, yay. haz. D. Hut, Z. Kurşun, A. Kavas (İstanbul, 2011), 440-443.Kuhn-Osius, K. Eckhard. “Making Loose End Meets: Private Journals in the Public Realm.” The German Quarterly, 54: 2 (1981): 166-176.Lejeune, Philippe. “The Practive of the Private Journal: Chronicle of an Investigation (1986-1998).” Marginal Voices, Marginal Forms: Diaries in European Literature and History(Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1999), 185-211.Makdisi, George. “The Diary in Islamic Historiography: Some Notes.” History and Theory, 25: 2 (1986): 173-185._____. “Diary of an Eleventh-Century Historian of Baghdad-V.” Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies [BSOAS], 19: 3 (1957): 426-443._____. “Diary of an Eleventh-Century Historian of Baghdad-IV.” BSOAS, 19: 2 (1957): 281-303._____. “Diary of an Eleventh-Century Historian of Baghdad-III.” BSOAS, 19: 1 (1957): 13-48._____. “Diary of an Eleventh-Century Historian of Baghdad-II.” BSOAS, 18: 2 (1956): 239-60._____. “Diary of an Eleventh-Century Historian of Baghdad-I.” BSOAS, 18: 1 (1956): 9-31.Matthews, William. American Diaries: An Annotated Bibliography of American Diaries Written Prior to the Year 1861 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1945)._____. British Diaries: An Annotated Bibliography of British Diaries Written between 1442 and 1942 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1950).Paperno, Irina. “What Can Be Done with Diaries?.” The Russian Review, 63 (2004): 561-573.Ransel, David L. A Russian Merchant’s Tale: The Life and Adventures of Ivan Alekseevich Tolchënov, Based on His Diary (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2009)._____. “The Diary of a Merchant: Insights into Eighteenth-Century Plebeian Life.” The Russian Review, 63 (2004): 594-608.Sajdi, Dana. “A Room of His Own: The ‘History’ of the Barber of Damascus (fl. 1762).” The MIT Electronic Journal of Middle East Studies, 3 (2003)._____. “Peripheral Visions: The Worlds and Worldviews of Commoner Chroniclers in the 18th Century Ottoman Levant.” Basılmamış Doktora Tezi, Columbia University, 2002.Saleh, Nabil. The Qadi and the Fortune Teller(Northampton: Interlink Publishing, 2008). Sherman, Stuart. Telling Time: Clocks, Diaries and English Diurnal Form, 1660-1785 (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1996).Struve, Lynn A. “Self-Struggles of a Martyr: Memories, Dreams, and Obsessions in the Extant Diary of Huang Chunyao.” Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, 69: 2 (2009): 343-394.Şeyh Ahmet El-Bedirî El-Hallâk. Berber Bedirî’nin Günlüğü, 1741-1762: Osmanlı Taşra Hayatına İlişkin Olaylar. çev. Hasan Yüksel (Ankara: Akçağ, 1995). Terzioğlu, Derin. “Man in the Image of God in the Image of the Times: Sufi Self-Narratives and the Diary of Niyazi-i Misri (1618-94).” Studia Islamica, 94 (2002): 139-165._____. “Sufi and Dissident in the Ottoman Empire Niyazi-i Mısri (1618-1694).” Basılmamış Doktora Tezi, Harvard University, 1999.Ulrich, Laurel Thatcher. A Midwife’s Tale: The Life of Martha Ballard Based on Her Diary, 1785-1812(New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1990). Webb,Nigel ve Caroline. The Earl and His Butler in Constantinople: The Secret Diary of an English Servant among the Ottomans (London: I. B. Tauris, 2009). White, Sam. The Climate of Rebellion in the Early Modern Ottoman Empire (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011).Zilfi, Madeline C. “Bir Müderrisin Günlüğü: Osmanlı Biyografi Çalışmaları İçin Yeni Bir Kaynak.” çev. Selim Karahasanoğlu, Doğu Batı, 20 (2002): 184-194.