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1/4: Explorers: A New History (A Norton Short) Paperback – August 5, 2025 by Matthew Lockwood (Author) https://www.amazon.com/Explorers-New-History-Norton-Short/dp/1324110317 Unfurling a tapestry of surprising and historically overlooked figures spanning forty centuries and six continents, historian Matthew Lockwood narrates lives filled with imagination and wonder, curiosity, connection, and exchange. Familiar icons of exploration like Pocahontas, Columbus, Sacagawea, and Captain Cook find new company in the untold stories of people usually denied the title “explorers,” including immigrants, indigenous interpreters, local guides, and fugitive slaves. He highlights female voyagers like Gudrid Far-Traveler and Freydís Eiríksdóttir, Viking women who sailed to North America in 1000 AD, and Mary Wortley Montagu, whose pioneering travels to Constantinople would lead to the development of the world's first smallpox vaccine. Figures like Ghulam Rassul Galwan, a guide for European travelers in the Himalayas, reveal the hidden labor, expertise, and local enthusiasm behind many grand stories of discovery. Other characters, like David Dorr, a man born into slavery in New Orleans who embarked on a Grand Tour of Europe and Egypt, embody discovery and wonder as universal parts of the human condition. As Lockwood makes clear, people of every background imagine new worlds. Adventurers from every corner of the globe search for the unknown and try to understand it, remaking the world and themselves in the process. Exploration is for everyone who sets off into the unknown. It is the inheritance of all. 1492 COLUMBUS AND THE TAINO PEOPLE
2/4: Explorers: A New History (A Norton Short) Paperback – August 5, 2025 by Matthew Lockwood (Author) https://www.amazon.com/Explorers-New-History-Norton-Short/dp/1324110317 Unfurling a tapestry of surprising and historically overlooked figures spanning forty centuries and six continents, historian Matthew Lockwood narrates lives filled with imagination and wonder, curiosity, connection, and exchange. Familiar icons of exploration like Pocahontas, Columbus, Sacagawea, and Captain Cook find new company in the untold stories of people usually denied the title “explorers,” including immigrants, indigenous interpreters, local guides, and fugitive slaves. He highlights female voyagers like Gudrid Far-Traveler and Freydís Eiríksdóttir, Viking women who sailed to North America in 1000 AD, and Mary Wortley Montagu, whose pioneering travels to Constantinople would lead to the development of the world's first smallpox vaccine. Figures like Ghulam Rassul Galwan, a guide for European travelers in the Himalayas, reveal the hidden labor, expertise, and local enthusiasm behind many grand stories of discovery. Other characters, like David Dorr, a man born into slavery in New Orleans who embarked on a Grand Tour of Europe and Egypt, embody discovery and wonder as universal parts of the human condition. As Lockwood makes clear, people of every background imagine new worlds. Adventurers from every corner of the globe search for the unknown and try to understand it, remaking the world and themselves in the process. Exploration is for everyone who sets off into the unknown. It is the inheritance of all. 1492 TAINO PEOPLE GREET COLUMBUS
3/4: Explorers: A New History (A Norton Short) Paperback – August 5, 2025 by Matthew Lockwood (Author) https://www.amazon.com/Explorers-New-History-Norton-Short/dp/1324110317 Unfurling a tapestry of surprising and historically overlooked figures spanning forty centuries and six continents, historian Matthew Lockwood narrates lives filled with imagination and wonder, curiosity, connection, and exchange. Familiar icons of exploration like Pocahontas, Columbus, Sacagawea, and Captain Cook find new company in the untold stories of people usually denied the title “explorers,” including immigrants, indigenous interpreters, local guides, and fugitive slaves. He highlights female voyagers like Gudrid Far-Traveler and Freydís Eiríksdóttir, Viking women who sailed to North America in 1000 AD, and Mary Wortley Montagu, whose pioneering travels to Constantinople would lead to the development of the world's first smallpox vaccine. Figures like Ghulam Rassul Galwan, a guide for European travelers in the Himalayas, reveal the hidden labor, expertise, and local enthusiasm behind many grand stories of discovery. Other characters, like David Dorr, a man born into slavery in New Orleans who embarked on a Grand Tour of Europe and Egypt, embody discovery and wonder as universal parts of the human condition. As Lockwood makes clear, people of every background imagine new worlds. Adventurers from every corner of the globe search for the unknown and try to understand it, remaking the world and themselves in the process. Exploration is for everyone who sets off into the unknown. It is the inheritance of all. 1492 COLUMBUS LANDING
4/4: Explorers: A New History (A Norton Short) Paperback – August 5, 2025 by Matthew Lockwood (Author) https://www.amazon.com/Explorers-New-History-Norton-Short/dp/1324110317 Unfurling a tapestry of surprising and historically overlooked figures spanning forty centuries and six continents, historian Matthew Lockwood narrates lives filled with imagination and wonder, curiosity, connection, and exchange. Familiar icons of exploration like Pocahontas, Columbus, Sacagawea, and Captain Cook find new company in the untold stories of people usually denied the title “explorers,” including immigrants, indigenous interpreters, local guides, and fugitive slaves. He highlights female voyagers like Gudrid Far-Traveler and Freydís Eiríksdóttir, Viking women who sailed to North America in 1000 AD, and Mary Wortley Montagu, whose pioneering travels to Constantinople would lead to the development of the world's first smallpox vaccine. Figures like Ghulam Rassul Galwan, a guide for European travelers in the Himalayas, reveal the hidden labor, expertise, and local enthusiasm behind many grand stories of discovery. Other characters, like David Dorr, a man born into slavery in New Orleans who embarked on a Grand Tour of Europe and Egypt, embody discovery and wonder as universal parts of the human condition. As Lockwood makes clear, people of every background imagine new worlds. Adventurers from every corner of the globe search for the unknown and try to understand it, remaking the world and themselves in the process. Exploration is for everyone who sets off into the unknown. It is the inheritance of all.
Good evening: The show begins in Canada at the candidates' debate... 1920 Alberta CBS EYE ON THE WORLD WITH JOHN BATCHELOR FIRST HOUR **9:00-9:15** #CANADA: REVELATORY DEBATE: CONRAD BLACK, NATIONAL POST. **9:15-9:30** #LANCASTER COUNTY: EMPTY STREETS OF DC. JIM MCTAGUE, FORMER WASHINGTON EDITOR, BARRONS. @MCTAGUEJ. AUTHOR OF THE "MARTIN AND TWYLA BOUNDARY SERIES." #FRIENDSOFHISTORYDEBATINGSOCIETY **9:30-9:45** #SMALLBUSINESSAMERICA: TRUCKING SLOWING ON TARIFF NEWS. @GENEMARKS @GUARDIAN @PHILLYINQUIRER **9:45-10:00** #SMALLBUSINESSAMERICA: SUPPLY CHAINS AND TRUMP. @GENEMARKS @GUARDIAN @PHILLYINQUIRER SECOND HOUR **10:00-10:15** #KEYSTONEREPORT: POLITICAL VIOLENCE IN HARRISBURG. SALENA ZITO, MIDDLE OF SOMEWHERE, @DCEXAMINER PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE, NEW YORK POST, SALENAZITO.COM **10:15-10:30** NUKES: ADVANTAGE IRAN? HENRY SOKOLSKI, NPEC **10:30-10:45** #SCOTUS: HUMPHREY EXECUTOR, 1935 AND JEROME POWELL. RICHARD EPSTEIN, CIVITAS **10:45-11:00** TARIFFS: WRONG-FOOT. RICHARD EPSTEIN, CIVITAS THIRD HOUR **11:00-11:15** 1/4: Explorers: A New History (A Norton Short) Paperback – August 5, 2025 by Matthew Lockwood (Author) https://www.amazon.com/Explorers-New-History-Norton-Short/dp/1324110317 Unfurling a tapestry of surprising and historically overlooked figures spanning forty centuries and six continents, historian Matthew Lockwood narrates lives filled with imagination and wonder, curiosity, connection, and exchange. Familiar icons of exploration like Pocahontas, Columbus, Sacagawea, and Captain Cook find new company in the untold stories of people usually denied the title "explorers," including immigrants, indigenous interpreters, local guides, and fugitive slaves. He highlights female voyagers like Gudrid Far-Traveler and Freydís Eiríksdóttir, Viking women who sailed to North America in 1000 AD, and Mary Wortley Montagu, whose pioneering travels to Constantinople would lead to the development of the world's first smallpox vaccine. Figures like Ghulam Rassul Galwan, a guide for European travelers in the Himalayas, reveal the hidden labor, expertise, and local enthusiasm behind many grand stories of discovery. Other characters, like David Dorr, a man born into slavery in New Orleans who embarked on a Grand Tour of Europe and Egypt, embody discovery and wonder as universal parts of the human condition. As Lockwood makes clear, people of every background imagine new worlds. Adventurers from every corner of the globe search for the unknown and try to understand it, remaking the world and themselves in the process. Exploration is for everyone who sets off into the unknown. It is the inheritance of all. **11:15-11:30** 2/4: Explorers: A New History (A Norton Short) Paperback – August 5, 2025 by Matthew Lockwood (Author) **11:30-11:45** 3/4: Explorers: A New History (A Norton Short) Paperback – August 5, 2025 by Matthew Lockwood (Author) **11:45-12:00** 4/4: Explorers: A New History (A Norton Short) Paperback – August 5, 2025 by Matthew Lockwood (Author) FOURTH HOUR **12:00-12:15** #AI: DEMYTHOLOGIZING: BRANDON WEICHERT. **12:15-12:30** #ITALY: TRUMP-WHISPERER MELONI. LORENZO FIORE **12:30-12:45** SPACEX: BAHAMAS FLAPDOODLE. BOB ZIMMERMAN BEHINDTHEBLACK.COM **12:45-1:00 AM** COSMOS: MORE BIG BANG TROUBLES. BOB ZIMMERMAN BEHINDTHEBLACK.COM
JR Rife - Author, Rocker, Theologian, and Modern Viking - engages in a variety of topics, ranging from Biblical to Heavy Metal to anthropology in this eclectic podcast.
DARVO was first identified by Dr. Jennifer Freyd, a psychology professor at the University of Oregon, in the late 1990s. Dr. Freyd's work primarily focused on betrayal trauma, and it was in this context that she observed a recurring pattern among perpetrators of abuse and misconduct. This pattern, she noted, was not just a defensive tactic but a sophisticated form of psychological manipulation.
Charles Spencer's new book about his boarding school experiences has now been released. You can find it here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Audible-A-Very-Private-School/dp/B0CKWD9Z6M/ref=sr_1_1?crid=320MHELEHEKLN&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.81PdazFBg3A7AleHD-lYQrr8QZXqwIxFOeUQIONnMvaAHp1OOHjwnFPEdjHXdQsGwITpT_DRzoK2CZeOTQBf6pju9k8AlNsIdXDgeRRo2A2zAGIM2OTF9_Yos8wdiXjjj3tSuHppUsQHf2crCpWYHg.w7cW417aM6Ih1AMJTOvr17CVXDJUf89cXELsYnBtbPw&dib_tag=se&keywords=charles+spencer+a+very+private+school&qid=1710330302&sprefix=charles+sp%2Caps%2C262&sr=8-1 On Monday of this week I came across this article from the Telegraph about a fellow pupil and how "it did him the world of good": https://www.telegraph.co.uk/columnists/2024/02/17/boarding-school-princess-diana-earl-spencer-maidwell-hall/ I also received an email from the wife of an ex-boarder last week. In it she talks about how her husband claims to have "loved boarding school". But has real difficulties with emotions and relationsSo today I wanted to speak to those who loved boarding. I see there are 3 camps. 1. The truth, they loved it and it was good for them. 2. Denial, those that have suppressed or dissociated from what happened 3. Betrayal trauma and the work of Jennifer Freyd. Many of us were betrayed at boarding school and it creates amnesia according to Dr Freyd's work. Warm regards, Piers --- Piers is an author and a men's transformational coach and therapist who works mainly with trauma, boarding school issues, addictions and relationship problems. He also runs online men's groups for ex-boarders, retreats and a podcast called An Evolving Man. He is also the author of How to Survive and Thrive in Challenging Times. To purchase Piers first book: https://www.amazon.co.uk/How-Survive-Thrive-Challenging-Times/dp/B088T5L251/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=piers+cross&qid=1609869608&sr=8-1 For more videos please visit: http://youtube.com/pierscross For FB: https://www.facebook.com/pierscrosspublic For Piers' website and a free training How To Find Peace In Everyday Life: https://www.piers-cross.com/community Many blessings, Piers Cross http://piers-cross.com/
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From the Visible Voices Podcast archives, today's episode features subject matter experts in safety. Specifically we highlight the research and findings of Dr. Jennifer J Frey. founder of The Center for Institutional Courage . Jennifer Joy Freyd researcher, author, educator, and speaker. Freyd is an extensively published scholar who is best known for her theories of betrayal trauma, DARVO, institutional betrayal, and institutional courage.Freyd is the Founder and President of the Center for Institutional Courage, Professor Emerit[ of Psychology at the University of Oregon, Adjunct Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences in the School of Medicine,[Faculty Fellow at the Clayman Institute for Gender Research, Affiliated Faculty, Women's Leadership Lab, Stanford University, and principal investigator of the Freyd Dynamics Lab. Freyd settled a lawsuit she filed against the University of Oregon after learning that the university was paying her $18,000 less per year than male colleagues closest in rank to her. The university agreed to pay her $350,000 to cover her claims for damages and her attorneys' fees and also agreed to donate $100,000 to the Center for Institutional Courage. Kevin Webb is a higher education training professional specializing in Title IX compliance and gender-based violence prevention, as well as equity and inclusion. Kevin has developed, implemented, and facilitated in-person and online training and education programs for students, faculty, and staff at large public and private universities, and produced a variety of education and awareness events around sexual assault and relationship violence prevention in collaboration with campus and community partners. Kevin has developed content for online Title IX/sexual misconduct training implemented by a cross section of American colleges and universities, and provided sexual harassment training for private organizations. Kevin is a graduate of Brown University, where he served as a teaching assistant in sociology courses dealing with issues of race and social justice, and an MPA from the Baruch College School of Public Affairs, CUNY.
Deep Cut pulls from our bonus episode archive to unearth previous ideas that remain relevant today. Survivor shame over what has been lost, and how one has been complicit. Apologist shame: turned inside out and externalized as aggression. Popular shaming, which tries to deflect attention from how close to home cultic dynamics really are. In the cult landscape, shame is a common denominator. In this contemplation, Matthew unpacks various aspects, with help from the writing of cult theorists and recovery counselors Alexandra Stein, Daniel Shaw, and Holocaust survivor Primo Levi. Deep Cut Intro Music Single Origins — Pete Kuzma Show Notes Primo Levi: The Drowned and the Saved The Relational System of the Traumatizing Narcissist — Shaw Rachel Bernstein's “One More Thing” at the end of Betrayal and Power w/ Nitai Joseph, former Hare Krishna — S4E5. All of Rachel Bernstein's IndoctriNation podcast. What's Behind the Blowback You'll Get When You Engage Cult Members "Deception, Dependence, Dread of Leaving" — Langone "I Got Mine-ism" Selected Bibliography: Ainsworth, Mary D. Salter. Patterns of Attachment: a Psychological Study of the Strange Situation. Routledge, 2015. Arendt, Hannah. The Origins of Totalitarianism. Penguin Classics, 2017. Freyd, Jennifer J. Betrayal Trauma: the Logic of Forgetting Childhood Abuse. Harvard University Press, 1998. Freyd, Jennifer J., and Pamela Birrell. Blind to Betrayal: Why We Fool Ourselves We Arent Being Fooled. Wiley, 2013. Hassan, Steven. Combating Cult Mind Control: the #1 Best-Selling Guide to Protection, Rescue, and Recovery from Destructive Cults. Freedom of Mind Press, 2016. Kramer, Joel, and Diana Alstad. The Guru Papers: Masks of Authoritarian Power. North Atlantic Books/Frog, 1993. Lalich, Janja, and Madeleine Landau. Tobias. Take Back Your Life: Recovering from Cults and Abusive Relationships. Bay Tree Pub., 2006. Lalich, Janja. Escaping Utopia: Growing up in a Cult, Getting out, and Starting Over. Routledge, 2018. Langone, Michael D. Recovery from Cults: Help for Victims of Psychological and Spiritual Abuse. W.W. Norton, 1995. Lifton, Robert Jay. Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism: a Study of “Brainwashing” in China.W.W. Norton, 1961. Miller, Alice, et al. For Your Own Good: Hidden Cruelty in Child-Rearing and the Roots of Violence. Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 2002. Oakes, Len. Prophetic Charisma: the Psychology of Revolutionary Religious Personalities. Syracuse University Press, 1997. Shaw, Daniel. Traumatic Narcissism: Relational Systems of Subjugation. Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2014. Stein, Alexandra. Terror, Love and Brainwashing: Attachment in Cults and Totalitarian Systems. Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2017. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Legendary researcher Dr. Jennifer Freyd, who has dedicated her life to understanding betrayal, reveals what you need to know about abuse, lies, toxic behavior and how to tell if you have “betrayal blindness.” Watch and Subscribe to our YouTube Channel @NavigatingNarcissismPod Follow me on social: Instagram - @doctorramani Pod Instagram - @navigatingnarcissismpod Facebook - @doctorramani Twitter - @DoctorRamani YouTube: Dr. Ramani's YT - DoctorRamani I want to hear from you, too. Have a toxic topic you want me to explore? Email me at askdrramani@redtabletalk.com. I just might answer your questions on air. Guest Bio: Jennifer J. Freyd, PhD, is a researcher, author, activist, and speaker. Freyd is the Founder and President of the Center for Institutional Courage, Professor Emerit of Psychology at the University of Oregon, and Adjunct Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences in the School of Medicine, Stanford University. Freyd is a widely published scholar known for her theories of betrayal trauma, institutional betrayal, institutional courage, and DARVO. Freyd is the author of the Harvard Press award-winning book Betrayal Trauma: The Logic of Forgetting Childhood Abuse. Her book Blind to Betrayal, co-authored with Pamela J. Birrell, was published in English with seven translations. Freyd has received numerous awards including being selected for the 2021 Christine Blasey Ford Woman of Courage Award by the Association for Women in Psychology. Guest Information: Website: https://www.jjfreyd.com/ Twitter: @jjfreydcourage This podcast should not be used as a substitute for medical or mental health advice. Individuals are advised to seek independent medical advice, counseling, and/or therapy from a healthcare professional with respect to any medical condition, mental health issue, or health inquiry, including matters discussed on this podcast. EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS Jada Pinkett Smith, Ellen Rakieten, Dr. Ramani Durvasula, Meghan Hoffman VP PRODUCTION OPERATIONS Martha Chaput CREATIVE DIRECTOR Jason Nguyen LINE PRODUCER Lee Pearce PRODUCER Matthew Jones, Aidan Tanner ASSOCIATE PRODUCER Mara De La Rosa ASSOCIATE CREATIVE PRODUCER Keenon Rush HAIR AND MAKEUP ARTIST Samatha Pack AUDIO ENGINEER Calvin Bailiff EXEC ASST Rachel Miller PRODUCTION OPS ASST Jesse Clayton EDITOR Eugene Gordon Eric Tome POST MEDIA MANAGER Luis E. Ackerman POST PROD ASST Moe Alvarez AUDIO EDITORS & MIXERS Matt Wellentin, Geneva Wellentin, VP, HEAD OF PARTNER STRATEGY Jae Trevits Digital MARKETING DIRECTOR Sophia Hunter VP, POST PRODUCTION Jonathan Goldberg SVP, HEAD OF CONTENT Lukas Kaiser HEAD OF CURRENT Christie Dishner VP, PRODUCTION OPERATIONS Jacob Moncrief EXECUTIVE IN CHARGE OF PRODUCTION Dawn ManningSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
“English et al.[115] report that children whose families are characterised by interpersonal violence, including psychological aggression and verbal aggression, may exhibit a range of serious disorders, including chronic depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder, dissociation and anger. Additionally, English et al. report that the impact of emotional abuse "did not differ significantly" from that of physical abuse. Johnson et al.[116] report that, in a survey of female patients (n = 825), 24% suffered emotional abuse, and this group experienced higher rates of gynaecological problems. In their study of men emotionally abused by a wife/partner (n = 116), Hines and Malley-Morrison[117] report that victims exhibit high rates of post-traumatic stress disorder and alcoholism. Namie's study[118] of workplace bullying found that 31% of women and 21% of men who reported workplace bullying exhibited three key symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (hypervigilance, intrusive imagery, and avoidance behaviours). A 1998 study of male college students (n = 70) by Simonelli & Ingram[119] found that men who were emotionally abused by their female partners exhibited higher rates of chronic depression than the general population. A study of college students (n = 80) by Goldsmith and Freyd[120] report that many who have experienced emotional abuse do not characterise the mistreatment as abusive. Additionally, Goldsmith and Freyd show that these people also tend to exhibit higher than average rates of alexithymia (difficulty identifying and processing their own emotions). Jacobson et al.[121] found that women report markedly higher rates of fear during marital conflicts. However, a rejoinder[122] argued that Jacobson's results were invalid due to men and women's drastically differing interpretations of questionnaires. Coker et al.[123] found that the effects of mental abuse were similar whether the victim was male or female. Pimlott-Kubiak and Cortina[124] found that severity and duration of abuse were the only accurate predictors of aftereffects of abuse; sex of perpetrator or victim were not reliable predictors. Analysis of a large survey (n = 25,876) by LaRoche[125] found that women abused by men were slightly more likely to seek psychological help than were men abused by women (63% vs. 62%). In a 2007 study, Laurent, et al.,[126] report that psychological aggression in young couples (n = 47) is associated with decreased satisfaction for both partners: "psychological aggression may serve as an impediment to couples development because it reflects less mature coercive tactics and an inability to balance self/other needs effectively." A 2008 study by Walsh and Shulman[127] reports that psychological aggression by females is more likely to be associated with relationship dissatisfaction for both partners, while withdrawal by men is more likely to be associated with relationship dissatisfaction for both partners.” --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/antonio-myers4/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/antonio-myers4/support
We got to chat with Jeffrey Leiser about why he decided that he absolutely had to make Freydís and Gudrid, an Icelandic opera film, the magic of sound design, and how he wants to set a positive example of a life well lived for his kids. Did we catch your interest? You can also keep up with Jeffrey's work at Albino Fawn Productions and on Instagram. This episode was first available to our community on Patreon Come chill on Insta Chat with us Twitter --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/why-not-both/support
Today Professor Jennifer Freyd speaks out against institutional betrayal, specifically about issues of sexual harassment and violence. We talk about what happens when institutions of higher education, which are supposed to be nurturing young people, teaching them to be better citizens and contributors to society, end up betraying them when they are mistreated. We talk in particular about the effects this has on students who enter universities hoping to become professors themselves, only to be betrayed by their own departments. Jennifer helps us understand why both individuals and departments deny betrayal, and she makes a forceful argument for changing that state of things. She ends by talking about hope and the future, and the work of her non-profit Institute for Institutional Courage.Jennifer J. Freyd, PhD, is a researcher, author, educator, and speaker. Freyd is the Founder and President of the Center for Institutional Courage, Professor Emerit of Psychology at the University of Oregon, and Adjunct Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences in the School of Medicine, Affiliated Faculty at the Clayman Institute for Gender Research, and Affiliated Faculty, Women's Leadership Lab, Stanford University. She is also a Member of the Advisory Committee, 2019-2023, for the Action Collaborative on Preventing Sexual Harassment in Higher Education, National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine. Freyd was in 1989-90 and again in 2018-19 a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University. Freyd currently serves as the Editor of The Journal of Trauma & Dissociation. Freyd is a widely published and renowned scholar known for her theories of betrayal trauma, institutional betrayal, institutional courage, and DARVO. She received her PhD in Psychology from Stanford University. The author or coauthor of over 200 articles and op-eds, Freyd is also the author of the Harvard Press award-winning book Betrayal Trauma: The Logic of Forgetting Childhood Abuse. Her most recent book Blind to Betrayal, co-authored with Pamela J. Birrell, was published by John Wiley, with seven additional translations. In 2014, Freyd was invited two times to the U.S. White House due to her research on sexual assault and institutional betrayal. In 2021 Freyd and the University of Oregon settled Freyd's precedent-setting equal pay lawsuit.Freyd has received numerous awards including being named a John Simon Guggenheim Fellow, an Erskine Fellow at The University of Canterbury in New Zealand, and a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. In April 2016, Freyd was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award from the International Society for the Study of Trauma & Dissociation. Freyd was selected for the 2021 Christine Blasey Ford Woman of Courage Award by the Association for Women in Psychology.
Við ræðu um siðrof í íslensku samfélagi við Jón Gunnar Bernburg, um kvenmorð við Freydísi Jónu Freysteinsdóttur og um Fávitann við Gunnar Pétursson. Engin froða á ferðinni. Og svo förum við yfir fréttir dagsins, þar er nokkur froða.
Today on the How We Can Heal Podcast, Lisa Danylchuk chats with Jennifer Freyd, Ph.D., a researcher, author, educator, speaker and so much more. The pair discuss Freyd's path to finding the Center for Institutional Courage, how the connections we have to institutions affect us, and her research on DARVO. Now, let's wrap up Season 2 and get talking about how we can heal.About Jennifer Freyd:Jennifer J. Freyd, PhD, is a researcher, author, educator, and speaker. Freyd is the Founder and President of the Center for Institutional Courage, Professor Emerit of Psychology at the University of Oregon, and Adjunct Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences in the School of Medicine, Affiliated Faculty at the Clayman Institute for Gender Research, and Affiliated Faculty, Women's Leadership Lab, Stanford University. She is also a Member of the Advisory Committee, 2019-2023, for the Action Collaborative on Preventing Sexual Harassment in Higher Education, National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine. Freyd was in 1989-90 and again in 2018-19 a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University. Freyd currently serves as the Editor of The Journal of Trauma & Dissociation.Freyd is a widely published and renowned scholar known for her theories of betrayal trauma, institutional betrayal, institutional courage, and DARVO. She received her PhD in Psychology from Stanford University. The author or coauthor of over 200 articles and op-eds, Freyd is also the author of the Harvard Press award-winning book Betrayal Trauma: The Logic of Forgetting Childhood Abuse. Her most recent book Blind to Betrayal, co-authored with Pamela J. Birrell, was published by John Wiley, with seven additional translations. In 2014, Freyd was invited two times to the U.S. White House due to her research on sexual assault and institutional betrayal. In 2021 Freyd and the University of Oregon settled Freyd's precedent-setting equal pay lawsuit.Freyd has received numerous awards including being named a John Simon Guggenheim Fellow, an Erskine Fellow at The University of Canterbury in New Zealand, and a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. In April 2016, Freyd was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award from the International Society for the Study of Trauma & Dissociation. Freyd was selected for the 2021 Christine Blasey Ford Woman of Courage Award by the Association for Women in Psychology.Additional Bio: Jennifer Joy Freyd profile by the American Psychological Association.Outline of the episode:04:26 Defining Institutional Courage18:54 Institutional Betrayal & Betrayal Blindness Explained33:29 The link between individuals and the institutions we love47:47 DARVO: Deny, Attack, and Reverse Victim and Offender54:38 Lab Research Institutional CourageResources:Jennifer's Website: https://www.jjfreyd.com/Center for Institutional Courage: https://www.institutionalcourage.org/Dynamics Lab: https://dynamic.uoregon.edu/South Park DARVO clip: https://southpark.cc.com/video-clips/gfwbrf/south-park-it-s-called-darvoYou can follow Dr. Freyd on Twitter at @jjfreydcourageFull Episode Transcript: howwecanheal.com/podcast
Föstudagsgestir Mannlega þáttarins í þetta sinn voru þau Unnur Ösp Stefánsdóttir og Guðjón Davíð Karlsson leikarar, ein þau leika einmitt útgerðarhjónin Freydísi og Einar í sjónvarpsþáttaröðinni Verbúðin sem nú hafa lokið göngu sinni á RÚV. Það er ekki hægt að segja annað en að þættirnir hafi orðið geysivinsælir, fólkið í landinu gat fyllst af nostalgíu í gegnum þættina, verbúðarlífið á níunda áratug síðustu aldar, tískan, tónlistin og kvótakerfið. Það var um nóg að tala við þau Unni Ösp og Góa í þættinum i dag. Í matarspjalli dagsins kom Knútur Rafn Ármann búfræðingur frá Hólum, en hann rekur ásamt eiginkonu sinni, Helenu Hermundardóttur garðyrkjufræðings frá Reykjum og fimm börnum sínum tómataræktina í Friðheimum í Grímsnesi. Þau heita Dóróthea, Karítas, Matthías Jens, Arnaldur og Tómas Ingi og öll taka þau virkan þátt í búskapnum. Fjölskyldan tekur líka á móti gestum, sýnir þeim hvernig tómataræktunin gengur fyrir sig og gefur þeim að smakka á afurðunum. Sem sagt tómatar í matarspjalli dagsins. Umsjón Guðrún Gunnarsdóttir og Sigurlaug Margrét Jónasdóttir
Föstudagsgestir Mannlega þáttarins í þetta sinn voru þau Unnur Ösp Stefánsdóttir og Guðjón Davíð Karlsson leikarar, ein þau leika einmitt útgerðarhjónin Freydísi og Einar í sjónvarpsþáttaröðinni Verbúðin sem nú hafa lokið göngu sinni á RÚV. Það er ekki hægt að segja annað en að þættirnir hafi orðið geysivinsælir, fólkið í landinu gat fyllst af nostalgíu í gegnum þættina, verbúðarlífið á níunda áratug síðustu aldar, tískan, tónlistin og kvótakerfið. Það var um nóg að tala við þau Unni Ösp og Góa í þættinum i dag. Í matarspjalli dagsins kom Knútur Rafn Ármann búfræðingur frá Hólum, en hann rekur ásamt eiginkonu sinni, Helenu Hermundardóttur garðyrkjufræðings frá Reykjum og fimm börnum sínum tómataræktina í Friðheimum í Grímsnesi. Þau heita Dóróthea, Karítas, Matthías Jens, Arnaldur og Tómas Ingi og öll taka þau virkan þátt í búskapnum. Fjölskyldan tekur líka á móti gestum, sýnir þeim hvernig tómataræktunin gengur fyrir sig og gefur þeim að smakka á afurðunum. Sem sagt tómatar í matarspjalli dagsins. Umsjón Guðrún Gunnarsdóttir og Sigurlaug Margrét Jónasdóttir
Jennifer Joy Freyd researcher, author, educator, and speaker. Freyd is an extensively published scholar who is best known for her theories of betrayal trauma, DARVO, institutional betrayal, and institutional courage.Freyd is the Founder and President of the Center for Institutional Courage, Professor Emerit[ of Psychology at the University of Oregon, Adjunct Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences in the School of Medicine,[Faculty Fellow at the Clayman Institute for Gender Research, Affiliated Faculty, Women's Leadership Lab, Stanford University, and principal investigator of the Freyd Dynamics Lab.Betrayal trauma Earlier this year, she settled a lawsuit she filed against the University of Oregon after learning that the university was paying her $18,000 less per year than male colleagues closest in rank to her. The university agreed to pay her $350,000 to cover her claims for damages and her attorneys' fees and also agreed to donate $100,000 to the Center for Institutional Courage. Kevin Webb is a higher education training professional specializing in Title IX compliance and gender-based violence prevention, as well as equity and inclusion. Kevin has developed, implemented, and facilitated in-person and online training and education programs for students, faculty, and staff at large public and private universities, and produced a variety of education and awareness events around sexual assault and relationship violence prevention in collaboration with campus and community partners. Kevin has developed content for online Title IX/sexual misconduct training implemented by a cross section of American colleges and universities, and provided sexual harassment training for private organizations. Kevin has a Bachelor of Arts degree in Sociology and Organizational Behavior and Management from Brown University, where he served as a teaching assistant in sociology courses dealing with issues of race and social justice, and a Master's degree in Public Administration (MPA) from the Baruch College School of Public Affairs, CUNY. In the news: Institutional betrayal Three graduate students file sexual harassment suit against prominent Harvard anthropology professor (Boston Globe)DARVO A high-flying German media giant is ahead on digital media but seems stuck in the past when it comes to the workplace and deal-making. Axel Springer (NYTimes)Women spoke up, men cried conspiracy: inside Axel Springer's #MeToo moment (Financial Times) 2018 NASEM Report Sexual Harassment in Academic Science Engineering and Medicine This study examined the prevalence and impact of sexual harassment in academia on the career advancement of women in the scientific, technical, and medical workforce. The report concludes that the cumulative result of sexual harassment in academic sciences, engineering, and medicine is significant damage to research integrity and a costly loss of talent in these fields. It provides a series of recommendations for systemwide changes to the culture and climate in higher education to prevent and effectively address all forms of sexual harassment. DARVODARVO stands for Deny, Attack, and Reverse Victim and Offender—a perpetrator strategy. The perpetrator may Deny the behavior, Attack the individual doing the confronting, and Reverse the roles of Victim and Offender, so that the perpetrator adopts the victim role and accuses the true victim of being an offender. This can occur when an actually guilty perpetrator assumes the role of "falsely accused" and attacks the accuser's credibility and blames the accuser of being the perpetrator of a false accusation. Institutional courage™Institutional courage is the antidote to institutional betrayal. It includes institutional accountability and transparency, as when institutions respond well to disclosures and when institutions conduct anonymous surveys of victimization within the institution and then use the data to become healthier. Betrayal blindnessBetrayal blindness, a key concept of betrayal trauma theory, is the unawareness, not-knowing, and forgetting exhibited by people towards betrayal. Victims, perpetrators, and witnesses may display betrayal blindness in order to preserve relationships, institutions, and social systems upon which they depend. Betrayal trauma A betrayal trauma occurs when someone you trust and/or someone who has power over you mistreats you. For instance, it's a betrayal trauma when your boss sexually harasses you. Our research shows that betrayal traumas are toxic. They are associated with measurable harm, both physical and mental. Institutional betrayalInstitutional betrayal, developed from betrayal trauma theory, occurs when the institution you trust or depend upon mistreats you. It can be overt but it can also be less obvious, for instance, a failure to protect you when protection is a reasonable expectation. Our research shows that institutional betrayal is also related to measurable harm —again both mental and physical.
In this episode of the Strange Horizons podcast, editor Ciro Faienza presents Freydís Moon's “NAMED THINGS.” You can read the full text of the poem and more about Freydís here.
Nous discutons avec Regis Freyd de son expérience avec le Technical Preview de Github Copilot, une extension Visual Studio Code qui utilise l'intelligence artificielle pour aider les programmeurs à écrire du meilleur code. Regis Freyd est un développeur, concepteur de produits et hacker indépendant basé à Montréal, très actif dans la communauté open source. Il est le superviseur/mainteneur de Monica, un CRM personnel open source et de OfficeLife, un ERP open source pour les humains. Liens Github Copilot Screencast de Jon Udell sur Copilot Blog de Regis Github de Regis Monica Office Life
Vaxtahækkun Seðalabankans frá í síðustu vikur var til umfjöllunar í spjalli um efnahag og samfélag. Þórður Snær Júlíusson, ritstjóri Kjarnans, fór yfir forsendur hækkunarinnar sem skýrðar eru í Peningamálum, riti bankans um ástand og horfur í efnahagsmálum. Hann upplýsti líka að fjöldi forsvarsmanna fyrirtækja og félaga skilar ekki ársreikningi eins og lögboðið er. 600 þúsund króna sekt liggur við slíku broti. Skattayfirvöld hafa lagaheimild til að slíta félögum og fyrirtækjum sem ekki skila ársreikningi en á þá heimild hefur ekki reynt þar sem reglugerð skortir um útfærslu heimildarinnar. Margir hafa tekið eftir auknum ágangi máva á höfuðborgarsvæðinu en þeir gera sig heimakomna við heimili fólks og annars staðar þar sem von er um æti. Mávarnir eru mörgum til ama en Freydís Vigfúsdóttir líffræðingur sem starfar hjá Reykjavíkurborg bar af þeim blak. Fæðuleysi í hafinu og hreinni hafnir kunna að skýra meiri fyrirferð tegundarinnar í samfélagi mannanna. Tónlist: Ég heyri svo vel - Olga Guðrún Árnadóttir, 6:20 - Þorgrímur Jónsson, Einu sinni á ágústkvöldi - Magnús Eiríksson, Ágústnótt - Alfreð Clausen, Hvítu mávar - Helena Eyjólfsdóttir Umsjón: Björn Þór Sigbjörnsson og Guðrún Hálfdánardóttir.
Vaxtahækkun Seðalabankans frá í síðustu vikur var til umfjöllunar í spjalli um efnahag og samfélag. Þórður Snær Júlíusson, ritstjóri Kjarnans, fór yfir forsendur hækkunarinnar sem skýrðar eru í Peningamálum, riti bankans um ástand og horfur í efnahagsmálum. Hann upplýsti líka að fjöldi forsvarsmanna fyrirtækja og félaga skilar ekki ársreikningi eins og lögboðið er. 600 þúsund króna sekt liggur við slíku broti. Skattayfirvöld hafa lagaheimild til að slíta félögum og fyrirtækjum sem ekki skila ársreikningi en á þá heimild hefur ekki reynt þar sem reglugerð skortir um útfærslu heimildarinnar. Margir hafa tekið eftir auknum ágangi máva á höfuðborgarsvæðinu en þeir gera sig heimakomna við heimili fólks og annars staðar þar sem von er um æti. Mávarnir eru mörgum til ama en Freydís Vigfúsdóttir líffræðingur sem starfar hjá Reykjavíkurborg bar af þeim blak. Fæðuleysi í hafinu og hreinni hafnir kunna að skýra meiri fyrirferð tegundarinnar í samfélagi mannanna. Tónlist: Ég heyri svo vel - Olga Guðrún Árnadóttir, 6:20 - Þorgrímur Jónsson, Einu sinni á ágústkvöldi - Magnús Eiríksson, Ágústnótt - Alfreð Clausen, Hvítu mávar - Helena Eyjólfsdóttir Umsjón: Björn Þór Sigbjörnsson og Guðrún Hálfdánardóttir.
Join me as I talk with Dr. Jennifer Freyd, PhD, to understand how betrayal from childhood trauma “show ups” in our adulthood, and ways we can overcome those effects.How Abusers Silence Victims and How That Affects Us In Adulthood.The Courage To Confront: The Good, The Bad, & "The How?"Women In The Workplace: Overcoming The “Silent and Hidden Barriers” from Childhood Trauma.Dr. Freyd is the founder of The Center for Institutional Courage, and Professor Emerit of Psychology, at the University of Oregon. She's also Affiliated Faculty at the Women's Leadership Lab at Stanford University. Dr. Freyd is world-renowned for her work on Betrayal trauma, Institutional Betrayal and Courage, and for her framework (DARVO) that identifies strategies used by abusers to manipulate their victims. That framework is so widely-known that actress, political activist, and sexual assault survivor, Ashley Judd, referenced it when discussing the Harvey Weinstein sexual abuse allegations in an interview with Diane Sawyer in 2017. Dr. Freyd has also been interviewed extensively by media in relation to the Harvey Weinstein case, and is sought internationally to talk about ways individuals can overcome childhood trauma, and how institutions play a role through betrayal and courage. Dr. Freyd's books and speaking appearances have reached millions of people around the world.
In this episode, I speak with Dr. Jennifer J. Freyd, the Founder and President of the Center for Institutional Courage, Inc (https://www.institutionalcourage.org/), keynote speaker, author, and professor emerit of psychology with over 30 years of experience researching people and their relationships with institutions.) Dr. Freyd emphasizes how it is in our nature as human beings to be sensitive to betrayal because experiencing betrayal can be so costly. She also explains how our wiring for connection, attachment, and love can contribute to us not only feeling great shame when we are betrayed, but also may also contribute to a phenomenon she refers to as "betrayal blindness." She thoughtfully shares her research on betrayal, different types of betrayal (e.g., institutional & interpersonal betrayal), reasons we may forget about experiences of trauma or have difficulty remembering certain details, and DARVO (D - Deny, A - Attack, RVO - Reverse Victim & Offender), a strategy that can be used to deflect blame when confronted with accusations of wrongdoing. Importantly, she highlights hope-instilling aspects of her research which show us how we can refrain from engaging in DARVO regardless of whether or not we believe we did what we are being accused of doing. We also discuss specific, concrete actions we can engage in on individual, interpersonal, and institutional levels to counteract the individual and collective harm caused by DARVO and effectively navigate difficult conversations with courage, curiosity, compassion, accountability, willingness to be vulnerable, openness to believing things we may not understand, and respect for ourselves and others. I have the distinct honor and privilege of having known Dr. Freyd for many years as a mentor, colleague, and friend, and Dr. Freyd continues to be a huge source of inspiration in my life both personally and professionally. Dr. Freyd is an incredible human being and force in the world and she has taught me so much about what it really means to be courageous and to live life in accordance with our values. This episode is near and dear to my heart and felt particularly meaningful and important, so I hope you enjoy it as much as I did. To connect more with Dr. Foynes: Check out the free 4-part video series on building resilience: https://melissafoynes.com/free-series 1:1 Coaching Program: https://melissafoynes.com/1-1-program Follow @drfoynes on Instagram. More About Dr. Jennifer J. Freyd: Jennifer Freyd, PhD, is the Founder and President of the Center for Institutional Courage, Inc. (https://www.institutionalcourage.org/). Dr. Freyd is also a keynote speaker, author, and professor emerit of psychology with over 30 years of experience researching people and their relationships with institutions. Freyd introduced the concepts of “institutional courage,” “institutional betrayal,” “DARVO,” and “betrayal trauma.” References & Additional Resources The Center for Institutional Courage. (https://www.institutionalcourage.org/) Freyd, J. J. (2018). 10 Steps to take-- When sexual assault victims speak out, their institutions often betray them. (https://theconversation.com/when-sexual-assault-victims-speak-out-their-institutions-often-betray-them-87050) Additional information on Dr. Freyd's research and selected publications can be found here. (https://dynamic.uoregon.edu/jjf/) Please note that the information provided in this episode does not constitute professional advice or therapy, mental health services, or health care services, and is not intended to serve as a substitute for professional advice or services. If you are struggling with a mental health crisis or need immediate assistance, please call 911 or go to your nearest emergency room.
QUICK EPISODE OVERVIEWApril and Tracie discuss Robin DiAngelo's book, White Fragility. They unpack some of the courage and vulnerability it takes to both give and receive feedback around racism, and imagine a world in which it is safe to do both.Find 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/Read more of Tracie's thoughts at bmoreincremental.comRESOURCES MENTIONED ON THE SHOWWhite Fragility by Robin DiAngelo: https://www.robindiangelo.com/publications/DARVO as a pattern of gaslighting in response to allegations of abuse was originally introduced by Jennifer J. Freyd, Ph.D.: https://dynamic.uoregon.edu/jjf/defineDARVO.htmlBrené Brown's podcast, Unlocking Us explores the importance of vulnerability: https://brenebrown.com/podcast/introducing-unlocking-us/DISCUSSION QUESTIONSTracie begins the episode describing what white fragility is. If you are White, can you think of a time when you’ve reacted in this way? Moving forward, what do you intend to do differently if in a similar situation? If you are a person of color who has witnessed white fragility, how was it similar and different to what Tracie is describing? Tracie shared a story offered by Robin DiAngelo in which Robin received feedback from a Black colleague. In reflecting on this story, Tracie and April reflect on how vulnerable it is to both give and receive feedback. How do I react when I receive feedback? How do I give it? What power dynamics may be at play that I don’t realize in that interaction? Tracie mentions that Robin DiAngelo no longer has a Twitter presence and has faced criticism for her book, about which you can read here. Linguist John McWhorter, while he finds DiAngelo is well-intentioned, describes how he feels that her proscriptions she offers are actually racist themselves and do not respect the resilience of Black people. How does his analysis land with you? How can we both be aware of white fragility and take concrete, anti-racist actions in our institution to advance equity and justice? April describes in depth the internal questioning that she, as a Black woman, goes through when engaging in conversations with White folks and what their reaction might be to her. How can White folks do better at creating environments that alleviate these fears? April and Tracie mention a binary that has developed in White community where “bad people” are oppositional from the “good people”; it is these “bad people” who are racist. When April and Tracie say that this isn’t helpful, why do you think that is so? Tracie asks you to identify an accountability partner for this work. Who is that in your life?
Avstriya psixoloqu və psixiatoru Ziqmund Freyd'in (1856 – 1939) yaratdığı psixoanaltik nəzəriyyə freydizm adı ilə məşhurdur. Z.Freyd Şəxsiyyətin fəallığının mənbəyini onda heyvan əcdadlarından irsən alınmış instiktiv təhriklərdə görürdü. Bununla da Freyd psixi hadisələrə yeni anlayış – Şüursuzluq anlayışı gətirmişdir. Onun fikrincə Ģəxsiyyətin strukturunda üç komponent mövcuddur: O (id), mən (eqo), yüksək – mən (super-eqo). Karl Yunq'a (1875 - 1961) görə Şəxsiyyət dörd əsas elementi özünə daxil edir: şüur, şəxsi şüursuzluq, şüursuzluq və kollektiv şüursuzluq. Mənbə: Mahirə Nərimanqızı, Ümumi Psixologiya Səsləndirən: Amanov Shamsaddin Tags: PSİXOLOGİYA | Şəxsiyyət Haqqında Nəzəriyyələr, Ziqmund Freyd, Id, Eqo, Super-Eqo, Karl Yung, Kollektiv şüursuzluq, Kölgə, Azərbaycanca fəlsəfə kitabları, fəlsəfə videoları, felsefe, Azərbaycanca podcast, Azəri podcast, Azərbaycan Spotify Podcast, Amanov, Freud, Sigmund, Carl Jung, Jungian, Freudian, Freydizm,
Ben and Jenny discuss (feminist icon?) Freydís Eiríksdóttir, the colonialist Viking warrior, and the gay love affair between Hyacinthus and Apollo, the Greek god of the sun.
In our eighth episode, we discuss Gudrid Thorbjarnardóttir and Freydís Eiríksdóttir, the two principle female characters from the Greenlanders' Sagas (The Greenlanders' Saga and the Saga of Eirik the Red). We discuss the importance of familial honor, why the same stories can differ so much from one text to another, and what makes the ideal Viking woman. For more information about today's episode, go to mytholadies.com.
April and Tracie discuss Robin DiAngelo's book, White Fragility. They unpack some of the courage and vulnerability it takes to both give and receive feedback around racism, and imagine a world in which it is safe to do both.Find April and Tracie's full bios and submit topic suggestions for the show at JewsTalkRacialJustice.comLearn more about April’s work at joyousjustice.comLearn about Tracie at TracieGuyDecker.com and read more of her thoughts at bmoreincremental.com.Resources mentioned in the show:White Fragility by Robin DiAngeloDARVO as a pattern of gaslighting in response to allegations of abuse was originally introduced by Jennifer J. Freyd, Ph.D. Brené Brown's podcast, Unlocking Us explores the importance of vulnerability.
Akureyrardæturnar Hafdís Sigurðardóttir og Freydís Heba Konráðsdóttir mæta í settið til Skúla B. Geirdal. Þær keppa báðar í hjólreiðum og eru kennarar á hjólanámskeiðum og þekkja því vel þá gífurlegu uppsveiflu sem hefur orðið í hjólreiðum á Íslandi síðustu ár. Hvað þarf til þess að að keppa og ná langt í hjólreiðum? Hvaða reglur gilda um hjólreiðar á vegum og gangstéttum? Hvernig er þjálfun í hjólreiðum háttað? Hafíds og Freyja gefa hér innsýn í líf keppnishjólreiða á Íslandi og koma með ýmis góð ráð fyrir þá sem hafa hug á að hjóla af krafti inn í sumarið!
Dr. Jennifer Freyd is a Professor of Psychology at the University of Oregon, as well as the Founder and President of a new non-profit, the Center for Institutional Courage. Dr. Freyd spoke with me about her journey from studying cognitive psychology to institutional betrayal, to institutional courage, as well as the ways she has had to show personal courage along her scholarly path. Though we don't discuss it in this episode Dr. Freyd is also fighting for pay equity at her institution via a major lawsuit. TRANSCRIPT Dr. Kate Clancy (Intro): Hello and welcome to the Courageous Scientists Podcast. My name is Kate Clancy and as you probably know from previous episodes this is a short, global pandemic passion project just to, I don’t know, shine a little light into our days and get to know some really amazing courageous people. I am so excited by who I am getting to talk to today, one of my personal heroes, this is Dr. Jennifer Freyd. She is a professor of psychology at the University of Oregon, she is a visiting scholar at Stanford and Jennifer is the founder and president of Center for Institutional Courage. So that should just give you the beginnings of the idea of why I am so excited to talk to Dr. Freyd. Thank you so much for joining me today. Dr. Jennifer Freyd: It’s my pleasure to be here. Clancy: So, as you know, since we talked about this before I started recording, I am going to be asking you the same three questions we ask everybody. So would you mind just starting with the first one: what brought you to science? Freyd: Well, you know I was an undergraduate in the late 1970s and I kept switching my major because I kept having new passions from fine arts to philosophy, ending up with anthropology. And near the end of my time in college I, on a lark, took an introductory psychology course and what inspired me to do that was one day walking through the library and seeing somebody’s textbook open with a diagram of the ear, explaining how hearing worked and perception and I thought it was so neat to understand perception. So I took this introductory psychology course and I fell in love with what was then called cognitive psychology: the study of thinking, memory, perception and decided that’s what I just had to do. It was really truly just falling in love. And so I just managed to get myself into graduate school despite not having a psychology major and I went to Stanford and I pursued cognitive psychology with great enthusiasm for really about ten years. Clancy: And since then you’ve had certainly a bit of a shift away from cognitive psychology. Do you want to say all what’s motivated that shift. Freyd: I think it kind of relates to your second question about courage because the shift required a lot of courage. I was in my early 30s, had mad something of a good name for myself in the field of cognitive psychology. Had tenure, was doing work that truly interested me that other people were building upon as well and in the area that I called Dynamic Representations’…had to do with perception and memory and around that time, two things happened. One was that there was a public increased interest in… what had been called different things but basically memories recovered of prior trauma so, especially prior sexual trauma and there were newspaper stories about it and it was touching to me personally in various ways as well and I realized, there are also memory psychologists. I knew a lot, but I had never really learned about this kind of striking phenomenon. And so I decided it was really important to understand and I delved into it, I learned a lot about sexual violence and hit the history of research on memory and trauma in general and for sexual violence and decided to start doing some research on this topic. And it was met with great consternation from my colleagues. Nobody was talking about sexual violence in academic psychology and I remember giving a colloquium starting out with some data, from other people, I hadn’t at that point collected my own data and about the rates. And it was like I had gotten up on a table and did something incredibly inappropriate because people were… some people were like scratching at their faces. It was really hard to describe and this was 1991 that that happened and, it would have been easy for me to have sort of retreated at that moment realizing that people did not like what I was doing, but for whatever reason, I’m just not made that way and if anything it kind of fueled my determination to study this topic and I developed a theory that it became called ‘Betrayal Trauma Theory,’ given kind of rapidly, and presented it in the summer of 1991 at a conference at UCSF’s (University of California, San Francisco) Medical School and really, at that point, shifted to more and more research on the psychology of sexual violence and trauma. Clancy: And so, as you said your sort of answer to that question was also starting to answer the second question of, ‘How have you shown courage in science?’ Can you share a little bit more about when you made that pivot and when you encountered obstacles… what that was like for you and how you persevered? Freyd: Yeah, I mean I’ve thought about it since you sent those questions and, there’s probably lots of different stories I could tell, but maybe one of the important moments there was, first of all just not giving up when my colleagues reacted with such unhappiness at my shift in interest and part of the message that came to me was this wasn’t an important topic and it probably wasn’t real and the data probably weren’t real and it was like a… it was not only inappropriate but, scientifically insignificant. And I knew, because I had read a lot of papers by then, that although there wasn’t a tone of research there was tons of research to say it was real. And I couldn’t imagine how it couldn’t be important. So, you know, I stuck with it. But within a couple of years, I found myself the target of a national organization that went after me. And this was extreme, this was a lot more than like colleagues in my department being realty bad and stuff, this was actual overt attack. And unfortunately for me, it involved my parents and they, and a lot of other people, really focused on discrediting me. And people in the media in the media like often, inadvertently I hope, broadcasted that message. It was humiliating and horrible. It took me some years, before I could speak at all in a public way about my suggestions, but it didn’t stop me from doing research. I just kept my head down and I did the research. In 1993, some more than two or three years into this, two years into this, I did speak out about the situation and why it wasn’t okay and I did that mostly because I was realizing it was impacting a lot of other people. Looking back, I don’t know how I had the courage to do that. I really don’t I certainly had the support of people close to me. I had an incredibly supportive partner and, at that point wonderful young children and very good friends, but very little support otherwise. I think it was just understanding that this was so important and some intuitive understanding that the backlash I was experiencing was part of the phenomenon and part of why I could not succumb to that pressure. That went on for years in the 90s and it started to subside near the end of the 90s and now I can, this is interesting to me, now students don’t know anything about that. My name was in so much popular media for a while there everybody knew about it but it just, sort of, shows how, with time, that certain things get forgotten and, to my relief, people don’t necessarily know about that but I think it’s important to, you know to say that scientists can get under a lot of personal attack for their work they’re doing and, in my case, intellectual work was put in personal terms, which I think was part of the point in discrediting me. So that was an extreme experience. Flash forward twenty years to 2014-ish, there was another, sort of, experience I had. I was doing research, by then my lab had been really going strong for twenty years. Developed Betrayal Trauma Theory where we were starting to study what we call ‘Institutional Betrayal’ and we had tons of data and by that time the country had really come around in talking about sexual violence in a big way. College Sexual Assault was now a topic. I was getting called from the press and the college really had turned around in a lot of ways. A big scandal hit my school involving an alleged gang rape involving athletes and there were protests, I was involved in various ways and the university administration asked me what they should do to handle the campus crisis and I said they should do what some people sometimes call a campus climate study, a survey of victimization rates which had not been done really in a big way at the school. At first they seemed to really want to support that but the when they looked at the survey, they really decided that no they were not going to support that and I think part of the thing that was going on too is I was openly critical in some ways of the university’s response and had even filed a report with the Department of Education on a suspected Clery Act violation. So you know I stuck my neck at them but I was proposing for really sound research that would really help the university and when they said no, they wouldn’t support or help this campus wide survey, I, somehow with my lab, figured out how to do it anyway. We got alternative funding and within a couple month’s we had done a big survey and it ended up being a really big contributor, in a good way, to the university but it took a lot of courage to do that when the administration seemed so clearly to be unhappy and had even said to the local press demeaning things about me as a researcher. Currently, I have put a huge amount of energy into creating a new non-profit, it’s called the Center for Institutional Courage. This has taken courage for me because of just who I am. I am an introverted person. I’m very comfortable in a laboratory, being a professor and I had to get out of that comfort zone to do this because founding a running a nonprofit involves all sorts of different skills. It really is probably a better thing for an extrovert than an introvert but I feel really strongly that the world needs exactly what I’m trying to create which is a research and dissemination organization to look at institutional courage which is kind of the antidote of institutional betrayal. Clancy: You know as a… as someone who does some work in this area and has been following in your footsteps for a very long time, it has been wonderful to see the center taking shape and I’m really excited about what it continues to do. Freyd: Thank you. Clancy: You’re welcome. I do have one last question: what do you want other people to know about what it means to be a courageous scientist? Freyd: A big part of this is being honest with yourself and what your values are and living your values. And each person’s values are going to be different so it’s going to look different for different people but I think we tend to be not courageous when we’re not living true to our own values. So for me, it’s really taking the time to think about what I really care the most about and prioritize and then say, ‘Is my living consistent with those values?’ and if I’m not, then adjusting what I am doing. And I think courage gets involved because, often, it’s easier to go along with what everybody else expects and go along with the status quo and when you detect that your own values are at odds with what you’re doing, it takes courage to change. People will resist it most likely. To me that’s what it takes whether it’s science or life. Clancy: I could not agree more. Any last thoughts or final words for our listeners? Freyd: I guess, you know, I can’t help but see in the response to the current pandemic all the themes that I’ve been looking at over the past 30 years showing up in various dramatic ways to the extent that the pandemic may impact people’s vulnerability to sexual violence and then you need to show institutional courage to protect people, for instance, who are ordered to be at home with abusers, to the response to the pandemic itself coming from various leaders whether those leaders create institutional betrayal through their inaction and dishonesty or whether they show institutional courage through their honesty and courageous moves. I just think it’s so right in front of our eyes right now and it just brings me back to why I think it’s so important to have a research center focusing on issues of institutional betrayal and institutional courage. Clancy: I was just having a conversation recently with folks about the fact that a lot of the university’s did at least some communicating in the early weeks of the pandemic and a lot have fallen silent now as we’re are all reckoning with how long term this is going to be and I know a lot of universities are reckoning with the fact that they are losing tens, if not, hundreds of millions of dollars because of what’s happening, but they aren’t necessarily talking to their people about it. But they’re not necessarily talking to their people about it. Freyd: I agree with you. Clancy: That’s concerning. Freyd: Yeah the lack of transparency is a hallmark of institutional betrayal and when I say, for instance, if the university is asking faculty to agree to pay-cuts without telling the faculty what the budget situation is… that seems very problematic to me because you don’t, where’s the accountability? What is being funded and what is not being funded? So I agree with you completely. It’s really important that universities stay open with their information right now to make sure that we really come out of this in a healthy way. Clancy: Right, especially in times like this right? Times of crisis or when we have to double down on, like you said thinking through our values and staying true to them rather than acting in fear. Freyd: Right. Clancy: Well I guess, fingers crossed that our various universities figure that out. (Laughs) Freyd: Yes. Clancy: Well thank you so much for joining me. This was just wonderful, as it always is when I get to talk to you so thank you so much. Freyd: Thank you Kate, so great to talk to you. Clancy (Outro): Yeah and thank you everyone for joining me for the courageous scientist podcast. If you want to learn more and visit the show notes to learn more about Dr. Freyd’s work, it’s at courageous-scientist.libysn.com, you do not need to visit a Patreon or help fund this podcast in any way. All you have to do is try to give some money to your foodbank so thank you so much and have a great day.
Hrund Gunnsteinsdóttir, framkvæmdastjóri Festu- miðstöðvar um samfélagsábyrgð kom og sagði okkur frá janúarráðstefnu sem ber yfirskriftina sóknarfæri á tímum alkemíu. Mikið vantraust ríkir á milli almennings í landinu og þeirra sem nýta fiskveiðiauðlindina okkar. Þetta segir Guðmundur Helgi Þórarinsson, formaður Félags vélstjóra og málmtæknimanna (VM). Hann bendir á að í mars árið 2019 hafi þrjú skip landað kolmunna hér á landi sama dag, hjá sama fyrirtæki, fiski úr sömu torfunni. Íslensku skipin tvö hafi fengið 25,17 krónur á kíló fyrir sinn farm, en norska skipið 36,07 krónur á kíló fyrir sinn kolmunna. Kristín Ýr Gunnarsdóttir hefur einsett sér að hlaupa 100 kílómetra í febrúar til styrktar Einstökum börnum. Dóttir hennar Freydís er með Williams-heilkenni. Kristín segir foreldra fatlaðra barna oft finna sig í einskismannslandi. Barátta þeirra skili sér ekki til þeirra sem síðar standi í sömu sporum. Því þurfi að breyta. Hægt er að heita á Kristínu og 100 kílómetrana hennar. Kári Jónasson, formaður stjórnar Ríkisútvarpsins, segir það hafa verið erfitt að komast að niðurstöðu um ráðningu nýs útvarpsstjóra. Stjórnin tilkynnti val sitt í gær. Stefán Eiríksson, borgarritari Reykjavíkurborgar og fyrrverandi lögreglustjóri á höfuðborgarsvæðinu, var ráðinn. Kári kom í Morgunútvarpið og ræddi við okkur ráðninguna og ferlið. Guðmundur Jóhannsson mætti í sitt vikulega tæknihorn.
Hrund Gunnsteinsdóttir, framkvæmdastjóri Festu- miðstöðvar um samfélagsábyrgð kom og sagði okkur frá janúarráðstefnu sem ber yfirskriftina sóknarfæri á tímum alkemíu. Mikið vantraust ríkir á milli almennings í landinu og þeirra sem nýta fiskveiðiauðlindina okkar. Þetta segir Guðmundur Helgi Þórarinsson, formaður Félags vélstjóra og málmtæknimanna (VM). Hann bendir á að í mars árið 2019 hafi þrjú skip landað kolmunna hér á landi sama dag, hjá sama fyrirtæki, fiski úr sömu torfunni. Íslensku skipin tvö hafi fengið 25,17 krónur á kíló fyrir sinn farm, en norska skipið 36,07 krónur á kíló fyrir sinn kolmunna. Kristín Ýr Gunnarsdóttir hefur einsett sér að hlaupa 100 kílómetra í febrúar til styrktar Einstökum börnum. Dóttir hennar Freydís er með Williams-heilkenni. Kristín segir foreldra fatlaðra barna oft finna sig í einskismannslandi. Barátta þeirra skili sér ekki til þeirra sem síðar standi í sömu sporum. Því þurfi að breyta. Hægt er að heita á Kristínu og 100 kílómetrana hennar. Kári Jónasson, formaður stjórnar Ríkisútvarpsins, segir það hafa verið erfitt að komast að niðurstöðu um ráðningu nýs útvarpsstjóra. Stjórnin tilkynnti val sitt í gær. Stefán Eiríksson, borgarritari Reykjavíkurborgar og fyrrverandi lögreglustjóri á höfuðborgarsvæðinu, var ráðinn. Kári kom í Morgunútvarpið og ræddi við okkur ráðninguna og ferlið. Guðmundur Jóhannsson mætti í sitt vikulega tæknihorn.
Nýverið sást til haftyrðla á höfuðborgarsvæðinu en þessi smávaxni fugl er sjaldséð sjón hér um slóðir. Við slógum á þráðinn til Freydísar Vigfúsdóttur líffræðings og fræddumst aðeins um þessa litlu gesti. Landsmenn hafa séð síðustu daga að veðurspár gera ráð fyrir miklu frosti um miðja vikuna, ekki síst hér á höfuðborgarsvæðinu, en spárnar hafa sýnt allt að 14 gráðu frost. Elín Björk Jónasdóttir, veðurfræðingur, var á línunni hjá okkur. Stofnaður hefur verið sérstakur metoo hópur á Facebook þar sem lesa má frásagnir tíu kvenna sem saka Jón Baldvin Hannibalsson, fyrrverandi utanríkisráðherra og sendiherra, um kynferðislega áreitni og ofbeldi í sinn garð. Stundin fjallaði fyrst um hópinn og ásakanir kvennana fyrir helgi. Ein þeirra sem sakar Jón Baldvin um áreitni er Carmen Jóhannsdóttir, en hún fullyrðir að Jón hafi káfað á sér síðasta sumar í vitna viðurvist þegar hún var í heimsókn á heimili hans og Bryndísar Schram á Spáni. Við heyrðum í Carmen. Guðrún Harðardóttir kom til okkar en hún er systurdóttir Bryndísar Schram, eiginkonu Jóns Baldvins. Hún steig fram árið 2012 viðtali við Nýtt líf og sagði frá áreitni Jóns Baldvins og klúrum bréfum sem hann sendi henni um nokkura ára skeið þegar hún var á aldrinum 12 til 17 ára. Hún er ein þeirra sem er að baki metoo hópsins sem stofnaður hefur verið á FB. Hún kom til okkar og ræddi m.a. við okkur um hvað gerðist eftir að hún steig fram á sínum tíma. Við slógum líka á þráðinn til Munchen þar sem karlalandsliðið í handbolta er nú nærri hálfnað með keppni í B-riðli Heimsmeistaramótsins. Kjartan Vídó Ólafsson, Eyjamaður og markaðsstjóri HSÍ, er þar ásamt hópi Íslendinga sem mættir eru gagngert til að styðja við bakið á liðinu. Gunnar Birgisson íþróttafréttamaður fór svo nánar yfir HM með okkur. Tónlist: KK - Frelsið. Foo Fighters - Walking after you. St. Etienne - Only love can break your heart. Gotye - Somebody that I used to know. Björk - Army of me. John Mayer - New light. Daft Punk og Julian Casablancas - Instant crush. Hjálmar - Fyrir þig.
Why are people defending Bill Cosby? How trash was R. Kelly response to #MuteRKelly? Who told Kanye West the lie that slavery is a choice? Monique joins hosts Wagatwe and Irna as they break down the stories behind the headlines. References and reading Camille Cosby's bizarre statement says her husband is the real victim It's not #metoo: Bill Cosby sealed his own fate with his quaaludes talk Interview with TMZ's Van Lathan after Kanye's comments Introduction to DARVO by Jennifer J. Freyd of the University of Oregon Follow us! https://www.instagram.com/disrespectability/ http://twitter.com/disrespectcast https://www.facebook.com/disrespectability/ Hosts: Wagatwe Wanjuki and Irna Landrum Creator: Monique Teal Sound and editing: Aaron Rand Freeman of Unreasonable Fridays
Jennifer Freyd is a Professor of Psychology at the University of OregonJennifer J. Freyd, PhD, is a professor of psychology at the University of Oregon and an author, consultant, and speaker. She is known for her influential theories about sexual assault and harassment including her theories of betrayal trauma, institutional betrayal, institutional courage, and DARVO (Deny, Attack, & Reverse Victim & Offender – a perpetrator strategy). The author or coauthor of over 200 articles, Freyd is also the author of the Harvard Press award-winning book Betrayal Trauma: The Logic of Forgetting Childhood Abuse. Freyd has received numerous awards including being named a John Simon Guggenheim Fellow, an Erskine Fellow at The University of Canterbury in New Zealand, a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the Lifetime Achievement Award from the International Society for the Study of Trauma & Dissociation. Freyd currently serves as the Editor of The Journal of Trauma & Dissociation and she is a Visiting Scholar at Stanford. Freyd attended the University of Pennsylvania for her undergraduate education and received her PhD in Psychology from Stanford University.Aired April 18, 2018 See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Reykvíkingar dagsins í dag ljá Reykvíkingum frá árinu 1918 rödd sína og lesa valda texta frá því ári. Í þessum þætti les Freydís Helgadóttir, 11 ára nemandi í Fossvogsskóla, færslu úr fundagerðabók barnastúkunnar Unnar. Barnastúkan Unnur var stofnuð 1. mars 1905 og var um tíma fjölmennasta barnastúkan hér á landi en þar var meðal annars leiklistarstarfsemi og blaðaútgáfa. R1918 er samstarfsverkefni Listahátíðar í Reykjavík, Landsbókasafnsins og RÚV. Textavinna: Landsbókasafn Íslands-Háskólabókasafn og Bjarni Jónsson. Tónlist: Úlfur Eldjárn. Samsetning: Þorgerður E. Sigurðardóttir.
Hanna Katrín Friðriksson, þingmaður Viðreisnar, hefur lagt fram þingsályktunartillögu á Alþingi um að samgönguráðherra verði falið að afnema hámarksfjölda atvinnuleyfa til leigubílaaksturs, fækka kvöðum fyrir veitingu þeirra og opna íslenskan leigubílamarkað fyrir aukinni samkeppni. Leigbílaleyfum hefur fjölgað um tvö frá árinu 2003 þrátt fyrir mikla fjölgun íbúa og ferðamanna en þegar er í skoðun hjá ráðuneytinu að fjölga leyfum um hundrað. Við heyrum Ástgeiri Þorsteinssyni, formanni félags leigubílstjóra. Spáð er talsverðu óveðri á vesturhelmingi landsins frá klukkan sjö og er appelsínugul viðvörun á suð-vesturhorninu, norðurlandi vestra og hluta Vestfjarða. Fjölda vega hefur þegar verið lokað og er búist við að vegir á vestanverðu landinu verði að mestu ófærir eða lokaðir. Við heyrum í veðurfræðingi á Veðurstofu Íslands. Börn af erlendum uppruna eiga erfiðara með að fóta sig í íslenska skólakerfinu en gengur og gerist í nágrannalöndunum. Þetta kemur fram í skýrslu norrænu ráðherranefndarinnar. Nichole Leigh Mosty, fyrrverandi alþingismaður, gagnrýndi í Morgunútvarpinu í gær að tvítyngdum börnum á íslandi sé kennt á sama hátt og þeim börnum sem hafa íslensku að móðurmáli. Hulda Karen Daníelsdóttir, sérfræðingur hjá Menntamálastofnun kemur til okkar og segir frá stöðu tvítyngdra barna samkvæmt nýrri greiningu stofnunarinnar en þau eru tífalt fleiri nú en fyrir tveimur áratugum. Hún kemur til okkar. Freydís Jóna Freysteinsdóttir, dósent við félagsráðgjafadeild HÍ, ætlar að ræða við okkur um kvennmorð á íslandi. Á síðustu 30 árum hefur kona verið myrt um það bil annað hvert ár og oftast eru tengsl á milli fórnarlambs og geranda. Freydís fer yfir þetta á ráðstefnu um löggæslu og samfélagið sem haldin er í dag í Háskólanum á Akureyri og við ræðum við hana í þættinum. Ísfirðingurinn Rögnvaldur Þór Óskarsson hefur óskað eftir aðstoð bæjarbúa við að finna nafn á krumma nokkurn sem vakið hefur athygli á Ísafirði og gert sig heimakominn á ákveðnu svæði. Þetta er ekki fyrsti krumminn sem getið hefur sér frægðar á Ísafirði, fyrirrennarar hans voru krumminn Gagarín, sem Jón á slökkvistöðinin átti á sjöundaáratugnum og krumminn Elías, sem síðar reyndist kvenkyns. Við hringjum í Rögnvald. Anna Filbert, í Björgunarsveitinni Kili, stendur vaktina á Kjalarnesinu í ofsaveðri sem nú gengur yfir. Hún segir orðið hættulegt að vera úti því vindhviður hafi náði 50 m/sek. Kolbrún Þorsteinsdóttir er farþegi í vél á leið til Munchen. Hún er föst í vélinni á flugbrautinni vegna veðurs en verið er að reyna að koma farþe