Podcasts about funambulist

  • 19PODCASTS
  • 96EPISODES
  • 40mAVG DURATION
  • 1MONTHLY NEW EPISODE
  • Apr 12, 2025LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about funambulist

Latest podcast episodes about funambulist

New Books Network
Mimi Thi Nguyen, "The Promise of Beauty" (Duke UP, 2024)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2025 92:05


In The Promise of Beauty (Duke UP, 2024), Mimi Thi Nguyen explores the relationship between the concept of beauty and narratives of crisis and catastrophe. Nguyen conceptualizes beauty, which, she observes, we turn to in emergencies and times of destruction, as a tool to identify and bridge the discrepancy between the world as it is and what it ought to be. Drawing widely from aesthetic and critical theories, Nguyen outlines how beauty—or its lack—points to the conditions that must exist for it to flourish. She notes that an absence of beauty becomes both a political observation and a call to action to transform the conditions of the situation so as to replicate, preserve, or repair beauty. The promise of beauty can then engender a critique of social arrangements and political structures that would set the foundations for its possibility and presence. In this way, Nguyen highlights the role of beauty in inspiring action toward a more just world. Mimi Thi Nguyen is Professor of Gender and Women's Studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Her first book, called The Gift of Freedom: War, Debt, and Other Refugee Passages, focuses on the promise of “giving” freedom concurrent and contingent with waging war (Duke University Press, 2012; Outstanding Book Award in Cultural Studies from the Association of Asian American Studies, 2014). She is also co-editor with Fiona I.B. Ngo and Mariam Lam of a special issue of positions: asia critique on Southeast Asian American Studies (20:3, Winter 2012), and co-editor with Thuy Linh Nguyen Tu of Alien Encounters: Pop Culture in Asian America (Duke University Press, 2007). Her papers have been solicited for the Feminist Theory Archive at Brown University. Her second book is called The Promise of Beauty, and she is part of an editorial collective with Patty Ahn, Michelle Cho, Vernadette Vicuna Gonzalez, Rani Neutill, and Yutian Wong for Bangtan Remixed: A Critical BTS Reader; both books are being published with Duke University Press in 2024. She has also published in Signs, Camera Obscura, The Funambulist, Women & Performance, positions, Radical History Review, and ArtForum. Najwa Mayer is an interdisciplinary cultural scholar of race, gender, sexuality, and Islam in/and the United States, working at the intersections of politics, aesthetics, and critical theory. She is currently a Society of Fellows Postdoctoral Scholar at Boston University. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network

New Books in Critical Theory
Mimi Thi Nguyen, "The Promise of Beauty" (Duke UP, 2024)

New Books in Critical Theory

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2025 92:05


In The Promise of Beauty (Duke UP, 2024), Mimi Thi Nguyen explores the relationship between the concept of beauty and narratives of crisis and catastrophe. Nguyen conceptualizes beauty, which, she observes, we turn to in emergencies and times of destruction, as a tool to identify and bridge the discrepancy between the world as it is and what it ought to be. Drawing widely from aesthetic and critical theories, Nguyen outlines how beauty—or its lack—points to the conditions that must exist for it to flourish. She notes that an absence of beauty becomes both a political observation and a call to action to transform the conditions of the situation so as to replicate, preserve, or repair beauty. The promise of beauty can then engender a critique of social arrangements and political structures that would set the foundations for its possibility and presence. In this way, Nguyen highlights the role of beauty in inspiring action toward a more just world. Mimi Thi Nguyen is Professor of Gender and Women's Studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Her first book, called The Gift of Freedom: War, Debt, and Other Refugee Passages, focuses on the promise of “giving” freedom concurrent and contingent with waging war (Duke University Press, 2012; Outstanding Book Award in Cultural Studies from the Association of Asian American Studies, 2014). She is also co-editor with Fiona I.B. Ngo and Mariam Lam of a special issue of positions: asia critique on Southeast Asian American Studies (20:3, Winter 2012), and co-editor with Thuy Linh Nguyen Tu of Alien Encounters: Pop Culture in Asian America (Duke University Press, 2007). Her papers have been solicited for the Feminist Theory Archive at Brown University. Her second book is called The Promise of Beauty, and she is part of an editorial collective with Patty Ahn, Michelle Cho, Vernadette Vicuna Gonzalez, Rani Neutill, and Yutian Wong for Bangtan Remixed: A Critical BTS Reader; both books are being published with Duke University Press in 2024. She has also published in Signs, Camera Obscura, The Funambulist, Women & Performance, positions, Radical History Review, and ArtForum. Najwa Mayer is an interdisciplinary cultural scholar of race, gender, sexuality, and Islam in/and the United States, working at the intersections of politics, aesthetics, and critical theory. She is currently a Society of Fellows Postdoctoral Scholar at Boston University. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/critical-theory

Urbinary
Finding our place: inside/outside/in the periphery of academia

Urbinary

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2025 26:19


In this 4th episode of Urbinary, we venture beyond the traditional confines of academia to explore research, education, and publication practices situated ‘in the periphery of' academia. We question which aspects of the ‘status quo' can be pushed back against and how. To unpack this, we chatted with three different editorial platforms that we admire for their thoughtful and generative perspectives: The Funambulist, KoozArch, and Bellingcat. Join Aubrey Toldi, Isabella Traeger, and Mohamed Elgohary as they explore different positionalities within spatial knowledge production.

lundisoir
États d'urgence: une histoire spatiale du continuum colonial français - Léopold Lambert

lundisoir

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2024 73:06


Qu'est ce qui relie des révoltes de Kabylie à la moitié du 19ème siècle à la Semaine Sanglante de Paris puis au bagne d'une terre perdue dans le Pacifique? Ou plus récemment, comment des corps et des idées souvent antagonistes parviennent ils à déployer des dispositifs, des doctrines et des résistances de la Casbah d'Alger aux banlieues du coeur de la métropole en passant par les forêts kanakes? C'est ce à quoi nous tentons de répondre avec Léopold Lambert, architecte de formation et rédacteur en chef de The Funambulist, qui s'attache à étudier la question des mobilités géographiques et de l'aménagement du territoire, jusque dans ses constructions les plus récentes.

The ET project
Walking the tightrope of life: Overcoming fear and embracing courage

The ET project

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2024 45:13


Today we're in Melbourne, Australia and chatting with our guest Mr. Utkarsh Naran, the Founder and CEO of IgnitedNeurons. Utkarsh is on a mission to help managers become future leaders for the world. He is a learning consultant and an accomplished coach on the path to achieving ICF-PCC accreditation, having over 1,000 hours of coaching experience. With a career spanning 17 years across healthcare, leadership, and e-learning, Utkarsh has led numerous cross-domain teams in both tech startups and large-scale client projects for Fortune 500 companies.  His career started as a 

Littérature sans frontières
Spéciale scène africaine au Salon du Livre de Genève

Littérature sans frontières

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2024 29:00


À l'occasion du Salon du Livre qui se déroule à Genève, en Suisse, avec au programme 650 écrivains venus du monde entier, pleins feux sur la scène africaine particulièrement riche avec, parmi les invités de cette édition 2024 : Raphaëlle Red, autrice d'un premier roman intitulé « Adikou » chez Grasset, et Meissa Mbaye qui a publié « Génies », un recueil illustré par Sophie Le Hire, aux éditions Saraaba. Dialogue littéraire entre deux des invités du Salon du Livre de GenèveRaphaëlle Red est née en 1997, à Paris, et vit aujourd'hui à Berlin. Elle a étudié les Sciences sociales avant de préférer la littérature. Pour l'écriture d'Adikou, elle a notamment été en résidence à la Maison des Artistes de Lomé. Ses textes ont été publiés en français (Jef Klak, L‘Humanité), anglais (gal-dem, The Funambulist) et allemand (Bella Triste, anthologies Resonanzen et Glückwunsch). Adikou est son premier roman."Elle sait à peine prononcer son nom, Adikou, que la narratrice décrit tour à tour comme un lézard et comme un vautour, un double et une étrangère. Sa lignée est floue, son histoire familiale trouble. Pourtant le monde entier voudrait qu'elle donne son origine, coche noire, ou blanche, ou bien fifty-fifty. Qu'elle accepte de se ranger.Alors, un lourd jour d'été, Adikou n'y tient plus. Elle s'échappe, prend la route du Togo, pays du père dont elle sait si peu de choses, et la narratrice n'a d'autre choix que de la suivre. C'est un départ qui fait écho à d'autres  : une dégringolade du nord vers le sud des États-Unis lors d'un séjour d'études, une tentative de retour à la source avec une ONG humanitaire. Mais cette fois-ci, elle est décidée à y séjourner aussi longtemps qu'il faudra pour trouver quelque chose d'elle-même. Un nom, une famille, une trace, une présence. Ou peut-être simplement un air plus respirable. Lomé ne sera qu'un début, un avant-goût moite et poussiéreux d'avancées vers des zones toujours plus mouvantes. Territoires intérieurs, qui la renvoient vers son insoluble lien au métissage. Territoires familiaux et géographiques, en quête des origines d'un père qui a depuis longtemps fui son pays. Territoires historiques marqués par l'esclavage puis la colonisation. (Présentation des éditions Grasset)Meissa Mbaye, un talent au service de la parole et de la scène. Musicien, compositeur et coach-formateur en art oratoire, Meïssa Mbaye a un riche parcours de trente ans comme conteur et pédagogue. Il est aujourd'hui directeur-fondateur et formateur au Werekaan Institute, qui promeut l'art oratoire africain.Entre mythes, traditions, folklore et poésie,« Génies » est un voyage envoûtant à la découverte de 7 créaturesqui peuplent les esprits des Sénégalaises et Sénégalais depuis toujours.Contes à écouter en ligne grâce à des QR codes à scanner (éditions Saaraba).

The Fire These Times
154/ Anti-Imperialism After the Syrian Revolution w/ Sahar Amarir

The Fire These Times

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2024 82:47


For episode 154, French-Moroccan-Amazigh analyst Sahar Amarir joins Elia J. Ayoub and Leila Al-Shami to talk about her piece "Imperialist is Multiple, so Should be Our Solidarities: on the Need for Post-Post-Colonialism"  published in The Funambulist.  The best way to support The Fire These Times is: Through ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Patreon.com/firethesetimes⁠⁠. With a monthly or yearly donation, you get perks including early access, exclusive videos, monthly hangouts, access to the video and book clubs, merch and more. Leave a review wherever you listen to podcasts. This allows us to show up on these platforms in the first place. Tell your friends and enemies about it. Episode Credits: Hosts: Elia J. Ayoub and Leila Al-Shami Producer: Elia J. Ayoub Guest: Margaret Killjoy Music: ⁠⁠Rap and Revenge⁠⁠ Sound editor: Artin Salimi Episode designer: Elia J. Ayoub Team profile pics: Molly Crabapple Original TFTT design: Wenyi Geng

sahar ayoub imperialist anti imperialism syrian revolution funambulist fire these times leila al shami
MONEY FM 89.3 - Workday Afternoon with Claressa Monteiro
Money in the Market: Why 2024 is the year of the funambulist

MONEY FM 89.3 - Workday Afternoon with Claressa Monteiro

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2024 13:16


2023 turned out to be better than many had expected for markets. But a number of key issues are coming to the forefront that will affect prospects in 2024. Pictet Wealth Management has recently published its prediction for the global economy and financial markets for the year ahead. They've labelled the year of 2024 as the ‘The Year of the Funambulist'. On Money in the Market, Hongbin Jeong speaks to Rickie Jia, Head of Discretionary Portfolio Management Multi-Asset and Management Asia, Pictet Wealth Management, to find out why.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

money head market funambulist
LIVE! From City Lights
adrienne marie brown in conversation with dream hampton

LIVE! From City Lights

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2023 57:27


LIVE! From City Lights celebrates author adrienne marie brown on her latest novel “Maroons: A Grievers Novel.” The second installment of the Grievers trilogy, “Maroons” is a tale of survival that bears brown's background as an activist in Detroit. Amidst the Syndrome H-8 pandemic, she learns the importance of community and connection through an abandoned urban landscape. adrienne marie brown grows healing ideas in public through her multi-genre writing, her music and her podcasts. Informed by 25 years of movement facilitation, somatics, Octavia E Butler scholarship and her work as a doula, brown has nurtured Emergent Strategy, Pleasure Activism, Radical Imagination and Transformative Justice as ideas and practices for transformation. She is the author/editor of seven published texts and the founder of the Emergent Strategy Ideation Institute, where she is now the writer-in-residence. Her published work includes “Fables and Spells Collected and New Short Fiction and Poetry,” “Octavia's Brood,” “Emergent Strategy,” “Pleasure Activism,” and “We Will Not Cancel Us.” “Maroons” is her second novel. Her visionary fiction has appeared in The Funambulist, Harvard Design Review, and Dark Mountain. You can purchase copies of “Maroons: A Grievers Novel” directly from City Lights here: https://citylights.com/maroons/ This was a virtual event hosted by Peter Maravelis and made possible by support from the City Lights Foundation: citylights.com/foundation.

Lost in Transportation
Hors-série : Banc à part

Lost in Transportation

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2023 18:55


Hors-série : Banc à part  Lorsqu'on veut qualifier un espace public, on peut se demander : Peut-on s'y déplacer à pied ? S'y sent-on à l'aise ? En sécurité ? Cet endroit est-il assez éclairé ? Est-il arborisé ? Peut-on s'y arrêter, s'y asseoir ? Le banc fait partie du mobilier qui améliore l'expérience d'un espace : il permet l'arrêt, le repos, et la permanence dans un lieu, sans finalité particulière.   Pour cet épisode hors-série de Lost in Transportation, nous voulions observer l'usage des bancs. Les bancs du quartier, proches de notre bureau, dans le 13ème arrondissement de Paris.  Des bancs ordinaires ; ni particulièrement bien placés, ni particulièrement hostiles à l'arrêt.  Dans cet épisode, pas d'étude sociologique. Pas de représentativité des bancs choisis, ni des passants. Pas de généralisation à l'échelle de la ville. Juste des paroles de passants, usagers et usagères des bancs, et une réflexion sur leur usage. Les bancs, pourquoi sont-ils là ? Pourquoi voudrait-on qu'ils soient là ?   Références : Albrecher, R. ; Clément, G. ; El Khawand, M. ; Hajji, K. et Kaufmann, V. Mobilité piétonne : le rôle des bancs publics dans la promotion de la marche à Lausanne" 2022 Blais, J-P., Laizé, G., « Banc de service public », L'Ameublement Français, 2015, http://monono.fr/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/Bancs-de-Service-Public_Web.pdf Cerema, « Favoriser la marche: quels aménagements, quelles démarches pour mieux accueillir les piétons ? », 2021 Debacker, A., « Le banc public, une unité où toute une société se joue : objet révélateur de l'ambiguïté des relations entre concepteur et usager de l'espace public. Architecture, aménagement de l'espace », 2020, ffdumas-02625272f Gehl, J, Stationnary activity mapping, Gehl institute https://gehlpeople.com/projects/porschestrasse-pspl-wolfsburg-germany/attachment/short_collecting_data_stationary/ Lapalud, P., Blache, C., “A bench is a bench, is a bench?”, The Funambulist, 2016 https://thefunambulist.net/magazine/06-object-politics/22476-2 Le Monde, « Le banc public, assise du vivre ensemble », 2020, https://www.lemonde.fr/economie/article/2020/07/24/le-banc-public-assise-du-vivre-ensemble_6047205_3234.html Afnor, Norme NF P99-610, Mobilier urbain d'ambiance et de propreté - Bancs publics - Caractéristiques de robustesse et de stabilité des bancs publics, Juin 1991, https://www.boutique.afnor.org/fr-fr/norme/nf-p99610/mobilier-urbain-dambiance-et-de-proprete-bancs-publics-caracteristiques-de-/fa022829/11345#AreasStoreProductsSummaryView

The Funambulist Podcast
Diasporas et Imaginaires des Luttes /// Maïa Tellit Hawad: Le Souffle du Pays Touareg

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2022 69:29


Dans cette conversation avec Maïa Tellit Hawad, membre de la petite diaspora touareg en France, nous parlons d'un pays sans état et donc les contours sont plus fluctuants que les lignes coloniales tracées dans le sable du Sahara. Cet épisode autour du Pays Touareg, ses luttes contre le colonialisme européen, les répressions des états du Maghreb et du Sahel, et l'extractivisme multinational, est pensé comme un complément du texte écrit par Maïa pour le 44ème numéro de The Funambulist magazine(novembre-décembre. Maïa Tellit Hawad est une chercheuse indépendante d'origine franco-touarègue, basée à Marseille. Elle a une formation de philosophe (Sorbonne, EHESS - Paris 7). Ses recherches questionnent les imaginaires du Sahara dans les sciences africanistes françaises et l'imbrication de la géographie, de la colonialité et des politiques de la race dans les administrations actuelles du Sahara central. Ses travaux récents s'intéressent aux devenirs nomades au sein de la société touarègue contemporaine. Elle co-réalise actuellement un premier documentaire qui s'intéresse aux femmes musiciennes touarègues de la région de Agadez.

the minor constellations podcast
Episode 12 | Rethinking Jewish Diaspora: in conversation with Ben Ratskoff

the minor constellations podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2022 49:18


In this episode, we talk to Ben Ratskoff, who is visiting assistant professor in the Louchheim School of Judaic Studies at Hebrew Union College and the University of Southern California. Our conversation departs from two articles he wrote. One was published in Funambulist, titled “Rethinking Jewish Diaspora”, in which he wants to nuance the concept of Jewish radical diasporism beyond Jewish opposition to Zionism. The other, titled "Against Analogy" appeared in Jewish Currents, titled "Against Analogy". It was written just weeks after the murder of George Floyd and suggests that progressive Jews need to go beyond invoking Jewish suffering as a means to enable Jewish solidarity with other minorities. The conversation addresses questions of Jewish identity, diaspora politics and analogy. This time, we recorded our conversation with a live audience, as part of the Minor Cosmopolitan Assembly event, at Silent Green Kulturquartier in Berlin Wedding. For links, a list of references, and more information about our guest please visit https://minor.hypotheses.org/podcast Our amazing intro track is by Shane Cooper, called "Bass in the Bathroom", from the album "Small Songs for Big Times", March 2020. For more, please visit https://shanecooper.bandcamp.com/releases

The Funambulist Podcast
Alexia Fiasco & Nilton Mascarenhas /// Histoire du Cap-Vert et de sa Diaspora

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2022 66:16


Le Cap Vert est quelque peu présent dans l'imaginaire anticolonial francophone par l'intermédiaire des écrits d'Amilcar Cabral (dont la mère était Guinéenne et le père Capverdien), mais l'imaginaire politique de l'archipel aux dix iles et de sa grande diaspora demeure trop peu connu de beaucoup d'entre nous en France. Cette conversation avec la photographe Alexia Fiasco et le militant Nilton Mascarenhas permet d'y remédier quelque peu. Pour les lectrices.eurs anglophone, elle peut etre acccompagnée par l'article de Flávio Zenun Almada and Sónia Vaz Borges à propos de la diaspora capverdienne de la région de Lisbonne dans The Funambulist 43 (sept-oct 2022) Diasporas.

The Funambulist Podcast
Eléonore Tran /// Art et photographies de la diaspora vietnamienne

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2022 51:50


Au sein de ce premier de deux (au moins) épisodes à propos de la diaspora vietnamienne, Eléonore Tran nous parle de recherche en histoire de l'art qu'elle a effectuée à propos des travaux de six artistes de cette diaspora: Bao Vuong, Prune Phi, Jacqueline Hoàng Nguyễn (qui avait participé au podcast de The Funambulist en 2019), Binh Danh, Quynh Lam et Dinh Q. Lê. Au sein d'un mémoire intitulé "Suture(s): Collecte et utilisation de photographies vernaculaires dans la pratique artistique du Vietnam et de sa diaspora" (2021), elle avait ainsi montré de quelle manière ces artistes mobilisent la mémoire (et son absence) par l'intermédiaire de la photographie (familiale et autre) afin de faire diaspora et questionner celle-ci. Eléonore Tran est doctorante en histoire de l'art contemporain à l'université Paris 8. Diplômée de Lettres modernes (Université Paris Cité) et d'Histoire de l'art (Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne) ses recherches mêlent à la fois étude artistique, sociologique et historique. Sa thèse porte sur les différentes manières dont la photographie sert de matériau de mémoire au sein de la diaspora vietnamienne. À travers l'analyse des œuvres d'artistes contemporains originaires du Vietnam, elle considère la photographie à la fois comme un fragment permettant de reconstituer le passé et comme un médium permettant d'établir de nouveaux récits de soi et de la communauté.

The Anton Savage Show
Kiskstart Your Weekend: Funambulist, Mairead Dewar

The Anton Savage Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2022 5:35


For this week's episode of Kickstart Your Weekend, Stefanie Preissner is joined by Mairead Dewar to talk about the Life Line project which involves local Galway volunteers taking to tightropes and walking high above sections of the River Corrib.

Haymarket Books Live
Between the Black Radical Tradition and the Digital w/ Logic Magazine

Haymarket Books Live

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2022 102:51


Join contributors to the special edition of Logic Magazine, Beacons, for a discussion on Black freedom and technology. What would it mean to take the Black internet seriously? How do we call in Black studies scholars to imagining technologies of black freedoms in addition to grappling with the racial regimes wrought by artificial intelligence and machine learning models? The dominant approach to mis/disinformation is policing, reporting and suspending individual users but what if we oriented towards abolition and affirming black joy? What can the black radical tradition offer in addressing new modes of surveillance and social control that begin from black indigineity instead of reinscribing the nation state? Contributors to special edition of Logic Magazine, in partnership with We Be Imagining, Beacons: Andre Brock and SA Smythe will be in conversation with Zoé Samudzi. Moderated by J. Khadijah Abdurahman. Get the new issue of Logic Magazine, Beacons, here: https://logicmag.io --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Speakers: SA Smythe (they / them) is a poet, translator, and assistant professor of Black European Cultural Studies, Contemporary Mediterranean Studies, and Black Trans Poetics at UCLA, where they research relational aspects of Black belonging beyond borders. They are a Senior Fellow at theCenter for Applied Transgender Studies and editor of Troubling the Grounds: Global Configurations of Blackness, Nativism, and Indigeneity, a special issue for Postmodern Culture. Winner of the 2022 Rome Prize for Modern Italian Studies, Smythe is currently based between Rome and Tongva Land (Los Angeles). André Brock (@docdre) is an Associate Professor in the School of Literature, Media & Communication at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Dr. Brock is one of the preeminent scholars of Black Cyberculture. His work bridges Science and Technology Studies and Critical Discourse Analysis, showing how the communicative affordances of online media align with those of Black communication practices. His scholarship includes published articles on racial representations in videogames, black women and weblogs, whiteness, blackness, and digital technoculture, as well as groundbreaking research on Black Twitter. He is the author of Distributed Blackness: African-American Cyberculture. Zoé Samudzi has a PhD in Sociology from the University of California, San Francisco where she is a postdoctoral fellow in the ACTIONS Program. She is co-author of As Black as Resistance, guest editor of the September-October 2021 issue of The Funambulist titled "Against Genocide," and a writer whose work has appeared in The New Republic, The New Inquiry, Hyperallergic, Jewish Currents, and other outlets. J. Khadijah Abdurahman (she/they/any) is an abolitionist whose research focus is predictive analytics in the child welfare system. They are the founder of We Be Imagining, a public interest technology project at Columbia University's INCITE Center and The American Assembly's Democracy and Trust Program. WBI draws on the Black radical tradition to develop public technology through infusing academic discourse with the performance arts in partnership with community based organizations. Khadijah is co-leading the Otherwise School: Tools and Techniques of Counter-Fascism alongside Sucheta Ghoshal's Inquilab at the University of Washington, HCDE. Their report examining the role of tech in mass atrocities in Ethiopia is forthcoming. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- This event is sponsored by Logic Magazine and Haymarket Books. Watch the live event recording: https://youtu.be/kiuv7W4gNqo Buy books from Haymarket: www.haymarketbooks.org Follow us on Soundcloud: soundcloud.com/haymarketbooks

The Funambulist Podcast
SHAHRAM KHOSRAVI /// Waiting Bodies in Dictatorial and Bordering Regimes

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2021 35:38


This conversation was recorded to be published in The Funambulist 36 (July-August 2021) They Have Clocks, We Have Time. Waiting is a particular temporal praxis, whose political dimension is more likely to be missed by those who make people wait than by those who have to wait for a visa, for food, for access to the city, etc. Shahram Khosravi shares with us some of his reflections on this action of waiting; its Kafkaian dimension, but also its revolutionary potential. Shahram Khosravi is a former taxi driver and currently an accidental Professor of Anthropology at Stockholm University. Khosravi is the author of some academic books and some articles but he prefers to write stories. He has been an active writer in the international press. The past year he has been working on an art book on Waiting and two years ago he started Critical Border Studies, a network for scholars, artists and activists to interact. See also his short story in this issue.

Burn It All Down
Hot Take: Dr. Sophia Azeb on Palestinian Liberation and Sports

Burn It All Down

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2021 44:39


In this Hot Take, Shireen Ahmed interviews Dr. Sophia Azeb, assistant professor of Black studies in the Department of English Language and Literature at the University of Chicago and regular contributor to The Funambulist magazine. They discuss the recent trauma in Palestine, how athletes have addressed the violence, Black and Palestinian transnational solidarity, and how sports are wielded politically.  This episode was produced by Tressa Versteeg. Shelby Weldon is our social media and website specialist. Burn It All Down is part of the Blue Wire podcast network. For show notes, transcripts, and more info about BIAD, check out our website: www.burnitalldownpod.com To help support the Burn It All Down podcast, please consider becoming a patron: www.patreon.com/burnitalldown For BIAD merchandise: https://www.bonfire.com/store/burn-it-all-down/ Find us on Twitter: twitter.com/BurnItDownPod; Facebook: www.facebook.com/BurnItAllDownPod/; and Instagram: www.instagram.com/burnitalldownpod/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The Funambulist Podcast
Quartiers Populaires #10 M. H. Abdallah & H. Ben Boubaker /// De la Commune à Aujourd'hui 1/2

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2021 70:11


Pour le numéro de mars-avril 2021 du magazine The Funambulist, nous tenions, comme beaucoup d'autres, à célébrer les 150 ans de la Commune de Paris. Il nous semblait néanmoins crucial d'extraire son histoire et son héritage des imaginaires des gauches blanches du Nord global et à les faire dialoguer avec des expériences communales du passé ou du présent de Martinique, de Syrie, de Chine, du Mexique, du Venezuela, de Tunisie, ou encore de Hong Kong. A cette approche résolument internationaliste, nous voulions ajouter une lecture intrinsèque aux quartiers populaires de l'Est et du Nord parisiens associant l'histoire de la Commune aux luttes de l'immigration et antiracistes de ces cinquante dernières années. C'est ainsi que j'ai proposé aux ami.e.s Mogniss H. Abdallah et Hajer Ben Boubaker de contribuer une nouvelle fois à nos projets éditoriaux en accomplissant ensemble deux marches sur les traces de ces histoires. Les deux enregistrements que ces marches ont produit peuvent être quelque peu déroutants, tant nous passons d'une époque à une autre au fil de nos conversations. Ce qui crée leur cohérence néanmoins est la progression spatiale que nous accomplissons, ainsi que l'excavation de différentes strates de la géologie politique de Paris à chaque endroit où nous nous arrêtons. Afin de vous y retrouver, nous vous proposons de suivre les cartes tracées pour l'occasion et incluses sur la page du podcast sur notre site ou bien en version anglophone dans le magazine. Très bonne écoute à toutes et à tous.

The Funambulist Podcast
Quartiers Populaires #10 M. H. Abdallah & H. Ben Boubaker /// De la Commune à Aujourd'hui 2/2

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2021 55:13


Pour le numéro de mars-avril 2021 du magazine The Funambulist, nous tenions, comme beaucoup d'autres, à célébrer les 150 ans de la Commune de Paris. Il nous semblait néanmoins crucial d'extraire son histoire et son héritage des imaginaires des gauches blanches du Nord global et à les faire dialoguer avec des expériences communales du passé ou du présent de Martinique, de Syrie, de Chine, du Mexique, du Venezuela, de Tunisie, ou encore de Hong Kong. A cette approche résolument internationaliste, nous voulions ajouter une lecture intrinsèque aux quartiers populaires de l'Est et du Nord parisiens associant l'histoire de la Commune aux luttes de l'immigration et antiracistes de ces cinquante dernières années. C'est ainsi que j'ai proposé aux ami.e.s Mogniss H. Abdallah et Hajer Ben Boubaker de contribuer une nouvelle fois à nos projets éditoriaux en accomplissant ensemble deux marches sur les traces de ces histoires. Les deux enregistrements que ces marches ont produit peuvent être quelque peu déroutants, tant nous passons d'une époque à une autre au fil de nos conversations. Ce qui crée leur cohérence néanmoins est la progression spatiale que nous accomplissons, ainsi que l'excavation de différentes strates de la géologie politique de Paris à chaque endroit où nous nous arrêtons. Afin de vous y retrouver, nous vous proposons de suivre les cartes tracées pour l'occasion et incluses sur la page du podcast sur notre site ou bien en version anglophone dans le magazine. Très bonne écoute à toutes et à tous.

The Funambulist Podcast
Quartiers Populaires #09 Marwan Mohammed /// Les Hautes Noues, Villiers-sur-Marne

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2021 58:20


Cette série podcast de The Funambulist en français est dédiée aux histoires et aux luttes des quartiers populaires de France et des colonies d'outremers. Des Minguettes de Vénissieux à la Cité Pierre Lenquette de Nouméa, des Bosquets de Montfermeil aux Flamants de Marseille, du Firminy Vert au Chaudron de Saint-Denis La Réunion, notre objectif est de prendre une modeste part à la transmission intergénérationnelle de l'histoire des luttes des quartiers. Afin de se faire, nous avons décidé de partir du particulier (un seul quartier par épisode) pour arriver au général dans les similitudes que ces conversations ne manqueront pas de générer. Comme pour tous nos autres projets, notre espoir est de cultiver les formes de solidarité entre initiatives politiques prises à l'encontre des structures racistes et coloniales. Marwan Mohammed est sociologue en poste au CNRS. Il est l'auteur de La formation des bandes de jeunes : entre la famille, l'école et la rue (PUF, 2011), Islamophobie : comment les élites françaises fabriquent le problème musulman (avec Abdellali Hajjat, La Découverte, 2013) et Communautarisme? (avec Julien Talpin, PUF, 2018). Il a également dirigé la publication de Les bandes de jeunes : des blousons noirs à nos jours (avec Laurent Mucchielli, La Découverte, 2007) et Les sorties de délinquance : théories, méthodes, enquêtes (La Découverte, 2012).

New Dawn
Neoliberalism and Gentrification in a Chocolate City

New Dawn

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2021 47:45


In this episode of New Dawn, Michael Dawson invites Brandi Thompson Summers to the show. Summers is an Assistant Professor of Geography and Global Metropolitan Studies at the UC Berkeley. She received her Ph.D. in Sociology from UC Santa Cruz. Her research engages theoretical themes that cut across multiple domains of social life. Summers builds epistemological and methodological insights from cultural and urban geography, urban sociology, African American studies, and media studies by examining the cultural, political, and economic dynamics by which race and space are reimagined and reordered. Her first book, Black in Place: The Spatial Aesthetics of Race in a Post-Chocolate City (UNC Press), explores how aesthetics and race converge to locate or map Blackness in Washington, D.C. Summers has published several articles and essays in both academic and popular publications, including the International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, New York Times, Boston Globe, and The Funambulist.

The Funambulist Podcast
Diasporas & Imaginaires des Luttes /// Yériché et Anaïs: Diaspora Arménienne

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2020 75:22


Cette mini-série du podcast de The Funambulist — pour une fois en français — est une tentative de mise en valeur des récits de diasporas en France, ou bien de groupes sous domination coloniale française, dont les récits ne nous semblent pas assez relayés en France, y compris parfois dans le milieu militant. Notre espoir pour cette mini-série est de contribuer a notre petite échelle à l'expansion de nos imaginaires politiques, ainsi qu'au développement de solidarités entre groupes qui, d'une manière ou d'une autre, luttent contre les structures racistes et colonialistes françaises. Yériché et Anaïs sont tou.te.s deux membres de la diaspora arménienne. Anaïs est architecte et vient de vivre cinq ans en Arménie. Yériché est chercheur et militant au mouvement Charjoum. https://thefunambulist.net/podcast/diasporas-imaginaire-des-luttes-une-mini-serie-en-francais

The Funambulist Podcast
Diasporas & Imaginaires des Luttes /// Ozan Çeneli: Les originaires de Turquie

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2020 62:02


Cette mini-série du podcast de The Funambulist — pour une fois en français — est une tentative de mise en valeur des récits de diasporas en France, ou bien de groupes sous domination coloniale française, dont les récits ne nous semblent pas assez relayés en France, y compris parfois dans le milieu militant. Notre espoir pour cette mini-série est de contribuer a notre petite échelle à l'expansion de nos imaginaires politiques, ainsi qu'au développement de solidarités entre groupes qui, d'une manière ou d'une autre, luttent contre les structures racistes et colonialistes françaises. Ozan Çeneli est membre de la communauté des originaires de Turquie, né en France, d'un père turc et d'une mère française, tous les deux ouvriers. Diplômé d'un master d'économie et ingénieur en statistique, il a commencé des études de sociologie il y a deux ans et sera sociologue à la fin de l'année universitaire. Il travaille sur les trajectoires de politisation des originaires de Turquie en France, et projette de mener des recherches sur le sujet une fois sociologue. Il a eu des activités politiques au sein d'associations, de syndicats et de collectifs sûr Strasbourg ou Paris notamment sur les crimes policiers concernant les quartiers, la Turquie, les questions kurdes et palestiniennes. https://thefunambulist.net/podcast/diasporas-imaginaire-des-luttes-une-mini-serie-en-francais

The Funambulist Podcast
Quartiers Populaires #08 Karima El Kharraze /// La Madeleine, Evreux

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2020 59:59


Cette série podcast de The Funambulist en français est dédiée aux histoires et aux luttes des quartiers populaires de France et des colonies d'outremers. Des Minguettes de Vénissieux à la Cité Pierre Lenquette de Nouméa, des Bosquets de Montfermeil aux Flamants de Marseille, du Firminy Vert au Chaudron de Saint-Denis La Réunion, notre objectif est de prendre une modeste part à la transmission intergénérationnelle de l'histoire des luttes des quartiers. Afin de se faire, nous avons décidé de partir du particulier (un seul quartier par épisode) pour arriver au général dans les similitudes que ces conversations ne manqueront pas de générer. Comme pour tous nos autres projets, notre espoir est de cultiver les formes de solidarité entre initiatives politiques prises à l'encontre des structures racistes et coloniales.  Autrice et metteuse en scène de théâtre, Karima El Kharraze s'intéresse autant au théâtre politique, aux langues invisibles, aux généalogies lesbiennes et féministes qu'à la poésie des quartiers périphériques où elle a grandi. Elle travaille depuis un moment entre la France et le Maroc où elle a tourné́ les spectacles Arable (texte publié aux Editions du Cygne), Madame Flyna et Le Cafard et L'Orchidée. Elle développe actuellement avec la réalisatrice Hélène Harder CasaMantes, un projet transmedia entre Casablanca et Mantes-la-Jolie qui explore les liens entre histoire coloniale et banlieues françaises et adapte pour le théâtre le roman Le Cœur est un chasseur solitaire de l'américaine Carson McCullers. Cette saison elle apprend entre autres la LSF (Langue des Signes Française) à l'IVT et collabore avec d'autres artistes comme Christelle Harbonn, Sebastian Blasius, Eva Doumbia ou Malik Soarès et donne régulièrement des ateliers de théâtre et d'écriture dans différents contextes (écoles, prisons, associations, lieux d'art, théâtres...). http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/quartiers-populaires-08-karima-el-kharraze-la-madeleine-evreux

The Funambulist Podcast
Quartiers Populaires #07 Les Potagers, Nanterre (deuxième partie)

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2020 59:35


Cette série podcast de The Funambulist en français est dédiée aux histoires et aux luttes des quartiers populaires de France et des colonies d'outremers. Des Minguettes de Vénissieux à la Cité Pierre Lenquette de Nouméa, des Bosquets de Montfermeil aux Flamants de Marseille, du Firminy Vert au Chaudron de Saint-Denis La Réunion, notre objectif est de prendre une modeste part à la transmission intergénérationnelle de l'histoire des luttes des quartiers. Afin de se faire, nous avons décidé de partir du particulier (un seul quartier par épisode) pour arriver au général dans les similitudes que ces conversations ne manqueront pas de générer. Comme pour tous nos autres projets, notre espoir est de cultiver les formes de solidarité entre initiatives politiques prises à l'encontre des structures racistes et coloniales.  Une conversation autour de la cité de transit des Potagers à Nanterre qui est sur le point d'être détruite après 60 ans d'une histoire politique très riche. Avec Belkacem Lahbaïri dit "Baba" enregistrée le 27 septembre 2020. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/quartiers-populaires-07-les-potagers-nanterre-deuxieme-partie

Tom Reads Your Story
The Amazing Journey of Philippe Petit

Tom Reads Your Story

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2020 32:06


Episode 28: As we near another 9/11 Anniversary, Tom recounts the incredible high wire WTC performance of Funambulist, Philippe Petit. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/tomreadsyourstory/message

The Funambulist Podcast
Quartiers Populaires #07 Les Potagers, Nanterre

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2020 64:16


Cette série podcast de The Funambulist en français est dédiée aux histoires et aux luttes des quartiers populaires de France et des colonies d'outremers. Des Minguettes de Vénissieux à la Cité Pierre Lenquette de Nouméa, des Bosquets de Montfermeil aux Flamants de Marseille, du Firminy Vert au Chaudron de Saint-Denis La Réunion, notre objectif est de prendre une modeste part à la transmission intergénérationnelle de l'histoire des luttes des quartiers. Afin de se faire, nous avons décidé de partir du particulier (un seul quartier par épisode) pour arriver au général dans les similitudes que ces conversations ne manqueront pas de générer. Comme pour tous nos autres projets, notre espoir est de cultiver les formes de solidarité entre initiatives politiques prises à l'encontre des structures racistes et coloniales.  Une conversation autour de la cité de transit des Potagers à Nanterre qui est sur le point d'être détruite après 60 ans d'une histoire politique très riche. Avec Mabrouka Lahbaïri, Boubakar Mazari, Mogniss H. Abdallah et Cherif Cherfi, enregistrée le 3 aout 2020. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/quartiers-populaires-07-les-potagers-nanterre

Another World is Podable
Episode 22: The Revolution Continues with Professor Angela Naomi Paik Discussing her new book "Bans, Walls, Raids, Sanctuary" and "abolitionist sanctuary"

Another World is Podable

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2020 80:50


A. Naomi Paik is an associate professor of Asian American studies with appointments in Gender & Women's studies and History at the  University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. She published Rightlessness: Testimony and Redress in U.S. Prison Camps since World War II (UNC Press, 2016; winner, Best Book in History, AAAS 2018; runner-up, John  Hope Franklin prize for best book in American Studies, ASA, 2017). Her book Bans, Walls, Raids, Sanctuary: Understanding U.S. Immigration for the 21st Century (University of California Press), examines the long-developing criminalization of foreign-born people in the United States and the need for radical, abolitionist approaches to sanctuary. She is currently working on a book-length manuscript on the most capacious meaning of “sanctuary for all” and developing another on military  outsourcing. As a board member of the Radical History Review, she has co-edited three special issues of the journal—on “Militarism and Capitalism (Winter 2019), “Radical Histories of Sanctuary” (Fall 2019), and “Policing, Justice, and the Radical Imagination” (Spring 2020). She has published articles in Social Text, Radical History Review, Cultural Dynamics, Race & Class, e-misferica, Humanity, The Conversation, The Funambulist, and the collection Guantánamo and American Empire. She is the IPRH-Mellon fellow in Legal Humanities (2019-2022), working to build the legal humanities at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. With Toby Beauchamp, she is organizing a series of events on "Abolition" as a Resident Associate of the Center for Advanced Study (2019-present). Her research and teaching interests include comparative ethnic studies; U.S. imperialism; U.S. militarism; social and cultural  approaches to legal studies; transnational and women of color feminisms; carceral spaces; and labor, race, and migration. New Book: "Bans, Walls, Raids, Sanctuary: Understanding U.S. Immigration for the 21st Century): https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520305120/bans-walls-raids-sanctuary The guest would like to note that the man detained at Guantanamo who connected his condition with George Floyd's murder is not Moath al-Alwi. For more information see: https://www.newsweek.com/guantanamo-bay-black-lives-matter-hope-1511940 For more information about abolitionist events see: https://abolitionjournal.org/studyguide/

The Funambulist Podcast
ZOÉ SAMUDZI /// Namibian History, Anticolonial Solidarities & Reparative Futurities

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2020 52:48


This conversation with Zoé Samudzi was recorded to operates as a complement of her text “Reparative Futurities: Thinking From the Ovaherero and Nama Colonial Genocide,” commissioned for and published in The Funambulist 30 (July-August 2020) REPARATIONS. Zoé begins by contextualizing the history of the first 20th century genocide, which was committed by the German settler colonial army against the Ovaherero and Nama nations in what is now Namibia. We then talks of the various forms of coalition settler colonial powers practice with each other, but also how the struggles against them can, in turn, form large solidarity fronts worldwide. Finally, Zoé describes the argument of her piece in The Funambulist 30 about the notion of reparative futurities. Zoé Samudzi is a writer and doctoral candidate in Medical Sociology at the University of California, San Francisco. She is also a photographer and the archivist with MATATU Nomadic Cinema. Along with William C. Anderson, she is the co-author of As Black as Resistance: Finding the Conditions for Our Liberation (AK Press, 2018). She is currently a fellow with Political Research Associates. https://thefunambulist.net/podcast/zoe-samudzi-namibian-history-anticolonial-solidarities-reparative-futurities

The Funambulist Podcast
Quartiers Populaires #06 Alèssi Dell'Umbria /// La Plaine, Marseille

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2020 59:37


Cette série podcast de The Funambulist en français est dédiée aux histoires et aux luttes des quartiers populaires de France et des colonies d'outremers. Des Minguettes de Vénissieux à la Cité Pierre Lenquette de Nouméa, des Bosquets de Montfermeil aux Flamants de Marseille, du Firminy Vert au Chaudron de Saint-Denis La Réunion, notre objectif est de prendre une modeste part à la transmission intergénérationnelle de l'histoire des luttes des quartiers. Afin de se faire, nous avons décidé de partir du particulier (un seul quartier par épisode) pour arriver au général dans les similitudes que ces conversations ne manqueront pas de générer. Comme pour tous nos autres projets, notre espoir est de cultiver les formes de solidarité entre initiatives politiques prises à l'encontre des structures racistes et coloniales.  Alèssi Dell'Umbria est natif de la Plaine. Il est réalisateur et essayiste. Il est l'auteur de six livres dont Histoire universelle de Marseille, De l'an mil à l'an deux mille (Agone, 2006) et C'est de la racaille ? Eh bien, j'en suis ! À propos de la révolte de l'automne 2005 (L'Échappée, 2006). http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/quartiers-populaires-06-alessi-dellumbria-la-plaine-marseille

The Funambulist Podcast
EDWARD HALEALOHA AYAU /// Reparations: 30 Years of Repatriation of Hawaiian Ancestors

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2020 53:40


In this conversation recorded to be featured in The Funambulist 30 (July-August 2020) REPARATIONS, Hawaiian activist Edward Halealoha Ayau describes the signification of the Return of Hawaiian kūpunas (ancestors) to their homeland, as well as the training, strategies, and rituals that the Return of over 6,000 remains and cultural items have necessitated these past 30 years. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/edward-halealoha-ayau-reparations-30-years-of-repatriation-of-hawaiian-ancestors

The Funambulist Podcast
Diasporas & Imaginaires des Luttes /// Feda Wardak: Diasporas Afghanes

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2020 67:33


Cette mini-série du podcast de The Funambulist — pour une fois en français — est une tentative de mise en valeur des récits de diasporas en France, ou bien de groupes sous domination coloniale française, dont les récits ne nous semblent pas assez relayés en France, y compris parfois dans le milieu militant. Notre espoir pour cette mini-série est de contribuer a notre petite échelle à l'expansion de nos imaginaires politiques, ainsi qu'au développement de solidarités entre groupes qui, d'une manière ou d'une autre, luttent contre les structures racistes et colonialistes françaises. Feda Wardak est architecte-constructeur ainsi que chercheur indépendant. Il est le directeur de la plateforme Aman Iwan, une plateforme transdisciplinaire et collaborative, s'intéressant aux problématiques de territoires et de populations souvent délaissés par les pouvoirs publics, et qui oriente son travail vers l'édition, l'architecture et la construction. https://thefunambulist.net/podcast/diasporas-imaginaire-des-luttes-une-mini-serie-en-francais

The Funambulist Podcast
Quartiers Populaires #05 Mathieu Rigouste /// Le Luth, Gennevilliers

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2020 72:17


Cette série podcast de The Funambulist en français est dédiée aux histoires et aux luttes des quartiers populaires de France et des colonies d'outremers. Des Minguettes de Vénissieux à la Cité Pierre Lenquette de Nouméa, des Bosquets de Montfermeil aux Flamants de Marseille, du Firminy Vert au Chaudron de Saint-Denis La Réunion, notre objectif est de prendre une modeste part à la transmission intergénérationnelle de l'histoire des luttes des quartiers. Afin de se faire, nous avons décidé de partir du particulier (un seul quartier par épisode) pour arriver au général dans les similitudes que ces conversations ne manqueront pas de générer. Comme pour tous nos autres projets, notre espoir est de cultiver les formes de solidarité entre initiatives politiques prises à l'encontre des structures racistes et coloniales.  Mathieu Rigouste est militant et fait de la recherche en sciences sociales. Il est l'auteur des livres L'ennemi intérieur : La généalogie coloniale et militaire de l'ordre sécuritaire dans la France contemporaine (La Découverte, 2009), Les marchands de peur : La bande à Bauer et l'idéologie sécuritaire (Libertalia, 2011), Théorème de la hoggra : Histoires et légendes de la guerre sociale (BBoyKonsian, 2011), La domination policière : Une violence industrielle (La Fabrique, 2012), État d'urgence et business de la sécurité (Niet!éditions, 2016), Un Seul Héros le Peuple, La contre-insurrection mise en échec par les soulèvements algériens de décembre 1960 (Premiers Matins de Novembre Éditions, 2020). http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/quartiers-populaires-05-mathieu-rigouste-le-luth-gennevilliers

The Funambulist Podcast
Quartiers Populaires #04 Jean-Riad Kechaou /// Les Bosquets, Montfermeil

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2020 61:33


Cette série podcast de The Funambulist en français est dédiée aux histoires et aux luttes des quartiers populaires de France et des colonies d'outremers. Des Minguettes de Vénissieux à la Cité Pierre Lenquette de Nouméa, des Bosquets de Montfermeil aux Flamants de Marseille, du Firminy Vert au Chaudron de Saint-Denis La Réunion, notre objectif est de prendre une modeste part à la transmission intergénérationnelle de l'histoire des luttes des quartiers. Afin de se faire, nous avons décidé de partir du particulier (un seul quartier par épisode) pour arriver au général dans les similitudes que ces conversations ne manqueront pas de générer. Comme pour tous nos autres projets, notre espoir est de cultiver les formes de solidarité entre initiatives politiques prises à l'encontre des structures racistes et coloniales.  Jean-Riad Kechaou est originaire de la région lyonnaise et habitant de Montfermeil. Il est prof d'histoire-géo depuis 2002 et exerce dans un collège de la banlieue parisienne depuis 2004. Il est l'auteur du livre 93370. Les Bosquets, un ghetto français (MeltingBook, 2016) ainsi que d'articles à propos des banlieues dans diverses média de presse. Depuis 2020, il est également conseiller municipal d'opposition à Montfermeil.  http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/quartiers-populaires-04-jean-riad-kechaou-les-bosquets-montfermeil

The Funambulist Podcast
Quartiers Populaires #03 Mapie /// Trénelle-Citron, Fort-de-France

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2020 49:49


Cette série podcast de The Funambulist en français est dédiée aux histoires et aux luttes des quartiers populaires de France et des colonies d'outremers. Des Minguettes de Vénissieux à la Cité Pierre Lenquette de Nouméa, des Bosquets de Montfermeil aux Flamants de Marseille, du Firminy Vert au Chaudron de Saint-Denis La Réunion, notre objectif est de prendre une modeste part à la transmission intergénérationnelle de l'histoire des luttes des quartiers. Afin de se faire, nous avons décidé de partir du particulier (un seul quartier par épisode) pour arriver au général dans les similitudes que ces conversations ne manqueront pas de générer. Comme pour tous nos autres projets, notre espoir est de cultiver les formes de solidarité entre initiatives politiques prises à l'encontre des structures racistes et coloniales.  Mapie est « Pawolèz », rappeuse, poétesse, slameuse, comédienne et metteur en scène. Foyalaise, elle est native de Trénelle-Citron où sa famille habite toujours. Tous les mots de Mapie sont écrits sous le coup d'une émotion. Son écriture est quasiment toujours spontanée. Si les thèmes peuvent paraître très variés, les mots sont toujours militants... et même quand elle parle d'amour, c'est, pour elle, une sorte de militantisme. D'ailleurs, l'Amour est la cause pour laquelle elle est la plus engagée : Amour fraternel, Amour de soi-même, Amour de son identité, Amour de la vie, Amour de la planète, Amour donnant vie, Amour... Elle est l'auteure du recueil de poésie Au bout du petit matin... l'Emotion ! publié en 2020. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/quartiers-populaires-04-jean-riad-kechaou-les-bosquets-montfermeil

The Funambulist Podcast
Quartiers Populaires #02 Meryem Bahia /// Empalot, Toulouse

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2020 67:39


Cette série podcast de The Funambulist en français est dédiée aux histoires et aux luttes des quartiers populaires de France et des colonies d'outremers. Des Minguettes de Vénissieux à la Cité Pierre Lenquette de Nouméa, des Bosquets de Montfermeil aux Flamants de Marseille, du Firminy Vert au Chaudron de Saint-Denis La Réunion, notre objectif est de prendre une modeste part à la transmission intergénérationnelle de l'histoire des luttes des quartiers. Afin de se faire, nous avons décidé de partir du particulier (un seul quartier par épisode) pour arriver au général dans les similitudes que ces conversations ne manqueront pas de générer. Comme pour tous nos autres projets, notre espoir est de cultiver les formes de solidarité entre initiatives politiques prises à l'encontre des structures racistes et coloniales.  Meryem Bahia vit à Toulouse. Elle est militante antiraciste et feministe, membre de l'émission radiophonique La vie des nôtres (sur Radio Canal Sud) et du webjournal Chouf Tolosa. Elle a étudié le droit et les sciences politiques; des savoirs qu'elle a décidé de mettre à profit de nombreux projets de quartier plutôt qu'au système judicio-carcéral. Nous nous sommes rencontré.e.s en travaillant ensemble pour l'Observatoire de l'état d'urgence sanitaire ces derniers mois. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/quartiers-populaires-02-meryem-bahia-empalot-toulouse

The Funambulist Podcast
Quartiers Populaires #01 Hajer Ben Boubaker /// Barbès, Paris (2/2)

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2020 55:57


Cette série podcast de The Funambulist en français est dédiée aux histoires et aux luttes des quartiers populaires de France et des colonies d'outremers. Des Minguettes de Vénissieux à la Cité Pierre Lenquette de Nouméa, des Bosquets de Montfermeil aux Flamants de Marseille, du Firminy Vert au Chaudron de Saint-Denis La Réunion, notre objectif est de prendre une modeste part à la transmission intergénérationnelle de l'histoire des luttes des quartiers. Afin de se faire, nous avons décidé de partir du particulier (un seul quartier par épisode) pour arriver au général dans les similitudes que ces conversations ne manqueront pas de générer. Comme pour tous nos autres projets, notre espoir est de cultiver les formes de solidarité entre initiatives politiques prises à l'encontre des structures racistes et coloniales.  Hajer Ben Boubaker est une militante et chercheuse indépendante. Elle est diplômée en Histoire et Sciences Politiques de la Sorbonne et en Genre, Politique et Sexualité de l'EHESS. Ses recherches portent sur les politiques migratoires européennes et leurs influences dans les pays de la rive sud de la Méditerranée. Elle est la fondatrice du podcast Vintage Arab qui interroge la place des transmissions culturelle et politiques en diaspora et qui s'attache à se réapproprier un patrimoine, loin des imaginaires orientalistes. Elle est une contributrice régulière des divers projets de The Funambulist. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/quartiers-populaires-01-hajer-ben-boubaker-barbes-paris-deuxieme-partie

The Funambulist Podcast
Quartiers Populaires #01 Hajer Ben Boubaker /// Barbès, Paris (1/2)

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2020 59:32


Cette série podcast de The Funambulist en français est dédiée aux histoires et aux luttes des quartiers populaires de France et des colonies d'outremers. Des Minguettes de Vénissieux à la Cité Pierre Lenquette de Nouméa, des Bosquets de Montfermeil aux Flamants de Marseille, du Firminy Vert au Chaudron de Saint-Denis La Réunion, notre objectif est de prendre une modeste part à la transmission intergénérationnelle de l'histoire des luttes des quartiers. Afin de se faire, nous avons décidé de partir du particulier (un seul quartier par épisode) pour arriver au général dans les similitudes que ces conversations ne manqueront pas de générer. Comme pour tous nos autres projets, notre espoir est de cultiver les formes de solidarité entre initiatives politiques prises à l'encontre des structures racistes et coloniales.  Hajer Ben Boubaker est une militante et chercheuse indépendante. Elle est diplômée en Histoire et Sciences Politiques de la Sorbonne et en Genre, Politique et Sexualité de l'EHESS. Ses recherches portent sur les politiques migratoires européennes et leurs influences dans les pays de la rive sud de la Méditerranée. Elle est la fondatrice du podcast Vintage Arab qui interroge la place des transmissions culturelle et politiques en diaspora et qui s'attache à se réapproprier un patrimoine, loin des imaginaires orientalistes. Elle est une contributrice régulière des divers projets de The Funambulist. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/quartiers-populaires-01-hajer-ben-boubaker-barbes-premiere-partie

The Funambulist Podcast
Diasporas & Imaginaires des Luttes /// Jeunesse Autochtone De Guyane

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2020 72:33


Cette mini-série du podcast de The Funambulist — pour une fois en français — est une tentative de mise en valeur des récits de diasporas en France, ou bien de groupes sous domination coloniale française, dont les récits ne nous semblent pas assez relayés en France, y compris parfois dans le milieu militant. Notre espoir pour cette mini-série est de contribuer a notre petite échelle à l'expansion de nos imaginaires politiques, ainsi qu'au développement de solidarités entre groupes qui, d'une manière ou d'une autre, luttent contre les structures racistes et colonialistes françaises. Christophe Yanuwana Pierre est cinéaste, Clarisse Taulewali est artiste. Tou.te.s deux sont membres de l'organisation militante Jeunesse Autochtone de Guyane (JAG). La JAG est un réseau de jeunes militants autochtones de Guyane qui, en collaboration avec de nombreux partenaires, collecte, analyse et partage des informations sur l'évolution de la situation et des conditions de vie des Peuples Autochtones. https://thefunambulist.net/podcast/diasporas-imaginaire-des-luttes-une-mini-serie-en-francais

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #31 Ruth Wilson Gilmore /// Beginning of a Perfect Decolonial Moment

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2020 29:19


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº31 As many of us are confined in many places of the world, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast in partnership with Radio Alhara emitting from Palestine. Our ambition for it is to not add to the saturation of information we are currently experiencing but, rather, to propose a daily extension 15-minute of our political imaginaries. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. While we are recording this podcast in privileged conditions of confinement, we keep in our thoughts the multitude of people around the world who do not share similar conditions or have no choice but to risk being affected by the pandemic because of criminal policies that have to do with neoliberalism, carceralism, or colonialism We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-31-ruth-wilson-gilmore-the-beginning-of-a-perfect-decolonial-moment

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #30 Mariana de Matos /// Poetic Fictions from Brazil

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2020 14:43


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº30 As many of us are confined in many places of the world, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast in partnership with Radio Alhara emitting from Palestine. Our ambition for it is to not add to the saturation of information we are currently experiencing but, rather, to propose a daily extension 15-minute of our political imaginaries. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. While we are recording this podcast in privileged conditions of confinement, we keep in our thoughts the multitude of people around the world who do not share similar conditions or have no choice but to risk being affected by the pandemic because of criminal policies that have to do with neoliberalism, carceralism, or colonialism We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-30-mariana-de-matos-poetic-fictions-from-brazil

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #29 Minia Biabiany /// An Island Giving Birth to Islands

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2020 22:48


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº29 As many of us are confined in many places of the world, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast in partnership with Radio Alhara emitting from Palestine. Our ambition for it is to not add to the saturation of information we are currently experiencing but, rather, to propose a daily extension 15-minute of our political imaginaries. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. While we are recording this podcast in privileged conditions of confinement, we keep in our thoughts the multitude of people around the world who do not share similar conditions or have no choice but to risk being affected by the pandemic because of criminal policies that have to do with neoliberalism, carceralism, or colonialism We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-29-minia-biabiany-an-island-giving-birth-to-islands

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #28 Atiyyah Khan /// Jazz Against Apartheid (Talk + DJ Mix)

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2020 59:38


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº28 As many of us are confined in many places of the world, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast in partnership with Radio Alhara emitting from Palestine. Our ambition for it is to not add to the saturation of information we are currently experiencing but, rather, to propose a daily extension 15-minute of our political imaginaries. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. While we are recording this podcast in privileged conditions of confinement, we keep in our thoughts the multitude of people around the world who do not share similar conditions or have no choice but to risk being affected by the pandemic because of criminal policies that have to do with neoliberalism, carceralism, or colonialism We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-28-atiyyah-khan-jazz-against-apartheid

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #27 Jaskiran Dhillon /// The Idle No More Indigenous Movement

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2020 20:55


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº27 As many of us are confined in many places of the world, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast in partnership with Radio Alhara emitting from Palestine. Our ambition for it is to not add to the saturation of information we are currently experiencing but, rather, to propose a daily extension 15-minute of our political imaginaries. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. While we are recording this podcast in privileged conditions of confinement, we keep in our thoughts the multitude of people around the world who do not share similar conditions or have no choice but to risk being affected by the pandemic because of criminal policies that have to do with neoliberalism, carceralism, or colonialism We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-27-jaskiran-dhillon-the-idle-no-more-indigenous-movement

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #25 Shahram Khosravi /// Border Smuggling as Decolonial Practice

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2020 21:23


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº26 As many of us are confined in many places of the world, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast in partnership with Radio Alhara emitting from Palestine. Our ambition for it is to not add to the saturation of information we are currently experiencing but, rather, to propose a daily extension 15-minute of our political imaginaries. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. While we are recording this podcast in privileged conditions of confinement, we keep in our thoughts the multitude of people around the world who do not share similar conditions or have no choice but to risk being affected by the pandemic because of criminal policies that have to do with neoliberalism, carceralism, or colonialism We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-25-shahram-khosravi-border-smuggling-as-decolonial-practice

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #25 Joao Gabriel /// 3 Decolonial Moments of Guadeloupean History

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2020 27:36


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº25 As many of us are confined in many places of the world, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast in partnership with Radio Alhara emitting from Palestine. Our ambition for it is to not add to the saturation of information we are currently experiencing but, rather, to propose a daily extension 15-minute of our political imaginaries. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. While we are recording this podcast in privileged conditions of confinement, we keep in our thoughts the multitude of people around the world who do not share similar conditions or have no choice but to risk being affected by the pandemic because of criminal policies that have to do with neoliberalism, carceralism, or colonialism We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-25-joao-gabriell-three-decolonial-moments-of-guadeloupean-history

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #24 Menna Agha /// The Nubian House Won't Die Silently

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2020 22:27


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº24 As many of us are confined in many places of the world, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast in partnership with Radio Alhara emitting from Palestine. Our ambition for it is to not add to the saturation of information we are currently experiencing but, rather, to propose a daily extension 15-minute of our political imaginaries. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. While we are recording this podcast in privileged conditions of confinement, we keep in our thoughts the multitude of people around the world who do not share similar conditions or have no choice but to risk being affected by the pandemic because of criminal policies that have to do with neoliberalism, carceralism, or colonialism We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-24-menna-agha-the-nubian-house-wont-die-silently

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #23 Joy Mboya /// Power Knowledge and Being on the African Continent

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2020 19:42


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº23 As many of us are confined in many places of the world, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast in partnership with Radio Alhara emitting from Palestine. Our ambition for it is to not add to the saturation of information we are currently experiencing but, rather, to propose a daily extension 15-minute of our political imaginaries. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. While we are recording this podcast in privileged conditions of confinement, we keep in our thoughts the multitude of people around the world who do not share similar conditions or have no choice but to risk being affected by the pandemic because of criminal policies that have to do with neoliberalism, carceralism, or colonialism We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-23-joy-mboya-power-knowledge-and-being-on-the-african-continent

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #22 Mpho Matsipa /// Post-Apartheid Spatial Futurities

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2020 20:02


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº22 As many of us are confined in many places of the world, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast in partnership with Radio Alhara emitting from Palestine. Our ambition for it is to not add to the saturation of information we are currently experiencing but, rather, to propose a daily extension 15-minute of our political imaginaries. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. While we are recording this podcast in privileged conditions of confinement, we keep in our thoughts the multitude of people around the world who do not share similar conditions or have no choice but to risk being affected by the pandemic because of criminal policies that have to do with neoliberalism, carceralism, or colonialism We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-22-mpho-matsipa-post-apartheid-spatial-futurities

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #21 Chandni Desai /// Cultural and Land-Based Palestinian Resistance

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2020 28:12


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº21 As many of us are confined in many places of the world, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast in partnership with Radio Alhara emitting from Palestine. Our ambition for it is to not add to the saturation of information we are currently experiencing but, rather, to propose a daily extension 15-minute of our political imaginaries. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. While we are recording this podcast in privileged conditions of confinement, we keep in our thoughts the multitude of people around the world who do not share similar conditions or have no choice but to risk being affected by the pandemic because of criminal policies that have to do with neoliberalism, carceralism, or colonialism We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-21-chandni-desai-cultural-and-land-based-palestinian-resistance

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #20 Ali Jimale Ahmed /// Proverbs for a Decolonized Consciences

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2020 20:25


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº20 As many of us are confined in many places of the world, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast in partnership with Radio Alhara emitting from Palestine. Our ambition for it is to not add to the saturation of information we are currently experiencing but, rather, to propose a daily extension 15-minute of our political imaginaries. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. While we are recording this podcast in privileged conditions of confinement, we keep in our thoughts the multitude of people around the world who do not share similar conditions or have no choice but to risk being affected by the pandemic because of criminal policies that have to do with neoliberalism, carceralism, or colonialism We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-20-ali-jimale-ahmed-proverbs-for-decolonized-consciences

The Funambulist Podcast
#19 Nish Morris /// The Djabwurrung Embassy in Aboriginal Country

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2020 18:52


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº19 As many of us are confined in many places of the world, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast in partnership with Radio Alhara emitting from Palestine. Our ambition for it is to not add to the saturation of information we are currently experiencing but, rather, to propose a daily extension 15-minute of our political imaginaries. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. While we are recording this podcast in privileged conditions of confinement, we keep in our thoughts the multitude of people around the world who do not share similar conditions or have no choice but to risk being affected by the pandemic because of criminal policies that have to do with neoliberalism, carceralism, or colonialism We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-19-nish-morris-the-djabwurrung-embassy-in-aboriginal-country

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #18 Jessica "Coco" Hansell /// Indigenous Island Time

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2020 19:48


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº18 As many of us are confined in many places of the world, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast in partnership with Radio Alhara emitting from Palestine. Our ambition for it is to not add to the saturation of information we are currently experiencing but, rather, to propose a daily extension 15-minute of our political imaginaries. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. While we are recording this podcast in privileged conditions of confinement, we keep in our thoughts the multitude of people around the world who do not share similar conditions or have no choice but to risk being affected by the pandemic because of criminal policies that have to do with neoliberalism, carceralism, or colonialism We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-18-jessica-coco-hansell-indigenous-island-time

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #17 Nay Saysourinho /// Decolonial Fairy Tales

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2020 19:30


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº17 As many of us are confined in many places of the world, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast in partnership with Radio Alhara emitting from Palestine. Our ambition for it is to not add to the saturation of information we are currently experiencing but, rather, to propose a daily extension 15-minute of our political imaginaries. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. While we are recording this podcast in privileged conditions of confinement, we keep in our thoughts the multitude of people around the world who do not share similar conditions or have no choice but to risk being affected by the pandemic because of criminal policies that have to do with neoliberalism, carceralism, or colonialism We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-17-nay-saysourinho-decolonial-fairy-tales-object-oriented-pedagogy

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #16 Saba Innab /// Reconstructing Nahr el Bared Refugee Camp

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2020 17:12


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº16 As many of us are confined in many places of the world, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast in partnership with Radio Alhara emitting from Palestine. Our ambition for it is to not add to the saturation of information we are currently experiencing but, rather, to propose a daily extension 15-minute of our political imaginaries. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. While we are recording this podcast in privileged conditions of confinement, we keep in our thoughts the multitude of people around the world who do not share similar conditions or have no choice but to risk being affected by the pandemic because of criminal policies that have to do with neoliberalism, carceralism, or colonialism We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-16-saba-innab-reconstructing-nahr-el-bared-palestinian-refugee-camp

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #15 Melanie K. Yazzie /// Navajo Decolonial Grief & Rage for Loreal

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2020 25:23


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº15 As many of us are confined in many places of the world, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast in partnership with Radio Alhara emitting from Palestine. Our ambition for it is to not add to the saturation of information we are currently experiencing but, rather, to propose a daily extension 15-minute of our political imaginaries. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. While we are recording this podcast in privileged conditions of confinement, we keep in our thoughts the multitude of people around the world who do not share similar conditions or have no choice but to risk being affected by the pandemic because of criminal policies that have to do with neoliberalism, carceralism, or colonialism We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-15-melanie-k-yazzie-navajo-decolonial-grief-rage-for-loreal-tsingine

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #14 Laurel Mei-Singh /// Decolonial Practices in Hawai'i

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2020 27:54


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº14 As many of us are confined in many places of the world, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast in partnership with Radio Alhara emitting from Palestine. Our ambition for it is to not add to the saturation of information we are currently experiencing but, rather, to propose a daily extension 15-minute of our political imaginaries. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. While we are recording this podcast in privileged conditions of confinement, we keep in our thoughts the multitude of people around the world who do not share similar conditions or have no choice but to risk being affected by the pandemic because of criminal policies that have to do with neoliberalism, carceralism, or colonialism We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-14-laurel-mei-singh-decolonial-and-accompanying-practices-in-hawaii

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #13 Sónia Vaz Borges /// Learning from Amílcar Cabral

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2020 19:21


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº13 As many of us are confined in many places of the world, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast in partnership with Radio Alhara emitting from Palestine. Our ambition for it is to not add to the saturation of information we are currently experiencing but, rather, to propose a daily extension 15-minute of our political imaginaries. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. While we are recording this podcast in privileged conditions of confinement, we keep in our thoughts the multitude of people around the world who do not share similar conditions or have no choice but to risk being affected by the pandemic because of criminal policies that have to do with neoliberalism, carceralism, or colonialism We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-13-sonia-vaz-borges-learning-from-amilcar-cabral

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #12 Reem Abbas /// Women's fb Groups for the Sudanese Revolution

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2020 16:26


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº12 As many of us are currently confined at home in many places of the world, and while we keep in our minds and in our hearts those who have no choice but to be at risk from the ongoing worldwide pandemic, because they're doctors, nurses, cashiers, workers, homeless, incarcerated, or in any other precarious situation, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast to use this time to reflect and organizing without talking about the pandemic itself -- there might be already enough about it. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-12-reem-abbas-womens-fb-groups-for-the-sudanese-revolution

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #11 Linda Quiquivix /// Imagining New Worlds with the Zapatistas

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2020 24:46


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº11 As many of us are currently confined at home in many places of the world, and while we keep in our minds and in our hearts those who have no choice but to be at risk from the ongoing worldwide pandemic, because they're doctors, nurses, cashiers, workers, homeless, incarcerated, or in any other precarious situation, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast to use this time to reflect and organizing without talking about the pandemic itself -- there might be already enough about it. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-11-linda-quiquivix-imagining-new-worlds-with-the-zapatistas

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #10 Miriam Hillawi Abraham /// The Exotic Other

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2020 13:26


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº10 As many of us are currently confined at home in many places of the world, and while we keep in our minds and in our hearts those who have no choice but to be at risk from the ongoing worldwide pandemic, because they're doctors, nurses, cashiers, workers, homeless, incarcerated, or in any other precarious situation, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast to use this time to reflect and organizing without talking about the pandemic itself -- there might be already enough about it. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-10-miriam-hillawi-abraham-the-exotic-other

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #09 Zoé Samudzi /// Black Anarchism

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2020 16:02


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº09 As many of us are currently confined at home in many places of the world, and while we keep in our minds and in our hearts those who have no choice but to be at risk from the ongoing worldwide pandemic, because they're doctors, nurses, cashiers, workers, homeless, incarcerated, or in any other precarious situation, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast to use this time to reflect and organizing without talking about the pandemic itself -- there might be already enough about it. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-09-zoe-samudzi-black-anarchism

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #08 Léuli Eshrāghi /// Priority to Indigenous Pleasures

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2020 17:00


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº08 As many of us are currently confined at home in many places of the world, and while we keep in our minds and in our hearts those who have no choice but to be at risk from the ongoing worldwide pandemic, because they're doctors, nurses, cashiers, workers, homeless, incarcerated, or in any other precarious situation, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast to use this time to reflect and organizing without talking about the pandemic itself -- there might be already enough about it. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-08-leuli-eshragi-priority-to-indigenous-pleasures

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #07 Ana Naomi De Sousa /// The House of Students of the Empire

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2020 20:31


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº07 As many of us are currently confined at home in many places of the world, and while we keep in our minds and in our hearts those who have no choice but to be at risk from the ongoing worldwide pandemic, because they're doctors, nurses, cashiers, workers, homeless, incarcerated, or in any other precarious situation, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast to use this time to reflect and organizing without talking about the pandemic itself -- there might be already enough about it. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-07-ana-naomi-de-sousa-the-house-of-students-of-the-empire

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #06 Sinthujan Varatharajah /// Constructing the Tamil Eelam State

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2020 12:30


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº06 As many of us are currently confined at home in many places of the world, and while we keep in our minds and in our hearts those who have no choice but to be at risk from the ongoing worldwide pandemic, because they're doctors, nurses, cashiers, workers, homeless, incarcerated, or in any other precarious situation, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast to use this time to reflect and organizing without talking about the pandemic itself -- there might be already enough about it. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-06-sinthujan-varatharajah-constructing-the-tamil-eelam-state

tamil constructing decolonization sinthujan varatharajah funambulist
The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization #05 Amy McQuire /// Aboriginal Women's Presence

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2020 14:21


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº05 As many of us are currently confined at home in many places of the world, and while we keep in our minds and in our hearts those who have no choice but to be at risk from the ongoing worldwide pandemic, because they're doctors, nurses, cashiers, workers, homeless, incarcerated, or in any other precarious situation, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast to use this time to reflect and organizing without talking about the pandemic itself -- there might be already enough about it. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-05-amy-mcquire-aboriginal-womens-presence

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization 04 Omar Berrada /// Decolonizing the Screen

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2020 17:48


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº04 As many of us are currently confined at home in many places of the world, and while we keep in our minds and in our hearts those who have no choice but to be at risk from the ongoing worldwide pandemic, because they're doctors, nurses, cashiers, workers, homeless, incarcerated, or in any other precarious situation, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast to use this time to reflect and organizing without talking about the pandemic itself -- there might be already enough about it. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-04-omar-berrada-decolonizing-the-screen

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization 03 Kite /// Lakota Economy of Giving

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2020 15:49


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº03 As many of us are currently confined at home in many places of the world, and while we keep in our minds and in our hearts those who have no choice but to be at risk from the ongoing worldwide pandemic, because they're doctors, nurses, cashiers, workers, homeless, incarcerated, or in any other precarious situation, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast to use this time to reflect and organizing without talking about the pandemic itself -- there might be already enough about it. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/daily-podcast-03-kite-lakota-economy-of-giving

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization 02 Sophia Azeb /// Palestinian Futurities

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2020 15:33


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº02 As many of us are currently confined at home in many places of the world, and while we keep in our minds and in our hearts those who have no choice but to be at risk from the ongoing worldwide pandemic, because they're doctors, nurses, cashiers, workers, homeless, incarcerated, or in any other precarious situation, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast to use this time to reflect and organizing without talking about the pandemic itself -- there might be already enough about it. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. http://thefunambulist.net/podcast/podcast-02-sophia-azeb-palestinian-futurities

The Funambulist Podcast
A Moment of True Decolonization 01 Fania Noël /// The Haitian Proclamation of Independence

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2020 17:57


A Moment of True Decolonization, A daily podcast series by The Funambulist in confinement Episode nº01 As many of us are currently confined at home in many places of the world, and while we keep in our minds and in our hearts those who have no choice but to be at risk from the ongoing worldwide pandemic, because they're doctors, nurses, cashiers, workers, homeless, incarcerated, or in any other precarious situation, we wanted to provide you with a daily podcast to use this time to reflect and organizing without talking about the pandemic itself -- there might be already enough about it. The concept is very simple. Every day, we ask one person the same question: "what is for you a moment of true decolonization?" The answer can be a historial moment or something they witnessed; something heroic and grandiose, or rather discreet and mundane; a durable blow to the structures of colonialism or a short instant of liberation. We thank you for listening and wish you and your loved ones the very best wherever you are. https://thefunambulist.net/podcast/01-fania-noel-the-haitian-proclamation-of-independence-january-1-1804

The Funambulist Podcast
Diasporas & Imaginaires des Luttes /// Hugo Dos Santos: Immigration portugaise

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2020 70:09


Cette mini-série du podcast de The Funambulist — pour une fois en français — est une tentative de mise en valeur des récits de diasporas en France, ou bien de groupes sous domination coloniale française, dont les récits ne nous semblent pas assez relayés en France, y compris parfois dans le milieu militant. Notre espoir pour cette mini-série est de contribuer a notre petite échelle à l'expansion de nos imaginaires politiques, ainsi qu'au développement de solidarités entre groupes qui, d'une manière ou d'une autre, luttent contre les structures racistes et colonialistes françaises. Hugo Dos Santos est diplômé en Histoire contemporaine et en Cinéma. Après un parcours dans le cinéma documentaire où il travaille les archives audiovisuelles sur des films traitant de l'immigration, de l'exil, du colonialisme ou de luttes sociales, il s'oriente parallèlement vers le journalisme. Depuis 2008 il est engagé dans l'association Mémoire Vive/Memória viva et notamment à la constitution d'un fonds d'archive à La Contemporaine et à une campagne d'entretiens. En 2018, il signe dans Le Monde une tribune avec l'historien Victor Pereira qui s'oppose à l'instrumentalisation de l'histoire de l'immigration portugaise qui stigmatise les autres immigrations. En 2019 il est le commissaire de l'exposition « Refuser la guerre coloniale » qui revient sur l'exil parisien des déserteurs de la guerre coloniale portugaise (1961-1974). Il réalise en ce moment le film « 15 rue du Moulinet » qui ravive la mémoire d'un réseau informel de soutien à la désertion de la guerre coloniale. https://thefunambulist.net/podcast/diasporas-imaginaire-des-luttes-une-mini-serie-en-francais

The Funambulist Podcast
Diasporas & Imaginaire des Luttes /// Apinayaa U: Tamoul⸱e⸱s d'Îlam

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2020 43:01


Cette mini-série du podcast de The Funambulist — pour une fois en français — est une tentative de mise en valeur des récits de diasporas en France, ou bien de groupes sous domination coloniale française, dont les récits ne nous semblent pas assez relayés en France, y compris parfois dans le milieu militant. Notre espoir pour cette mini-série est de contribuer a notre petite échelle à l'expansion de nos imaginaires politiques, ainsi qu'au développement de solidarités entre groupes qui, d'une manière ou d'une autre, luttent contre les structures racistes et colonialistes françaises. Apinayaa U. est étudiante en relations internationales et membre de la diaspora tamoule d'Îlam en France. Conformément à son souhait et celui de sa famille à l'issue de cet entretien nous avons délibérément retiré toute référence à son nom de famille au sein de cet entretien. Cette conversation a été la première pensée et enregistrée pour cette mini-série et nous remercions Sinthujan Varatharajah et Brintha Koneshachandra pour leur aide. Les Tamoul⸱e⸱s d'Îlam (distinct.e.s des Tamoul⸱e⸱s du Tamil Nadu en Inde et en particulier de Puducherry qui pourraient eulles-aussi faire partie de cette série pour leur relation avec le colonialisme français) sont nombreux⸱ses à vivre dans les quartiers populaires sans que les raisons de leur arrivée en France ni que leur imaginaire politique (en particulier celui lié à l'organisation des Tigres de libération de l'Îlam tamoul) ne soit nécessairement connus de leurs voisin.e.s et collègues. Apinayaa U. a ainsi généreusement accepté de répondre à nos questions. https://thefunambulist.net/podcast/diasporas-imaginaire-des-luttes-une-mini-serie-en-francais

The Funambulist Podcast
Diasporas et Imaginaires des Luttes /// Pierre Wélépa: Le Combat Kanak

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2020 65:07


Cette mini-série du podcast de The Funambulist — pour une fois en français — est une tentative de mise en valeur des récits de diasporas en France, ou bien de groupes sous domination coloniale française, dont les récits ne nous semblent pas assez relayés en France, y compris parfois dans le milieu militant. Notre espoir pour cette mini-série est de contribuer a notre petite échelle à l'expansion de nos imaginaires politiques, ainsi qu'au développement de solidarités entre groupes qui, d'une manière ou d'une autre, luttent contre les structures racistes et colonialistes françaises. Pierre Wélépa est un citoyen calédonien et un militant décolonial kanak. Il est le co-auteur du texte "Vers un dialogue décolonial au pays du non-dit" dans Rencontres radicales: Pour des dialogues féministes décoloniaux édité par Manal Altamimi, Tal Dor & Nacira Guénif-Souilamas (Cambourakis, 2018). Cette conversation avec lui s'adresse principalement à un public en France, en particulier les personnes non-Kanak détentrice de la citoyenneté française qui sont, en partie, co-responsables de la perpetuation du régime colonial en Kanaky. A travers un survol historique, une présentation des imaginaires et pratiques politiques kanak ainsi qu'une analyse du présent colonial, nous espérons que cet entretien puisse servir de base pour un engagement de solidarité effective et utile avec le combat autochtone pour Kanaky en France.  https://thefunambulist.net/podcast/diasporas-imaginaire-des-luttes-une-mini-serie-en-francais

The Funambulist Podcast
Diasporas & Imaginaires des Luttes /// Dawud Bumaye: Les Comores

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2020 66:42


Cette mini-série du podcast de The Funambulist — pour une fois en français — est une tentative de mise en valeur des récits de diasporas en France, ou bien de groupes sous domination coloniale française, dont les récits ne nous semblent pas assez relayés en France, y compris parfois dans le milieu militant. Notre espoir pour cette mini-série est de contribuer a notre petite échelle à l'expansion de nos imaginaires politiques, ainsi qu'au développement de solidarités entre groupes qui, d'une manière ou d'une autre, luttent contre les structures racistes et colonialistes françaises. https://thefunambulist.net/podcast/diasporas-imaginaire-des-luttes-une-mini-serie-en-francais

The Funambulist Podcast
THE FUNAMBULIST EVENTS /// Political Geographies of Chicago

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2019 105:54


An event around the book The Funambulist by its Readers: Political Geographies from Chicago and Elsewhere commissioned by the Chicago Architecture Biennial. Guests are Patricia Nguyen, Jesse Mumm, Maira Khwaja, Benji Hart, and Anjulie Rao. https://thefunambulist.net/podcast/the-funambulist-events-political-geographies-of-chicago

chicago events political geography chicago architecture biennial funambulist
The Funambulist Podcast
Discreet Violence 2: Samia Henni - Les bidonvilles d'Alger et de Nanterre

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2018 23:51


Discreet Violence 2: Samia Henni - Les bidonvilles d'Alger et de Nanterre by The Funambulist

The Funambulist Podcast
Discreet Violence 1: Introduction by Kader Attia, Samia Henni, Léopold Lambert

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2018 10:30


Discreet Violence 1: Introduction by Kader Attia, Samia Henni, Léopold Lambert by The Funambulist

The Funambulist Podcast
Discreet Violence 5: Discussion

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2018 28:48


Discreet Violence 5: Discussion by The Funambulist

violence discreet funambulist
The Funambulist Podcast
Discreet Violence 4: Hassina Mechaï - L'etat d'urgence de 2015

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2018 26:58


Discreet Violence 4: Hassina Mechaï - L'etat d'urgence de 2015 by The Funambulist

The Funambulist Podcast
Discreet Violence 3: Léopold Lambert - Espace-temps du 17 octobre 1961

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2018 22:17


Discreet Violence 3: Léopold Lambert - Espace-temps du 17 octobre 1961 by The Funambulist

The Funambulist Podcast
The Funambulist in Hong Kong - Q&A

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2016 53:57


Questions and answers at the The Funambulist presentation in Hong Kong (Oct. 13, 2016) thefunambulist.net/2016/10/14/audi…o-and-hong-kong

hong kong funambulist
The Funambulist Podcast
The Funambulist in Hong Kong - Sonia Wong

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2016 5:19


Contribution by Sonia Wong at the The Funambulist presentation in Hong Kong (Oct. 13, 2016) thefunambulist.net/2016/10/14/audi…o-and-hong-kong

The Funambulist Podcast
The Funambulist in Hong Kong - Tings Chak

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2016 12:24


Contribution by Tings Chak at the The Funambulist presentation in Hong Kong (Oct. 13, 2016) thefunambulist.net/2016/10/14/audi…o-and-hong-kong

hong kong contribution funambulist tings chak
The Funambulist Podcast
The Funambulist in Hong Kong - Léopold Lambert

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2016 51:21


Introduction by Léopold Lambert at the The Funambulist presentation in Hong Kong (Oct. 13, 2016) thefunambulist.net/2016/10/14/audi…o-and-hong-kong

hong kong lambert funambulist
The Funambulist Podcast
The Funambulist in Tokyo - Momoyo Homma

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2016 34:34


Contribution by Momoyo Homma at the The Funambulist presentation in Tokyo (Oct 7, 2016) thefunambulist.net/2016/10/14/audi…o-and-hong-kong

The Funambulist Podcast
The Funambulist in Tokyo - Christina Yi (incomplete)

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2016 7:40


Contribution by Christina Yi at the The Funambulist presentation in Tokyo (Oct 7, 2016) http://thefunambulist.net/2016/10/14/audio-recording-of-the-presentations-of-the-funambulist-in-tokyo-and-hong-kong

La Matinale de 19h
La Matinale - L'architecture comme arme politique, et Rares Talents

La Matinale de 19h

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2016


L'architecture est-elle une arme politique ? Léopold Lambert, créateur de la revue The Funambulist nous répond un grand oui. Oui, la politique et l'architecture sont liées. Multiforme et résolument internationale, la revue anglophone qui parait tout les deux mois, est à la fois un format papier et numérique. Elle regroupe des articles papiers, des podcasts donnant la parole à des penseurs à travers le monde et aborde des thèmes aussi différents que la philosophie, la géographie, l'histoire ou encore l'architecture. Bref The Funambulist est une revue aussi iconoclaste et singulière, que son créateur qui a énormément voyagé.  La hauteur d'une chaise est-elle dangereuse pour nous ? Le mur d'une chambre ou d'une cellule est-il le même ?  Le réaménagement de la place de la République, est-il politique ?  On vous présente donc dans cette première partie une vraie revue de funambule, qui crée des ponts entre des thématiques, différentes au premier abord mais pourtant liées. Tout est dans le lien, le fil.  La figure du Funambule n'est pas libre de la ligne, puisqu'il marche dessus mais il transgresse l'ordre émit par cette ligne.  A partir de demain, mercredi 18 mai, la 5ème édition du festival Rares Talents  se tiendra à Paris dans le 11ème, mais aussi à Pantin et au Blanc Mesnil. La Matinale reçoit donc en deuxième partie d'émission, Vivianne Chaudon vice présidente de l'association et Nassim Dadane musicien, qui nous parlent de ce festival réunissant des artistes de la scène africaine. On vous prévient, ça commence fort avec le Sénégal cette année sur le thème de l'hospitalité. La scène verra défiler ensuite des artistes de nombreux pays africains. Un événement qui se place aussi sous le signe de l'ouverture et de l'échange où des talents connus et peu connus se mélangent. On casse, ou plutôt on brouille, les représentations d'artistes confirmés ou émergents. On se mélange et on partage, avec des musiques pluriculturelles. Le festival porte un message culturel, tout en offrant au public l'opportunité de  découvrir en live des artistes.  Dépêchez-vous de réserver vos places sur rarestalents.com ou la page Facebook.  Un festival qui essaye de briser les barrières pour mieux rapprocher. Et première chronique Maureen nous parle de la nouvelle folie de NJR12 : des enfants dans une émission de télé-réalité. En fin d'émission, Fanny nous raconte ce qu'il ne fallait pas rater, mais alors SURTOUT PAS rater sur le web : le classement 2016 des vidéos les plus dislikés, les mots qu'on n'aime pas classer par Google, et la nouvelle sportive... Présentation : Loïc Gazar / Réalisation : Rémy Dussart / Co-interviews : Valentin Baudena & Erwan Duchateau/ Chronique : Maureen Lepers / Coordination : Elsa Landard & Camille Regache / Web : Lune Bourgogne

La Matinale de 19h
La Matinale – L'architecture comme arme politique, et Rares Talents

La Matinale de 19h

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2016 58:12


L'architecture est-elle une arme politique ? Léopold Lambert, créateur de la revue The Funambulist nous répond un grand oui. Oui, la politique et l'architecture sont liées. Multiforme et résolument internationale, la revue anglophone qui parait tout les deux mois, est à la fois un format papier et numérique. Elle regroupe des articles papiers, des podcasts donnant la parole à des penseurs à travers le monde et aborde des thèmes aussi différents que la philosophie, la géographie, l'histoire ou encore l'architecture. Bref The Funambulist est une revue aussi iconoclaste et singulière, que son créateur qui a énormément voyagé.  La hauteur d'une chaise est-elle dangereuse pour nous ? Le mur d'une chambre ou d'une cellule est-il le même ?  Le réaménagement de la place de la République, est-il politique ?  On vous présente donc dans cette première partie une vraie revue de funambule, qui crée des ponts entre des thématiques, différentes au premier abord mais pourtant liées. Tout est dans le lien, le fil. La figure du Funambule n'est pas libre de la ligne, puisqu'il marche dessus mais il transgresse l'ordre émit par cette ligne. A partir de demain, mercredi 18 mai, la 5ème édition du festival Rares Talents  se tiendra à Paris dans le 11ème, mais aussi à Pantin et au Blanc Mesnil. La Matinale reçoit donc en deuxième partie d'émission, Vivianne Chaudon vice présidente de l'association et Nassim Dadane musicien, qui nous parlent de ce festival réunissant des artistes de la scène africaine. On vous prévient, ça commence fort avec le Sénégal cette année sur le thème de l'hospitalité. La scène verra défiler ensuite des artistes de nombreux pays africains. Un événement qui se place aussi sous le signe de l'ouverture et de l'échange où des talents connus et peu connus se mélangent. On casse, ou plutôt on brouille, les représentations d'artistes confirmés ou émergents. On se mélange et on partage, avec des musiques pluriculturelles. Le festival porte un message culturel, tout en offrant au public l'opportunité de  découvrir en live des artistes.  Dépêchez-vous de réserver vos places sur rarestalents.com ou la page Facebook. Un festival qui essaye de briser les barrières pour mieux rapprocher.Et première chronique Maureen nous parle de la nouvelle folie de NJR12 : des enfants dans une émission de télé-réalité. En fin d'émission, Fanny nous raconte ce qu'il ne fallait pas rater, mais alors SURTOUT PAS rater sur le web : le classement 2016 des vidéos les plus dislikés, les mots qu'on n'aime pas classer par Google, et la nouvelle sportive...Présentation : Loïc Gazar / Réalisation : Rémy Dussart / Co-interviews : Valentin Baudena et Erwan Duchateau/ Chronique : Maureen Lepers / Coordination : Elsa Landard et Camille Regache / Web : Lune Bourgogne

The Funambulist Podcast
The Funambulist: Design & Racism / Christina Heatherton

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2016 22:47


Recording of the May 4, 2016 launch of the fifth issue of The Funambulist Magazine 5 (May-June 2016) dedicated to Design & Racism. http://thefunambulist.net/product/05-may-jun-2016-design-racism-printed-version/

The Funambulist Podcast
The Funambulist: Design & Racism / Alicia Olushola Ajayi

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2016 10:17


Recording of the May 4, 2016 launch of the fifth issue of The Funambulist Magazine 5 (May-June 2016) dedicated to Design & Racism. http://thefunambulist.net/product/05-may-jun-2016-design-racism-printed-version/

The Funambulist Podcast
The Funambulist: Design & Racism / Minh-Ha T. Pham

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2016 18:38


Recording of the May 4, 2016 launch of the fifth issue of The Funambulist Magazine 5 (May-June 2016) dedicated to Design & Racism. http://thefunambulist.net/product/05-may-jun-2016-design-racism-printed-version/

The Funambulist Podcast
The Funambulist: Design & Racism / Questions And Roundtable

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2016 37:11


Recording of the May 4, 2016 launch of the fifth issue of The Funambulist Magazine 5 (May-June 2016) dedicated to Design & Racism. http://thefunambulist.net/product/05-may-jun-2016-design-racism-printed-version/

The Funambulist Podcast
The Funambulist: Design & Racism / Hadeel Khalil Assali

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2016 17:33


Recording of the May 4, 2016 launch of the fifth issue of The Funambulist Magazine 5 (May-June 2016) dedicated to Design & Racism. http://thefunambulist.net/product/05-may-jun-2016-design-racism-printed-version/

The Funambulist Podcast
SADIA SHIRAZI, OLIVIA AHN & MINH-HA T. PHAM /// The Funambulist Magazine Launch at e-flux

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2015 100:55


Presentations recorded with Sadia Shirazi, Olivia Ahn, and Minh-Ha T. Pham at e-flux (New York) on August 13, 2015 http://the-archipelago.net/2015/08/17/sadia-shirazi-olivia-ahn-minh-ha-t-pham-the-funambulist-magazine-launch-at-e-flux/

The Funambulist Podcast
Five Articles about Gaza on The Funambulist

The Funambulist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2014 29:27


Recorded in New York on July 20, 2014 http://the-archipelago.net/2014/07/20/five-articles-about-gaza-on-the-funambulist/

new york gaza funambulist