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This week on CounterSpin: A number of federal agencies rushed to make clear they would be scrubbing activities and events that “celebrate cultural awareness” in an effort to stay on the good side of the weird new White House. Trump and his abettors' anti-anti-discrimination agenda is as subtle as a sledgehammer. “DEI hire,” for instance, is super-complicated code for the idea that if a person who isn't white, cis, and male got a job, that can only mean a better qualified white cis man was unfairly denied it. That's just, Trump says, “common sense.” The irony is not lost that history itself is seen as being manipulated for political purpose when it comes to Black History Month — because we know that history is constantly invoked, if implicitly, as a way of justifying present-day unfairness. White supremacy can be presented as natural if white people invented everything, discovered everything, created all the wealth, and defined civilization. What people try to silence tells us what they fear. So what is so scary about everyone, not just Black people, acknowledging the particular circumstances, and responses to those circumstances, of Black people in these United States — our experience, challenges, accomplishments? Is it that history — real history, and not comforting tall tales — connects the past with the present in ways that are powerful, grounding, and inspiring? In March 2021, a hitherto no-name right-wing activist openly declared an intention to mislead around racism and to vilify any questioning of enduring racial inequities: “The goal,” wrote Manhattan Institute's Christopher Rufo, “is to have the public read something crazy in the newspaper and immediately think ‘critical race theory'.” He bragged that he had “successfully frozen” the “brand” of critical race theory, and was “steadily driving up negative perceptions. We will eventually turn it toxic as we put all of the various cultural insanities under that brand category.” A self-respecting press corps would have taken that as a shot across the bow. The corporate news media we have dutifully signed on to present a campaign openly defined as uninterested in truth or humanity and concerned only with rolling back the clock on racial equity as a totally valid, “grassroots” perspective, deserving respectful inclusion in national conversation. That was a jumping-off point for our conversation with law professor Luke Charles Harris, co-founder with Kimberle Crenshaw of the African American Policy Forum. We hear that important conversation again this week. Plus Janine Jackson takes a quick look back at recent press coverage of Venezuela, Elon Musk, and ICE. The post Luke Charles Harris on Critical Race Theory (2021) appeared first on KPFA.
Today, The Murder Sheet interviews Kelly Sue DeConnick, an award-winning comic book writer. Her latest book FML deals with plenty of themes around true crime, centering a cartoonist out of Portland, Oregon with an obsession for gory podcasts. We'll talk with Kelly Sue about true crime, art, and why we all seek out disturbing stories.Preorder FML at your local comic shop, which you can find at Comic Shop Locator: https://www.comicshoplocator.com/Learn more about FML here: https://www.fmlcomix.com/Check out the details on FML Issue #1 (along with pre-order links): https://www.darkhorse.com/Comics/3013-235/FML-1Here's the announcement about FML and pre-order links: https://www.darkhorse.com/Blog/4147/kelly-sue-deconnick-and-david-lopez-return-to-creaLearn more about FML here: https://www.darkhorse.com/Search/fmlFind your local comic book shop by going to the Comic Shop Locator here: https://www.comicshoplocator.com/Check out Dark Horse Comics here: https://www.darkhorse.com/Buy Wonder Woman: Historia: The Amazons here: https://bookshop.org/p/books/wonder-woman-historia-the-amazons-kelly-sue-deconnick/19695715?ean=9781779521354Here are some books that came up during our conversation:Buy Mia Zapata and the Gits: A Story of Art, Rock, and Revolution by Steve Moriarty here: https://bookshop.org/p/books/art-rock-and-revolution-the-story-of-the-gits/19663701?ean=9781627311502Buy the The Ten-Cent Plague: The Great Comic-Book Scare and How It Changed America by David Hajdu here: https://bookshop.org/p/books/the-ten-cent-plague-the-great-comic-book-scare-and-how-it-changed-america-david-hajdu/10092241?ean=9780312428235Buy Helter Skelter: The True Story of the Manson Murders by Vincent Bugliosi and Curt Gentry here: https://bookshop.org/p/books/helter-skelter-the-true-story-of-the-manson-murders-curt-gentry/7327756?ean=9780393322231Check out Maggie Estep's work here: https://bookshop.org/contributors/maggie-estepCheck out Kimberle Crenshaw's work here: https://bookshop.org/contributors/kimberle-crenshawBuy Ice Haven by Daniel Clowes here or wherever you get your comics: https://www.abebooks.com/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=31921083673&dest=usa&ref_=ps_ggl_18382194370&cm_mmc=ggl-_-US_Shopp_Trade0to10-_-product_id=COM9780375423321USED-_-keyword=&gclid=CjwKCAjwlbu2BhA3EiwA3yXyu5tDVNTTThQU5QdohYkZ89Ef-qKEMyHoT-2UdWkWhi6E3YjQ1rAn7hoClnwQAvD_BwEListen to The Murder Sheet's recent episode with Jayson Blair of the Silver Linings Handbook Podcast here: https://art19.com/shows/murder-sheet/episodes/d7a42e66-7f75-4a20-bf62-2dfcf7cbff84Check out works by and about the photographer Arthur Fellig, known as Weegee, here: https://bookshop.org/search?keywords=weegeeThe Los Angeles Kirby Vision exhibition is no longer running out but definitely check out Jack Kirby's work here: https://bookshop.org/search?keywords=jack+kirbyCheck out Matt Fraction's Superman's Pal Jimmy Olsen: Who Killed Jimmy Olsen? here: https://www.dc.com/graphic-novels/supermans-pal-jimmy-olsen-2019/supermans-pal-jimmy-olsen-who-killed-jimmy-olsenCheck out Ed Brubaker's Criminal series here: https://bookshop.org/contributors/ed-brubakerSupport The Murder Sheet by buying a t-shirt here: https://www.murdersheetshop.com/Come see us do our first live show in Kendallville, Indiana https://clcevents.eventcalendarapp.com/u/43485/315102Send tips to murdersheet@gmail.com.The Murder Sheet is a production of Mystery Sheet LLC.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Heute schließen wir Kapitel 1.5 aus das Unbehagen der Geschlechter ab. Wir sprechen über trans Identität und Geschlecht als Spektrum, das Aufbrechen von Geschlechter-Klischees, und die Gegenreaktion von Maskulisten wie Andrew Tate sowie dem Wunsch nach Eindeutigkeit in Fragen des Genders. Schließlich kommen wir zu Butlers Fazit, dass die Ontologie der Substanzen überflüssig ist und Gender Performance ist. Wollt ihr uns unterstützen? Dann gebt uns doch einen Kaffee aus! :) https://www.buymeacoffee.com/privatsprache Oder über PayPal: https://www.paypal.me/DanielBrockmeier ==== abonniert meinen Podcast ===== Philosophie-Videos: Aristoteles' Kritik an Platons Ideenlehre: https://youtu.be/Hjghct9d8yo?si=puV480EiYUFQdlFh Ethik und Ästhetik in Tár – Kann man die Kunst vom Künstler trennen? https://youtu.be/3oH9G19T04A 10 philosophische Lieblingsbücher: https://youtu.be/LfQ2CksAEB0 Alle Philosophie-Videos: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhvEH9NjuPs&list=PL1L_CFjFbZ9aRfcEW6avxSgvxr9Q2jBrH Wie das mit der Philosophie angefangen hat: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhvEH9NjuPs&t Zur weiteren Recherche über Judith Butler: Judith Butler – Das Unbehagen der Geschlechter: https://amzn.to/3ENUwBW * Lars Distelhorst – Judith Butler https://amzn.to/3H31oho * Riki Wilchins – Gender Theory. Eine Einführung: https://amzn.to/3AZFZSw * Ernst Ulrich von Weizsäcker über Konrad Lorenz: https://gegneranalyse.de/personen/konrad-lorenz/# Bundespsychotherapeutenkammer über die Entpathologisierung von Homosexualität: https://www.bptk.de/homosexualitaet-und-transgeschlechtlichkeit-sind-keine-krankheiten/ Olaf Hiort über biologisches Geschlecht als Spektrum https://www.spektrum.de/frage/geschlechtsidentitaet-gibt-es-mehr-als-zwei-geschlechter/1835662 Simone de Beauvoir – Das andere Geschlecht: https://amzn.to/3XtAXb3 * Eva Scheufler – Die feministische Philosophie und der Frauenkörper https://utheses.univie.ac.at/detail/913# Gödels Unvollständigkeitssätze https://www.spektrum.de/kolumne/goedels-unvollstaendigkeitssaetze-mathematik-ist-unvollstaendig/2019298 Die BPB zu Humanismus: https://www.bpb.de/kurz-knapp/lexika/das-junge-politik-lexikon/320496/humanismus/ Deutschlandfunk zu Butlers Dekonstruktion des Humanismus: https://www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de/humanismus-einer-dekonstruktivistin-100.html Und Produktive Differenzen zur Frage, warum Butler diese Dekonstruktion vornimmt: https://differenzen.univie.ac.at/glossar.php?sp=26 Wörterbuch der Philosophischen Begriffe https://amzn.to/3Qi5Ygk * Spektrum der Wissenschaft zur Herr-Knecht-Dialektik https://www.spektrum.de/lexikon/philosophie/herr-und-knecht/871 "Reach Everyone on the Planet" von Kimberleé Crenshaw https://www.boell.de/sites/default/files/crenshaw_-_reach_everyone_on_the_planet_de.pdf Habermas' Diskursethik https://philosophisch-ethische-rezensionen.de/rezension/Themen/Habermas1.html Jürgen Habermas: Erläuterungen zur Diskursethik https://amzn.to/3SuSwqA * Der Podcast Feminist Shelf Control: https://podcasts.apple.com/de/podcast/feminist-shelf-control/id1635137441 Die drei Paradigmen er Philosophie: https://perspektiefe.privatsprache.de/die-drei-paradigmen-der-philosophie/ Definition Identität: https://www.spektrum.de/lexikon/philosophie/identitaet/931 Foucault – Sexualität und Wahrheit: Erster Band: Der Wille zum Wissen: https://amzn.to/3z5C9JB * Kübra Gümüşay – Sprache und Sein: https://amzn.to/3dfJYBx * Podcast What's in your Pants: https://whats-in-your-pants.de/ Philosophy Tube zu Judith Butler: https://youtu.be/QVilpxowsUQ?si=6SvqY51IeYfT5kFy Mein kleines Philosophie-Lexikon: https://amzn.to/3LRTYyJ * Tim Kreider – We learn nothing: https://amzn.to/3Xc5oTb * *Das ist ein Affiliate-Link: Wenn ihr das Buch kauft, bekomme ich eine winzige Provision und freue mich. Oder in Amazons Formulierung: Als Amazon-Partner verdiene ich an qualifizierten Verkäufen.
Bioneers: Revolution From the Heart of Nature | Bioneers Radio Series
Ever since women won the right to vote in 1920, women leaders and their allies have sought to pass an Equal Rights Amendment to drive total equality and justice for women into the U.S. Constitution. It did pass in 1972, but fell three states short of ratification. Today's next wave of the women's movement might finally make the ERA a reality. Why is Constitutional protection so crucial? Join leading advocates Joan Blades (MomsRising co-founder), attorney Kimberle Crenshaw and Jessica Neuwirth (ERA Coalition President) to learn the true story of what's at stake and how life would be different and better for women and men. To learn more about Kimberle Crenshaw's work, visit the African American Policy Forum. You can follow Joan Blades work at MomsRising, and Living Room Conversations. Follow the progress Jessica Neuwirth and others are making with the ERA Coalition. See related media in our Green New Deal Media Collection. This is an episode of the Bioneers: Revolution from the Heart of Nature series. Visit the radio and podcast homepage to learn more.
In hour 3 of The Armstrong & Getty Show: Joe is over Snoop Dogg & inflation Kamala sucks off the cuff. Also, Jack's butt. Gaza/Israel war update Kimberle Crenshaw pops off on Twitter See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In hour 3 of The Armstrong & Getty Show: Joe is over Snoop Dogg & inflation Kamala sucks off the cuff. Also, Jack's butt. Gaza/Israel war update Kimberle Crenshaw pops off on Twitter See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Wir setzen Kapitel 1.5 fort. Heute geht es das, was Butlerm den "naiven Diskurs" nennt. Wir fragen uns wo Trans herkommt und diskutieren, dass Butler mit their Theorie der Performanz das Gefühl nicht erklären kann, das trans Menschen empfinden. Es geht weiter um die heterosexuelle Matrix und damit verbunden, um den naturalistischen Fehlschluss. Wir besprechen Foucaults These vom Sexus als Machtinstrument der Fortpfanzung und streiten am Ende heftig über die Akzidens der Identität. Wollt ihr uns unterstützen? Dann gebt uns doch einen Kaffee aus! :) https://www.buymeacoffee.com/privatsprache Oder über PayPal: https://www.paypal.me/DanielBrockmeier ==== abonniert meinen Podcast ===== Philosophie-Videos: Aristoteles' Kritik an Platons Ideenlehre: https://youtu.be/Hjghct9d8yo?si=puV480EiYUFQdlFh Ethik und Ästhetik in Tár – Kann man die Kunst vom Künstler trennen? https://youtu.be/3oH9G19T04A 10 philosophische Lieblingsbücher: https://youtu.be/LfQ2CksAEB0 Alle Philosophie-Videos: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhvEH9NjuPs&list=PL1L_CFjFbZ9aRfcEW6avxSgvxr9Q2jBrH Wie das mit der Philosophie angefangen hat: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhvEH9NjuPs&t Zur weiteren Recherche über Judith Butler: Judith Butler – Das Unbehagen der Geschlechter: https://amzn.to/3ENUwBW * Lars Distelhorst – Judith Butler https://amzn.to/3H31oho * Riki Wilchins – Gender Theory. Eine Einführung: https://amzn.to/3AZFZSw * Ernst Ulrich von Weizsäcker über Konrad Lorenz: https://gegneranalyse.de/personen/konrad-lorenz/# Bundespsychotherapeutenkammer über die Entpathologisierung von Homosexualität: https://www.bptk.de/homosexualitaet-und-transgeschlechtlichkeit-sind-keine-krankheiten/ Olaf Hiort über biologisches Geschlecht als Spektrum https://www.spektrum.de/frage/geschlechtsidentitaet-gibt-es-mehr-als-zwei-geschlechter/1835662 Simone de Beauvoir – Das andere Geschlecht: https://amzn.to/3XtAXb3 * Eva Scheufler – Die feministische Philosophie und der Frauenkörper https://utheses.univie.ac.at/detail/913# Gödels Unvollständigkeitssätze https://www.spektrum.de/kolumne/goedels-unvollstaendigkeitssaetze-mathematik-ist-unvollstaendig/2019298 Die BPB zu Humanismus: https://www.bpb.de/kurz-knapp/lexika/das-junge-politik-lexikon/320496/humanismus/ Deutschlandfunk zu Butlers Dekonstruktion des Humanismus: https://www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de/humanismus-einer-dekonstruktivistin-100.html Und Produktive Differenzen zur Frage, warum Butler diese Dekonstruktion vornimmt: https://differenzen.univie.ac.at/glossar.php?sp=26 Wörterbuch der Philosophischen Begriffe https://amzn.to/3Qi5Ygk * Spektrum der Wissenschaft zur Herr-Knecht-Dialektik https://www.spektrum.de/lexikon/philosophie/herr-und-knecht/871 "Reach Everyone on the Planet" von Kimberleé Crenshaw https://www.boell.de/sites/default/files/crenshaw_-_reach_everyone_on_the_planet_de.pdf Habermas' Diskursethik https://philosophisch-ethische-rezensionen.de/rezension/Themen/Habermas1.html Jürgen Habermas: Erläuterungen zur Diskursethik https://amzn.to/3SuSwqA * Der Podcast Feminist Shelf Control: https://podcasts.apple.com/de/podcast/feminist-shelf-control/id1635137441 Die drei Paradigmen er Philosophie: https://perspektiefe.privatsprache.de/die-drei-paradigmen-der-philosophie/ Definition Identität: https://www.spektrum.de/lexikon/philosophie/identitaet/931 Foucault – Sexualität und Wahrheit: Erster Band: Der Wille zum Wissen: https://amzn.to/3z5C9JB * Kübra Gümüşay – Sprache und Sein: https://amzn.to/3dfJYBx * Podcast What's in your Pants: https://whats-in-your-pants.de/ Philosophy Tube zu Judith Butler: https://youtu.be/QVilpxowsUQ?si=6SvqY51IeYfT5kFy Mein kleines Philosophie-Lexikon: https://amzn.to/3LRTYyJ * *Das ist ein Affiliate-Link: Wenn ihr das Buch kauft, bekomme ich eine winzige Provision und freue mich. Oder in Amazons Formulierung: Als Amazon-Partner verdiene ich an qualifizierten Verkäufen.
Wir setzen Kapitel 1.5 fort. Heute geht es zentral um Monique Wittigs These, dass Lesben als drittes Geschlecht keine Frauen sind. Wir erarbeiten uns, was Wittig damit gemeint haben könnte und ob ihre Vision, sich als Lesbe der heterosexuellen Matrix zu entziehen, realisiert wurde. Es geht um Essentialismus und Materialismus und Butlers Kritik an dem Standpunkt, dass es eine Substanz der Person vor dem Geschlecht gibt. Das diskutiert Butler anhand einer These von Friedrich Nietzsche. Wir sprechen darüber, welche Kategorien tief in unserer Sprache eingeschrieben sind. Außerdem diskutieren wir das Selbstgefühl als Identitäts-Geber vs. Der Performanz. Wollt ihr uns unterstützen? Dann gebt uns doch einen Kaffee aus! :) https://www.buymeacoffee.com/privatsprache ==== abonniert meinen Podcast ===== Philosophie-Videos: Aristoteles' Kritik an Platons Ideenlehre: https://youtu.be/Hjghct9d8yo?si=puV480EiYUFQdlFh Ethik und Ästhetik in Tár – Kann man die Kunst vom Künstler trennen? https://youtu.be/3oH9G19T04A 10 philosophische Lieblingsbücher: https://youtu.be/LfQ2CksAEB0 Alle Philosophie-Videos: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhvEH9NjuPs&list=PL1L_CFjFbZ9aRfcEW6avxSgvxr9Q2jBrH Wie das mit der Philosophie angefangen hat: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhvEH9NjuPs&t Zur weiteren Recherche über Judith Butler: Judith Butler – Das Unbehagen der Geschlechter: https://amzn.to/3ENUwBW * Lars Distelhorst – Judith Butler https://amzn.to/3H31oho * Riki Wilchins – Gender Theory. Eine Einführung: https://amzn.to/3AZFZSw * Ernst Ulrich von Weizsäcker über Konrad Lorenz: https://gegneranalyse.de/personen/konrad-lorenz/# Bundespsychotherapeutenkammer über die Entpathologisierung von Homosexualität: https://www.bptk.de/homosexualitaet-und-transgeschlechtlichkeit-sind-keine-krankheiten/ Olaf Hiort über biologisches Geschlecht als Spektrum https://www.spektrum.de/frage/geschlechtsidentitaet-gibt-es-mehr-als-zwei-geschlechter/1835662 Simone de Beauvoir – Das andere Geschlecht: https://amzn.to/3XtAXb3 * Eva Scheufler – Die feministische Philosophie und der Frauenkörper https://utheses.univie.ac.at/detail/913# Gödels Unvollständigkeitssätze https://www.spektrum.de/kolumne/goedels-unvollstaendigkeitssaetze-mathematik-ist-unvollstaendig/2019298 Die BPB zu Humanismus: https://www.bpb.de/kurz-knapp/lexika/das-junge-politik-lexikon/320496/humanismus/ Deutschlandfunk zu Butlers Dekonstruktion des Humanismus: https://www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de/humanismus-einer-dekonstruktivistin-100.html Und Produktive Differenzen zur Frage, warum Butler diese Dekonstruktion vornimmt: https://differenzen.univie.ac.at/glossar.php?sp=26 Wörterbuch der Philosophischen Begriffe https://amzn.to/3Qi5Ygk * Spektrum der Wissenschaft zur Herr-Knecht-Dialektik https://www.spektrum.de/lexikon/philosophie/herr-und-knecht/871 "Reach Everyone on the Planet" von Kimberleé Crenshaw https://www.boell.de/sites/default/files/crenshaw_-_reach_everyone_on_the_planet_de.pdf Habermas' Diskursethik https://philosophisch-ethische-rezensionen.de/rezension/Themen/Habermas1.html Jürgen Habermas: Erläuterungen zur Diskursethik https://amzn.to/3SuSwqA * Der Podcast Feminist Shelf Control: https://podcasts.apple.com/de/podcast/feminist-shelf-control/id1635137441 Die drei Paradigmen er Philosophie: https://perspektiefe.privatsprache.de/die-drei-paradigmen-der-philosophie/ Definition Identität: https://www.spektrum.de/lexikon/philosophie/identitaet/931 Foucault – Sexualität und Wahrheit: Erster Band: Der Wille zum Wissen: https://amzn.to/3z5C9JB * Kübra Gümüşay – Sprache und Sein: https://amzn.to/3dfJYBx * *Das ist ein Affiliate-Link: Wenn ihr das Buch kauft, bekomme ich eine winzige Provision und freue mich. Oder in Amazons Formulierung: Als Amazon-Partner verdiene ich an qualifizierten Verkäufen.
Wir setzen Kapitel 1.5 fort. Heute geht es erneut ganz viel um Identität. Wir sprechen über die Kohärenz und Kontinuität der Person. Ist Identität normativ oder deskriptiv? Stecken Kohärenz und Kontinuität analytisch im Begriff der Person? Es geht um die Wahrheit des Sexus bei Foucault und die heterosexuelle Matrix. Wollt ihr uns unterstützen? Dann gebt uns doch einen Kaffee aus! :) https://www.buymeacoffee.com/privatsprache ==== abonniert meinen Podcast ===== Philosophie-Videos: Aristoteles' Kritik an Platons Ideenlehre: https://youtu.be/Hjghct9d8yo?si=puV480EiYUFQdlFh Ethik und Ästhetik in Tár – Kann man die Kunst vom Künstler trennen? https://youtu.be/3oH9G19T04A 10 philosophische Lieblingsbücher: https://youtu.be/LfQ2CksAEB0 Alle Philosophie-Videos: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhvEH9NjuPs&list=PL1L_CFjFbZ9aRfcEW6avxSgvxr9Q2jBrH Wie das mit der Philosophie angefangen hat: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhvEH9NjuPs&t Zur weiteren Recherche über Judith Butler: Judith Butler – Das Unbehagen der Geschlechter: https://amzn.to/3ENUwBW * Lars Distelhorst – Judith Butler https://amzn.to/3H31oho * Riki Wilchins – Gender Theory. Eine Einführung: https://amzn.to/3AZFZSw * Ernst Ulrich von Weizsäcker über Konrad Lorenz: https://gegneranalyse.de/personen/konrad-lorenz/# Bundespsychotherapeutenkammer über die Entpathologisierung von Homosexualität: https://www.bptk.de/homosexualitaet-und-transgeschlechtlichkeit-sind-keine-krankheiten/ Olaf Hiort über biologisches Geschlecht als Spektrum https://www.spektrum.de/frage/geschlechtsidentitaet-gibt-es-mehr-als-zwei-geschlechter/1835662 Simone de Beauvoir – Das andere Geschlecht: https://amzn.to/3XtAXb3 * Eva Scheufler – Die feministische Philosophie und der Frauenkörper https://utheses.univie.ac.at/detail/913# Gödels Unvollständigkeitssätze https://www.spektrum.de/kolumne/goedels-unvollstaendigkeitssaetze-mathematik-ist-unvollstaendig/2019298 Die BPB zu Humanismus: https://www.bpb.de/kurz-knapp/lexika/das-junge-politik-lexikon/320496/humanismus/ Deutschlandfunk zu Butlers Dekonstruktion des Humanismus: https://www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de/humanismus-einer-dekonstruktivistin-100.html Und Produktive Differenzen zur Frage, warum Butler diese Dekonstruktion vornimmt: https://differenzen.univie.ac.at/glossar.php?sp=26 Wörterbuch der Philosophischen Begriffe https://amzn.to/3Qi5Ygk * Spektrum der Wissenschaft zur Herr-Knecht-Dialektik https://www.spektrum.de/lexikon/philosophie/herr-und-knecht/871 "Reach Everyone on the Planet" von Kimberleé Crenshaw https://www.boell.de/sites/default/files/crenshaw_-_reach_everyone_on_the_planet_de.pdf Habermas' Diskursethik https://philosophisch-ethische-rezensionen.de/rezension/Themen/Habermas1.html Jürgen Habermas: Erläuterungen zur Diskursethik https://amzn.to/3SuSwqA * Der Podcast Feminist Shelf Control: https://podcasts.apple.com/de/podcast/feminist-shelf-control/id1635137441 Die drei Paradigmen er Philosophie: https://perspektiefe.privatsprache.de/die-drei-paradigmen-der-philosophie/ Definition Identität: https://www.spektrum.de/lexikon/philosophie/identitaet/931 Foucault – Sexualität und Wahrheit: Erster Band: Der Wille zum Wissen: https://amzn.to/3z5C9JB * *Das ist ein Affiliate-Link: Wenn ihr das Buch kauft, bekomme ich eine winzige Provision und freue mich. Oder in Amazons Formulierung: Als Amazon-Partner verdiene ich an qualifizierten Verkäufen.
Christiane und ich beginnen Kapitel 1.5. Heute geht es ganz viel um Identität. Wir fragen uns, was Identität erkenntnistheoretisch ist, was sie logisch ist und ob Dinge im Laufe der Zeit mit sich selbst identisch sind. Mit Butler wenden wir das dann auf Geschlechtsidentität an und verirren uns intelligibel in die drei Paradigmen der Philosophie. Wollt ihr uns unterstützen? Dann gebt uns doch einen Kaffee aus! :) https://www.buymeacoffee.com/privatsprache Hier findet ihr Christianes neuen Podcast: Autonomie und Algorythmen: https://www.podcast.de/podcast/3451842/autonomie-algorithmen ==== abonniert meinen Podcast ===== Philosophie-Videos: Aristoteles' Kritik an Platons Ideenlehre: https://youtu.be/Hjghct9d8yo?si=puV480EiYUFQdlFh Ethik und Ästhetik in Tár – Kann man die Kunst vom Künstler trennen? https://youtu.be/3oH9G19T04A 10 philosophische Lieblingsbücher: https://youtu.be/LfQ2CksAEB0 Alle Philosophie-Videos: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhvEH9NjuPs&list=PL1L_CFjFbZ9aRfcEW6avxSgvxr9Q2jBrH Wie das mit der Philosophie angefangen hat: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhvEH9NjuPs&t Zur weiteren Recherche über Judith Butler: Judith Butler – Das Unbehagen der Geschlechter: https://amzn.to/3ENUwBW * Lars Distelhorst – Judith Butler https://amzn.to/3H31oho * Riki Wilchins – Gender Theory. Eine Einführung: https://amzn.to/3AZFZSw * Ernst Ulrich von Weizsäcker über Konrad Lorenz: https://gegneranalyse.de/personen/konrad-lorenz/# Bundespsychotherapeutenkammer über die Entpathologisierung von Homosexualität: https://www.bptk.de/homosexualitaet-und-transgeschlechtlichkeit-sind-keine-krankheiten/ Olaf Hiort über biologisches Geschlecht als Spektrum https://www.spektrum.de/frage/geschlechtsidentitaet-gibt-es-mehr-als-zwei-geschlechter/1835662 Simone de Beauvoir – Das andere Geschlecht: https://amzn.to/3XtAXb3 * Eva Scheufler – Die feministische Philosophie und der Frauenkörper https://utheses.univie.ac.at/detail/913# Gödels Unvollständigkeitssätze https://www.spektrum.de/kolumne/goedels-unvollstaendigkeitssaetze-mathematik-ist-unvollstaendig/2019298 Die BPB zu Humanismus: https://www.bpb.de/kurz-knapp/lexika/das-junge-politik-lexikon/320496/humanismus/ Deutschlandfunk zu Butlers Dekonstruktion des Humanismus: https://www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de/humanismus-einer-dekonstruktivistin-100.html Und Produktive Differenzen zur Frage, warum Butler diese Dekonstruktion vornimmt: https://differenzen.univie.ac.at/glossar.php?sp=26 Wörterbuch der Philosophischen Begriffe https://amzn.to/3Qi5Ygk * Spektrum der Wissenschaft zur Herr-Knecht-Dialektik https://www.spektrum.de/lexikon/philosophie/herr-und-knecht/871 "Reach Everyone on the Planet" von Kimberleé Crenshaw https://www.boell.de/sites/default/files/crenshaw_-_reach_everyone_on_the_planet_de.pdf Habermas' Diskursethik https://philosophisch-ethische-rezensionen.de/rezension/Themen/Habermas1.html Jürgen Habermas: Erläuterungen zur Diskursethik https://amzn.to/3SuSwqA * Der Podcast Feminist Shelf Control: https://podcasts.apple.com/de/podcast/feminist-shelf-control/id1635137441 Die drei Paradigmen er Philosophie: https://perspektiefe.privatsprache.de/die-drei-paradigmen-der-philosophie/ Definition Identität: https://www.spektrum.de/lexikon/philosophie/identitaet/931 *Das ist ein Affiliate-Link: Wenn ihr das Buch kauft, bekomme ich eine winzige Provision und freue mich. Oder in Amazons Formulierung: Als Amazon-Partner verdiene ich an qualifizierten Verkäufen.
Kimberle Crenshaw, is a pioneering scholar for Critical Race Theory and professor at Columbia University and UCLA
Christiane und ich beenden Kapitel 1.4. Dabei stolpern wir in einige Probleme von Butlers Bündnispolitik. Wir sprechen über die Querfront und wie Terminologie-Wechsel helfen können, Probleme zu überwinden. Es geht um die Schwierigkeit unserer Sprache, Kontinuen abzubilden und am Ende ziehen wir ein Fazit, was wir aus dem Kapitel mitnehmen. Wollt ihr uns unterstützen? Dann gebt uns doch einen Kaffee aus! :) https://www.buymeacoffee.com/privatsprache ==== abonniert meinen Podcast ===== Philosophie-Videos: Aristoteles' Kritik an Platons Ideenlehre: https://youtu.be/Hjghct9d8yo?si=puV480EiYUFQdlFh Ethik und Ästhetik in Tár – Kann man die Kunst vom Künstler trennen? https://youtu.be/3oH9G19T04A 10 philosophische Lieblingsbücher: https://youtu.be/LfQ2CksAEB0 Alle Philosophie-Videos: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhvEH9NjuPs&list=PL1L_CFjFbZ9aRfcEW6avxSgvxr9Q2jBrH Wie das mit der Philosophie angefangen hat: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhvEH9NjuPs&t Zur weiteren Recherche über Judith Butler: Judith Butler – Das Unbehagen der Geschlechter: https://amzn.to/3ENUwBW * Lars Distelhorst – Judith Butler https://amzn.to/3H31oho * Riki Wilchins – Gender Theory. Eine Einführung: https://amzn.to/3AZFZSw * Ernst Ulrich von Weizsäcker über Konrad Lorenz: https://gegneranalyse.de/personen/konrad-lorenz/# Bundespsychotherapeutenkammer über die Entpathologisierung von Homosexualität: https://www.bptk.de/homosexualitaet-und-transgeschlechtlichkeit-sind-keine-krankheiten/ Olaf Hiort über biologisches Geschlecht als Spektrum https://www.spektrum.de/frage/geschlechtsidentitaet-gibt-es-mehr-als-zwei-geschlechter/1835662 Simone de Beauvoir – Das andere Geschlecht: https://amzn.to/3XtAXb3 * Eva Scheufler – Die feministische Philosophie und der Frauenkörper https://utheses.univie.ac.at/detail/913# Gödels Unvollständigkeitssätze https://www.spektrum.de/kolumne/goedels-unvollstaendigkeitssaetze-mathematik-ist-unvollstaendig/2019298 Die BPB zu Humanismus: https://www.bpb.de/kurz-knapp/lexika/das-junge-politik-lexikon/320496/humanismus/ Deutschlandfunk zu Butlers Dekonstruktion des Humanismus: https://www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de/humanismus-einer-dekonstruktivistin-100.html Und Produktive Differenzen zur Frage, warum Butler diese Dekonstruktion vornimmt: https://differenzen.univie.ac.at/glossar.php?sp=26 Wörterbuch der Philosophischen Begriffe https://amzn.to/3Qi5Ygk * Spektrum der Wissenschaft zur Herr-Knecht-Dialektik https://www.spektrum.de/lexikon/philosophie/herr-und-knecht/871 "Reach Everyone on the Planet" von Kimberleé Crenshaw https://www.boell.de/sites/default/files/crenshaw_-_reach_everyone_on_the_planet_de.pdf Habermas' Diskursethik https://philosophisch-ethische-rezensionen.de/rezension/Themen/Habermas1.html Jürgen Habermas: Erläuterungen zur Diskursethik https://amzn.to/3SuSwqA * Der Podcast Feminist Shelf Control: https://podcasts.apple.com/de/podcast/feminist-shelf-control/id1635137441 *Das ist ein Affiliate-Link: Wenn ihr das Buch kauft, bekomme ich eine winzige Provision und freue mich.
Christiane und ich lesen weiter Kapitel 1.4. Judith Butler macht hier den Vorschlag, aufzugeben, "Frau" zu definieren und stattdessen eine Bündnispolitik anzustreben. Es geht darum, wie man neue Macht- und Unterdrückungsstrukturen in einem solchen Bündnis verhindern kann. Christiane und ich machen Exkurse über Intersektionalität, Ecriture feminine und Habermas' Diskursethik. Wollt ihr uns unterstützen? Dann gebt uns doch einen Kaffee aus! :) https://www.buymeacoffee.com/privatsprache ======= abonniert meinen Podcast ====== Philosophie-Videos: Aristoteles' Kritik an Platons Ideenlehre: https://youtu.be/Hjghct9d8yo?si=puV480EiYUFQdlFh Ethik und Ästhetik in Tár – Kann man die Kunst vom Künstler trennen? https://youtu.be/3oH9G19T04A 10 philosophische Lieblingsbücher: https://youtu.be/LfQ2CksAEB0 Alle Philosophie-Videos: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhvEH9NjuPs&list=PL1L_CFjFbZ9aRfcEW6avxSgvxr9Q2jBrH Wie das mit der Philosophie angefangen hat: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhvEH9NjuPs&t Zur weiteren Recherche über Judith Butler: Judith Butler – Das Unbehagen der Geschlechter: https://amzn.to/3ENUwBW * Lars Distelhorst – Judith Butler https://amzn.to/3H31oho * Riki Wilchins – Gender Theory. Eine Einführung: https://amzn.to/3AZFZSw * Ernst Ulrich von Weizsäcker über Konrad Lorenz: https://gegneranalyse.de/personen/konrad-lorenz/# Bundespsychotherapeutenkammer über die Entpathologisierung von Homosexualität: https://www.bptk.de/homosexualitaet-und-transgeschlechtlichkeit-sind-keine-krankheiten/ Olaf Hiort über biologisches Geschlecht als Spektrum https://www.spektrum.de/frage/geschlechtsidentitaet-gibt-es-mehr-als-zwei-geschlechter/1835662 Simone de Beauvoir – Das andere Geschlecht: https://amzn.to/3XtAXb3 * Eva Scheufler – Die feministische Philosophie und der Frauenkörper https://utheses.univie.ac.at/detail/913# Gödels Unvollständigkeitssätze https://www.spektrum.de/kolumne/goedels-unvollstaendigkeitssaetze-mathematik-ist-unvollstaendig/2019298 Die BPB zu Humanismus: https://www.bpb.de/kurz-knapp/lexika/das-junge-politik-lexikon/320496/humanismus/ Deutschlandfunk zu Butlers Dekonstruktion des Humanismus: https://www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de/humanismus-einer-dekonstruktivistin-100.html Und Produktive Differenzen zur Frage, warum Butler diese Dekonstruktion vornimmt: https://differenzen.univie.ac.at/glossar.php?sp=26 Wörterbuch der Philosophischen Begriffe https://amzn.to/3Qi5Ygk * Spektrum der Wissenschaft zur Herr-Knecht-Dialektik https://www.spektrum.de/lexikon/philosophie/herr-und-knecht/871 "Reach Everyone on the Planet" von Kimberleé Crenshaw https://www.boell.de/sites/default/files/crenshaw_-_reach_everyone_on_the_planet_de.pdf Habermas' Diskursethik https://philosophisch-ethische-rezensionen.de/rezension/Themen/Habermas1.html Jürgen Habermas: Erläuterungen zur Diskursethik https://amzn.to/3SuSwqA * *Das ist ein Affiliate-Link: Wenn ihr das Buch kauft, bekomme ich eine winzige Provision und freue mich.
De 19 a 22 de outubro, Niterói sedia o 9° Encontro Nacional do Movimento Brasileiro de Mulheres Cegas e com Baixa Visão - MBMC, e este é o tema do Podcast Acessando Lucília desta terça-feira, 17/10. A abertura do evento, no bloco P do Campus Gragoatá, da Universidade Federal Fluminense-UFF, será com a palestra magna “O Coletivo e a Interseccionalidade das Mulheres com Deficiência Visual: Em Foco seus Marcadores de Gênero, Raça, Capacidade e Geracionalidade”. O MBMC é um coletivo que promove o encontro nacional com o objetivo de dar visibilidade social e política para as mulheres cegas e com baixa visão, na perspectiva de participação nas definições de políticas públicas e na condução dos direitos humanos em nosso país. E o que é Interseccionalidade? De forma resumida é um instrumento metodológico que investiga a interação de fatores de opressão que definem identidades sociais: racismo, capacitismo e machismo perpassam uma mulher negra com deficiência visual, por exemplo. O conceito foi criado em 1989 pela professora americana Kimberle Crenshaw, cientista nas áreas de raça e gênero, e tem como base a história de uma americana que não conseguiu processar uma empresa ao ser discriminada por dois fatores: ser mulher e ser negra. Nossa conversa será sobre o Encontro, sobre mulheres e sobre questões da cegueira e da baixa visão. Nossas convidadas são: Sonia March, 80 anos, ativista pelos direitos das mulheres, professora e assistente social aposentada, com atuação nas escolas de ensino fundamental no município de São Gonçalo, região metropolitana do Rio, na extinta Fundação Nacional de Bem-Estar do Menor - Funabem e na Fundação Legião Brasileira de Assistência - LBA e que atualmente compõe a coordenação executiva nacional do Movimento Brasileiro de Mulheres Cegas e com Baixa Visão - MBMC. Wanda Silva, graduanda de psicologia na Universidade Federal Fluminense - UFF; pesquisadora do Projeto de Extensão Perceber Sem Ver - PSV UFF; pesquisadora do Laboratório de Corpos Natureza e Sentidos - Labiconatus - Departamento de Antropologia UFF, e coordenadora executiva do Movimento Brasileiro de Mulheres Cegas e com Baixa Visão - MBMC. Marcia Moraes, doutora em psicologia pela Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo - PUC/SP; professora titular do Departamento de Psicologia da Universidade Federal Fluminense - UFF; pesquisadora em estudos da deficiência, em especial pessoas com deficiência visual, em particular na perspectiva feminista; coordenadora do Laboratório PesquisarCOM: Pesquisas e Intervenções em Psicologia (UFF). O bate-papo será transmitido ao vivo, às 18h, na página do ACESSANDO LUCÍLIA no Youtube: @acessandolucilia5059, na Web Rádio Censura Livre, no Youtube, (youtube.com/c/Censuralivre ), no Facebook facebook.com/webradiocensuralivre-e/ ), site (www.clwebradio.com ) e nos aplicativos: RadiosNet (http://l.radios.com.br/r/100204 ), no App exclusivo da emissora (http://webapp.hoost.com.br/clwebrad/ ) e também no Twitter@wrcensuralivre.
“A More Perfect Union" Hour 2 with Nii-Quartelai Quartey | @drniiquartelai| Podcast Hosted by changemaker, journalist, educator, and KBLA Talk 1580 Chief National Political Analyst Dr. Nii-Quartelai Quartey, “A More Perfect Union” promises to deliver national news of consequence, informed opinion, and analysis beyond the headlines. During this hour, tap into my conversation with UCLA Law and Columbia University Law Professor Kimberle Crenshaw, the world's leading scholar on Critical Race Theory. Plus, don't miss my conversation in South Los Angeles with Green Party U.S. Presidential Candidate Dr. Cornel West. Listen to his campaign update and more.
In this episode I interview Ghino Parker, Centre director at Barnardo's who has worked across many communities to ensure that diverse voices are heard. In this episode we talk about: Systems Change as 'common sense youth work' Kimberle Crenshaw's movement around intersectionality Cultural competency crucial for Systems Change Real life examples of applying cultural competency Resources: Kimberle Crenshaw TED talk intersectionality: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=akOe5-UsQ2o Ghino Parker TED talk 'when youth workers make all the difference' https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vsYIqhVZMAI&t=3sCo-impact Gender equality and Intersectionality https://www.co-impact.org/gender-equality-and-intersectionality/#:~:text=Co%2DImpact's%20goal%20is%20to,the%20circumstances%20of%20their%20birth.
Intersectionality, a term coined by Kimberle Crenshaw, talks about the interconnectedness of different identities, and how the overlapping of them can create disadvantages in society. For example, a white woman can experience gender discrimination, but her experience is entirely different than that of a black woman's, who also experiences racial discrimination on top of gender discrimination. The same thing applies to the climate movement. Someone who is affluent has a much different experience navigating the climate crisis than someone who is of a lower socioeconomic status. BIPOC folks and those living in the Global South experience environmental discrimination in ways that white people or those living in richer countries don't. When we acknowledge the different ways that people experience the climate crisis and work towards creating a radically inclusive and better future for all, that is called intersectional environmentalism. Intersectional environmentalism. The term was coined by Leah Thomas, a young environmental activist who you may also know as greengirlleah and the founder of the non-profit organization Intersectional Environmentalist. She also happens to be our guest on today's episode of Operation Climate, and we are so excited to have her!! Learn about Intersectional Environmentalist here! Follow Leah on Instagram here and here. Read Leah's book, The Intersectional Environmentalist! You can find it here. ____________ Visit our website to keep up with the OC team and for a full transcript of this episode! https://operationclimatepo.wixsite.com/operationclimate Follow us on Instagram at @operationclimate! Follow us on Twitter at @opclimate! Subscribe to us on Youtube! To contact us, DM us on Instagram or email us at operationclimatepodcast@gmail.com! ____________ Host: Katherine Li Writer: Katherine Li Reporters: Chloe Fey, Cameron Cho, Rowena Wong Guest: Leah Thomas Audio Editor: Katherine Li --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/operation-climate/support
Today I am delighted to be in conversation with Rafia Zakaria, an American Muslim author, attorney, and political philosopher, to discuss her powerful book, Against White Feminism: Notes on Disruption. In this book, Rafia challenges white feminism's global, long-standing affinity with colonial, patriarchal, and white supremacist ideals. Covering such ground as the legacy of the British feminist imperialist savior complex and "the colonial thesis that all reform comes from the West" to the condescension of the white feminist-led "aid industrial complex" and the conflation of sexual liberation as the "sum total of empowerment," Zakaria follows in the tradition of intersectional feminist forebears Kimberlé Crenshaw, Adrienne Rich, and Audre Lorde. Zakaria ultimately refutes and reimagines the apolitical aspirations of white feminist empowerment in this radical critique, with Black and Brown feminist thought at the forefront.Rafia is a writer at the Baffler and Dawn magazine and a Fellow at the African American Policy Forum, an innovative think tank Co-Founded by Kimberle Crenshaw that connects academics, activists and policy-makers to promote efforts to dismantle structural inequality. Highlights:(03:09) Rafia's journey to publishing this book(12:34) What is white feminism? (22:03) Moving away from individualism towards collective action(29:02) A Perspective Empowerment History and Collectivism Solidarity(46:21) Technology & white supremacy(52:20) Engineering our future: How feminists inform politics(56:36) Rahia's dream for the feminist movementRafia Zakaria's Links:Twitter:Rafia Zakaria @rafiazakariaInstagram:@rafiazakariafeministLinkedIn:Rafia ZakariaLinks Mentioned:Against White Feminism: Notes on Disruption by Rafia ZakariaUnfocused Feminism: The battle lines go beyond the bedroom and the boardroom by Rafia ZakariaMy links: Substack: ayandastood.substack.com | Subscribe to my newsletter!!! Tiktok: @ayandastoodPodcast Instagram: @reimaginingwithayandastoodMy Instagram: @ayandastood --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ayandastood/support
This series was previously paywalled, but by popular demand has been released on the free feed. This is a special 5-part series discussing the evolution of Critical Race Theory from its conception by Derrick Bell to its current, arguably diluted forms as seen by Kimberle Crenshaw and her work on intersectionality or the anti-racist publishing industry spearheaded by thinkers such as Ibram X Kendi. Trevor talks to our guest Dr. Patrick D. Anderson about the three-part article series he wrote for the website Black Agenda Report about Critical Race Theory, and how it gets weaponized and misrepresented by people on all sides of the political spectrum, including those left of center, and why. We discuss what CRT is, what it isn't, why the CRT as originally conceived by Derrick Bell is still too dangerous decades later to be promoted in earnest, and why neoliberal dilutions of CRT like Intersectionality as conceived by Kimberle Crenshaw are promoted by the powers-that-be instead. Patrick D. Anderson is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Central State University.His research focuses on the Anticolonial Tradition of Black Radical Thought and theconnections between technology, ethics, and imperialism. He is editor-in-chief at theWikiLeaks Bibliography, and the author of the 2022 book Cypherpunk Ethics: RadicalEthics for the Digital Age (Routledge Focus on Digital Media and Culture). His three-part article series on Critical Race Theory: “The Conspicuous Absence of Derrick Bell—Rethinking the CRT Debate, Part 1”: https://www.blackagendareport.com/conspicuous-absence-derrick-bell-rethinking-crt-debate-part-1 “Realism, Idealism, and the Deradicalization of Critical Race Theory—Rethinking the CRT Debate, Part 2”: https://www.blackagendareport.com/realism-idealism-and-deradicalization-critical-race-theory-rethinking-crt-debate-part-2-0 “The Theory of Intersectionality Emerges out of Racist, Colonialist Ideology, Not Radical Politics—Rethinking the CRT Debate Part 3”: https://www.blackagendareport.com/theory-intersectionality-emerges-out-racist-colonialist-ideology-not-radical-politics-rethinking Co-produced & edited by Aaron C. Schroeder / Pierced Ears Recording Co, Seattle WA (www.piercedearsrec.com). Opening theme composed by T. Beaulieu. Closing theme composed by Dustfingaz (https://www.youtube.com/user/TheRazhu_)
This series was previously paywalled, but by popular demand has been released on the free feed. This is a special 5-part series discussing the evolution of Critical Race Theory from its conception by Derrick Bell to its current, arguably diluted forms as seen by Kimberle Crenshaw and her work on intersectionality or the anti-racist publishing industry spearheaded by thinkers such as Ibram X Kendi. Trevor talks to our guest Dr. Patrick D. Anderson about the three-part article series he wrote for the website Black Agenda Report about Critical Race Theory, and how it gets weaponized and misrepresented by people on all sides of the political spectrum, including those left of center, and why. We discuss what CRT is, what it isn't, why the CRT as originally conceived by Derrick Bell is still too dangerous decades later to be promoted in earnest, and why neoliberal dilutions of CRT like Intersectionality as conceived by Kimberle Crenshaw are promoted by the powers-that-be instead. Patrick D. Anderson is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Central State University.His research focuses on the Anticolonial Tradition of Black Radical Thought and theconnections between technology, ethics, and imperialism. He is editor-in-chief at theWikiLeaks Bibliography, and the author of the 2022 book Cypherpunk Ethics: RadicalEthics for the Digital Age (Routledge Focus on Digital Media and Culture). His three-part article series on Critical Race Theory: “The Conspicuous Absence of Derrick Bell—Rethinking the CRT Debate, Part 1”: https://www.blackagendareport.com/conspicuous-absence-derrick-bell-rethinking-crt-debate-part-1 “Realism, Idealism, and the Deradicalization of Critical Race Theory—Rethinking the CRT Debate, Part 2”: https://www.blackagendareport.com/realism-idealism-and-deradicalization-critical-race-theory-rethinking-crt-debate-part-2-0 “The Theory of Intersectionality Emerges out of Racist, Colonialist Ideology, Not Radical Politics—Rethinking the CRT Debate Part 3”: https://www.blackagendareport.com/theory-intersectionality-emerges-out-racist-colonialist-ideology-not-radical-politics-rethinking Co-produced & edited by Aaron C. Schroeder / Pierced Ears Recording Co, Seattle WA (www.piercedearsrec.com). Opening theme composed by T. Beaulieu. Closing theme composed by Dustfingaz (https://www.youtube.com/user/TheRazhu_)
This series was previously paywalled, but by popular demand has been released on the free feed. This is a special 5-part series discussing the evolution of Critical Race Theory from its conception by Derrick Bell to its current, arguably diluted forms as seen by Kimberle Crenshaw and her work on intersectionality or the anti-racist publishing industry spearheaded by thinkers such as Ibram X Kendi. Trevor talks to our guest Dr. Patrick D. Anderson about the three-part article series he wrote for the website Black Agenda Report about Critical Race Theory, and how it gets weaponized and misrepresented by people on all sides of the political spectrum, including those left of center, and why. We discuss what CRT is, what it isn't, why the CRT as originally conceived by Derrick Bell is still too dangerous decades later to be promoted in earnest, and why neoliberal dilutions of CRT like Intersectionality as conceived by Kimberle Crenshaw are promoted by the powers-that-be instead. Patrick D. Anderson is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Central State University.His research focuses on the Anticolonial Tradition of Black Radical Thought and theconnections between technology, ethics, and imperialism. He is editor-in-chief at theWikiLeaks Bibliography, and the author of the 2022 book Cypherpunk Ethics: RadicalEthics for the Digital Age (Routledge Focus on Digital Media and Culture). His three-part article series on Critical Race Theory: “The Conspicuous Absence of Derrick Bell—Rethinking the CRT Debate, Part 1”: https://www.blackagendareport.com/conspicuous-absence-derrick-bell-rethinking-crt-debate-part-1 “Realism, Idealism, and the Deradicalization of Critical Race Theory—Rethinking the CRT Debate, Part 2”: https://www.blackagendareport.com/realism-idealism-and-deradicalization-critical-race-theory-rethinking-crt-debate-part-2-0 “The Theory of Intersectionality Emerges out of Racist, Colonialist Ideology, Not Radical Politics—Rethinking the CRT Debate Part 3”: https://www.blackagendareport.com/theory-intersectionality-emerges-out-racist-colonialist-ideology-not-radical-politics-rethinking Co-produced & edited by Aaron C. Schroeder / Pierced Ears Recording Co, Seattle WA (www.piercedearsrec.com). Opening theme composed by T. Beaulieu. Closing theme composed by Dustfingaz (https://www.youtube.com/user/TheRazhu_)
This series was previously paywalled, but by popular demand has been released on the free feed. This is a special 5-part series discussing the evolution of Critical Race Theory from its conception by Derrick Bell to its current, arguably diluted forms as seen by Kimberle Crenshaw and her work on intersectionality or the anti-racist publishing industry spearheaded by thinkers such as Ibram X Kendi. Trevor talks to our guest Dr. Patrick D. Anderson about the three-part article series he wrote for the website Black Agenda Report about Critical Race Theory, and how it gets weaponized and misrepresented by people on all sides of the political spectrum, including those left of center, and why. We discuss what CRT is, what it isn't, why the CRT as originally conceived by Derrick Bell is still too dangerous decades later to be promoted in earnest, and why neoliberal dilutions of CRT like Intersectionality as conceived by Kimberle Crenshaw are promoted by the powers-that-be instead. Patrick D. Anderson is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Central State University.His research focuses on the Anticolonial Tradition of Black Radical Thought and theconnections between technology, ethics, and imperialism. He is editor-in-chief at theWikiLeaks Bibliography, and the author of the 2022 book Cypherpunk Ethics: RadicalEthics for the Digital Age (Routledge Focus on Digital Media and Culture). His three-part article series on Critical Race Theory: “The Conspicuous Absence of Derrick Bell—Rethinking the CRT Debate, Part 1”: https://www.blackagendareport.com/conspicuous-absence-derrick-bell-rethinking-crt-debate-part-1 “Realism, Idealism, and the Deradicalization of Critical Race Theory—Rethinking the CRT Debate, Part 2”: https://www.blackagendareport.com/realism-idealism-and-deradicalization-critical-race-theory-rethinking-crt-debate-part-2-0 “The Theory of Intersectionality Emerges out of Racist, Colonialist Ideology, Not Radical Politics—Rethinking the CRT Debate Part 3”: https://www.blackagendareport.com/theory-intersectionality-emerges-out-racist-colonialist-ideology-not-radical-politics-rethinking Co-produced & edited by Aaron C. Schroeder / Pierced Ears Recording Co, Seattle WA (www.piercedearsrec.com). Opening theme composed by T. Beaulieu. Closing theme composed by Dustfingaz (https://www.youtube.com/user/TheRazhu_)
This series was previously paywalled, but by popular demand has been released on the free feed. This is a special 5-part series discussing the evolution of Critical Race Theory from its conception by Derrick Bell to its current, arguably diluted forms as seen by Kimberle Crenshaw and her work on intersectionality or the anti-racist publishing industry spearheaded by thinkers such as Ibram X Kendi. Trevor talks to our guest Dr. Patrick D. Anderson about the three-part article series he wrote for the website Black Agenda Report about Critical Race Theory, and how it gets weaponized and misrepresented by people on all sides of the political spectrum, including those left of center, and why. We discuss what CRT is, what it isn't, why the CRT as originally conceived by Derrick Bell is still too dangerous decades later to be promoted in earnest, and why neoliberal dilutions of CRT like Intersectionality as conceived by Kimberle Crenshaw are promoted by the powers-that-be instead. Patrick D. Anderson is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Central State University.His research focuses on the Anticolonial Tradition of Black Radical Thought and theconnections between technology, ethics, and imperialism. He is editor-in-chief at theWikiLeaks Bibliography, and the author of the 2022 book Cypherpunk Ethics: RadicalEthics for the Digital Age (Routledge Focus on Digital Media and Culture). His three-part article series on Critical Race Theory: “The Conspicuous Absence of Derrick Bell—Rethinking the CRT Debate, Part 1”: https://www.blackagendareport.com/conspicuous-absence-derrick-bell-rethinking-crt-debate-part-1 “Realism, Idealism, and the Deradicalization of Critical Race Theory—Rethinking the CRT Debate, Part 2”: https://www.blackagendareport.com/realism-idealism-and-deradicalization-critical-race-theory-rethinking-crt-debate-part-2-0 “The Theory of Intersectionality Emerges out of Racist, Colonialist Ideology, Not Radical Politics—Rethinking the CRT Debate Part 3”: https://www.blackagendareport.com/theory-intersectionality-emerges-out-racist-colonialist-ideology-not-radical-politics-rethinking Co-produced & edited by Aaron C. Schroeder / Pierced Ears Recording Co, Seattle WA (www.piercedearsrec.com). Opening theme composed by T. Beaulieu. Closing theme composed by Dustfingaz (https://www.youtube.com/user/TheRazhu_)
We as women all face unique experiences in our lives that cause us to go through many challenging and sometimes traumatic ebb's and flows. Unfortunately, without we as a society doing the important work of healing and reckoning with the systemically ingrained transgressions and traumas that plague us we as a society fail to heal. We disparage the chance for women to craft and curate their own identities unbeholden to societal expectations and norms. I want to continue the conversation on the topic identity as we did last time on episode 2. On today's episode I will approach the topic from a personal perspective that is near and dear to my heart which is the many levels of Intersectionality as it relates to the dark skinned black woman. Attorney and Scholar, Kimberle Crenshaw coined the term intersectionality. She discovered in researching through her many legal cases that a specific phenomenon occurs. She states, – The intersection of racism and sexism creates a different experience for the black woman, and at the intersection there are certain stereotypes, tropes, and difficulties, that black women uniquely faceThis episode I am joined by a very special guest, my best friend Ciera Young of Mamasbrew coffee. Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mamasbrewcoffee/, Website: https://mama-s-brew-coffee.myshopify.com/ Ciera and I take our time as we discuss our unique and shared experiences with this phenomenon throughout our lifetimes. Please visit the following resources that were shared on this episode:https://youtu.be/8nIa4aUp3cIhttps://genderjusticeandopportunity.georgetown.edu/https://scholarship.law.columbia.edu/books/255/Let's not miss a chance to connect as women and let it be beautiful! Social Media: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/visionaryjewelsllc/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/visionaryjewelsllc Subscribe with your email to be alerted when a new episode is released. Website: http://visionaryjewelsllc.comEmail: podcast@visionaryjewelsllc.comMake sure to Follow, Like, and Subscribe on your podcast platform of choice. Please take the time to rate and review Visionary Jewels Podcast wherever you listen in! This helps us grow our Visionary Jewels Community and share our vision. Stay Tuned for bonus video content of this conversation that will be posted incrementally on all social media platforms and the website.
Three things generate a sense of meaning IN life; Coherence - can you make sense of the world? Purpose - do you feel a sense of purpose with what you do? And Significance - does your life matter? Having meaning in your life is correlated with a sense of self certainty. Knowing who you are and having a sense of self, gives you structure and a stable way of seeing the world. But how do you answer the question “who am I?” Our guest, Dr Brian Lowery PhD says the answer isn't as individualistic as we may have been led to believe. Not only do those around us; our friends, co-workers and parents contribute to who we are, Brian claims they actually create who we are. Putting it bluntly, there is no way of separating “you” from your relationships. We've waited a long time to talk to Brian, who is the Walter Kenneth Kilpatrick Professor of Organizational Behavior at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. He is a social psychologist by training, but Brian's work is by no means traditional in that field. He studies how individuals perceive inequality, and his research explores individuals' experiences of inequality and fairness in a way that sheds light on intergroup conflict and the nature of social justice. Brian is also a fellow podcaster, hosting the show Know What You See which is definitely worth checking out. Listeners can become a Behavioral Grooves supporter by donating to our work through Patreon. Or please consider writing us a podcast review on your app. Thanks! Topics (5:21) Welcome to Brian Lowery and speed round questions. (7:34) The meaning IN life vs. the meaning OF life. (9:23) How meaning in life is linked to a sense of self certainty. (13:30) Context matters: those around us create who we are. (17:13) What are you referring to when you talk about you? (19:23) The responsibility we have when interacting with others. (21:27) Does authenticity assume a stability of self? (26:17) Our relationships define us while also limiting our freedom. (30:59) The myth of rugged individualism. (36:35) Do we really have freewill? (42:06) What Brian talks about on his podcast, Know What You See. (43:42) What role does music play in the identity of self? (51:43) Grooving Session with Kurt and Tim discussing the meaning in life. © 2022 Behavioral Grooves Links Know What You See Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/know-what-you-see-with-brian-lowery/id1580636076 Monty Python's The Meaning Of Life: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LAwDWZoETk4&ab_channel=MontyPython Episode 67, George Loewenstein: On a Functional Theory of Boredom: https://behavioralgrooves.com/episode/george-loewenstein-on-a-functional-theory-of-boredom/ Episode 248, John Bargh: Do We Control Situations or Do Situations Control Us? https://behavioralgrooves.com/episode/control-situations-with-john-bargh/ Kimberle Crenshaw: https://www.law.columbia.edu/faculty/kimberle-w-crenshaw Episode 307, Groove Track | Mind Over Milkshakes: Why Expectations Matter A Lot: https://behavioralgrooves.com/episode/mind-over-milkshakes-groove-track/ Behavioral Grooves Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/behavioralgrooves Musical Links Killer Mike “Untitled”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lNsAfGDkUtk
In episode 273, Kestrel welcomes Kesiena Onosigho, a textile and mixed-media artist, to the show. Through the study of materials and patterns, Kesiena intuitively explores textiles and a range of media to create atmospheric abstractions focused on intersectionality, as coined by Kimberle Crenshaw, engaging in themes of social & environmental justice. “My work really is about reclaiming and retelling these narratives around Black cultural contributions to textiles and crafts and sustainability. And really dedicating my work to uplifting and centering Black women in particular, but Black people in general, their work and their history across the African diaspora.” -Kesiena This week's guest is a natural dyer, a knitter, a botanical ink-maker and beyond. An exceptional textile and mixed media artist, Kesiena's work is grounded in historical context and lived experiences, and focused on themes around social and environmental justice. Growing up within a very matriarchal family, surrounded by a community of Black women, she has collected experiences and knowledge, and navigated her way to discovering that art is a tool for liberation – in particular slow art. As she says, “for Black people today, finding that space is an act of rebellion.” Through her work, she creates what she calls “atmospheric abstractions” – I love this so much. And it's beyond accurate because so often with art, we end up being able to feel it before we actually understand it. And when it comes to her process, sustainability is woven into each step along the way – as she says: sustainability isn't passive, it's something you live, and something you are. Quotes & links from the conversation: Gist Yarn's upcoming textile residency (starting in July) that Kesiena was selected to be a part of this year Garbage Goddess — a great resource for natural dyers that Kesiena recommended, after the recording. They sometimes offer free flowers for natural dyers in NYC, and Kesiena sometimes freelances with them. Teju Adisa-Farrar's Black Material Geographies Podcast (Kesiena mentions) Sustainable Brooklyn (organization to support that Kesiena mentions) The Root Series with Dominique Drakeford Kesiena encourages folks to check out and support the work of Lisa Betty (who was featured on episode 1 of The Root series) Conscious Chatter episode 228 with Catherine McKinley > Kesiena's website > Follow Kesiena on Instagram >
One of the terms of art that has become popularized in the current age of hyper politics is intersectionality. A notion created by academic Kimberle Crenshaw that arose in conjunction with critical race theory, intersectionality became so popular it was weaponized by Hillary Clinton in her 2016 presidential election bid. Is intersectionality anything more than a plea for equality of distribution, recognition, and opportunity in a capitalist political economy that is rooted inequality and exploitation. Is this simply an identitarian plea for inclusion in the seating among the deck chairs of the titanic? About TIR Thank you, guys, again for taking the time to check this out. We appreciate each and every one of you. If you have the means, and you feel so inclined, BECOME A PATRON! We're creating patron-only programming, you'll get bonus content from many of the episodes, and you get MERCH! Become a patron now: https://www.patreon.com/join/BitterLakePresents Please also like, subscribe, and follow us on these platforms as well, especially YouTube! THANKS Y'ALL YouTube: www.youtube.com/thisisrevolutionpodcast Twitch: www.twitch.tv/thisisrevolutionpodcast & www.twitch.tv/leftflankvets Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Thisisrevolutionpodcast/ Twitter: @TIRShowOakland Instagram: @thisisrevolutionoakland Pascal Robert in Newsweek: https://www.newsweek.com/black-political-elite-serving... Jason Myles in Sublation Magazine: https://www.sublationmag.com/.../rodney-king-the-la-riots... Get THIS IS REVOLUTION Merch here: www.thisisrevolutionpodcast.com Get the music featured on the show here: https://bitterlakeoakland.bandcamp.com/ Follow Djene Bajalan @djenebajalan Follow Kuba Wrzesniewski @DrKuba2
“Racism is not just the product of individual bias or prejudice,” explains Sam Jean Esq., “racism can be embedded in legal systems and policies.” Sam, a former classmate of Michael's when they both completed their undergraduate degrees at Eastern Nazarene College, also teaches graduate school and has made several media appearances on the subject of U.S. policy. Critical race theory continues to ignite heated debate not only for its content and merits, but whether or not it should be taught in schools, particularly at the elementary level. Yet, as Sam explains, this theory is not new. It originated over 30 years ago, from a workshop organized by Kimberle Crenshaw, Neil Gotanda, and Stephanie Philips at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. It examines the overlap between race, the law, and society. In this episode, find out what Critical Race Theory actually is (as opposed to anti-racism, or the 1619 Project), why Sam views George Washington differently than he views Thomas Jefferson, and what we can learn from the way that other countries teach their children about the ugly parts of their country's history. Quotes • “Racism is developed due to the fact it is structurally embedded in America's institutions and its laws since the days of slavery.” (3:48-3:58 | Michael) • “I don't remember coming out of that classroom saying, ‘Ooh, I hate white people.' I don't remember us saying anything like that. We would have lunch together, move on, graduate, and still maintain our friendship. But today…” (8:38-8:50 | Michael) • “What actual critical race theory is, if people were being objective about it is something that most people would agree with.” (10:38-10:47 | Sam) • “People have done bad things. In order for those bad things not to happen again, we should all be informed what they were.” (19:08-19:16 | Sam) • “And if somebody brings it up, ‘What about the children?' The children should know.” (25:41-25:46 | Sam) • “I think it's a political tool. And it is useful. And one of the things I have to say, Republican and Conservative strategists, they understand their base. They understand the things that drive their people and one of the things that Republicans, Republicans don't believe in,--OK, to a percent, when you poll them– they don't believe that race is an issue.” (29:28-29:54 | Sam) Links cuckoo4politics.com https://www.instagram.com/cuckoo_4_politics/ https://www.facebook.com/Cuckoo-4-Politics-104093938102793 Podcast production and show notes provided by HiveCast.fm --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
This week, Kaylin Padovano joins Dr. Joan Collier to discuss the concept of intersectionality and how it affects her work as a staff & faculty training coordinator for the Center on Violence Against Women and Children at the Rutgers School of Social Work. Topics discussed: Intersectionality Interpersonal Violence Social Justice Links mentioned in this episode: #MeToo and Black Women: From Hip Hop to Hollywood - Episode 3 of the podcast Intersectionality Matters with Kimberle Crenshaw. Black Women's Blueprint - Black feminist organization Hollaback! - Bystander intervention organization Because of Anita - A four-part podcast the explores the enduring impact of Anita Hill's testimony with new insights and on-the-ground stories from guests.
In this episode, my research partner, Callen Wallace, and I discuss explore the issue of medical mistrust— the roots, implications, and impact on BIPOC women's health outcomes. We argue that medical mistrust plays a pivotal role in perpetuating disparate negative health outcomes, and is a result of both historical mistreatment and implicit bias in medicine that has long plagued those who have the intersectional identities of women belonging to a minority race/ethnicity. Some of the key concepts we discuss are intersectionality and biopower, and how these factors interplay to maintain the subordination and suffering of BIPOC women. Specifically, we take a look at the death of Dr. Susan Moore, Indigenous women's sterilization, and a physician-perspective on it all.. And as promised, the links are attached below: Kimberle Crenshaw's podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/intersectionality-matters/id1441348908 Dorothy Robert's Ted Talk: https://www.ted.com/speakers/dorothy_roberts More on Biopower: https://globalsocialtheory.org/concepts/biopower/ We hope you enjoy this very important discussion, stay tuned for the passionate conclusion. If you're interested in our research, please contact me for our references and additional materials at raniasalah82000@gmail.com
In GBN's "A Year of Good Black News" Page-A-Day®️Calendar for 2022 we explore words and phrases in the Black Lexicon in a category we call "Lemme Break It Down." Our March entry in this category takes a brief look at "Intersectionality," a term first publicly explained by law professor Kimberlé Crenshaw in 1989.Sources:“Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex” by Kimberlé Crenshaw (1989)Intersectionality Matters,Crenshaw's current podcast on the subjecthttps://youtu.be/akOe5-UsQ2o Crenshaw's Ted Talk on Intersectionalityhttps://amzn.to/3srgyp8 (Kimberle Crenshaw book On Intersectionality – on pre-order for December 2022)https://youtu.be/O1islM0ytkE (animated video explaining intersectionality)and check out other sources provided in today's show notes and in the episode's full transcript posted on goodblacknews.org.https://time.com/5786710/kimberle-crenshaw-intersectionality/https://www.vox.com/the-highlight/2019/5/20/18542843/intersectionality-conservatism-law-race-gender-discriminationIf you like our Daily Drops, please consider following us on Apple, Google Podcasts, RSS.com, Amazon,Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. You could give us a positive rating or review, share your favorite episodes on social media, or go old school and tell a friend.For more Good Black News, check out goodblacknews.org or search and follow @goodb,lacknews anywhere on social.
This episode of Behind the Lines: The Houston Lawyer Podcast is a companion to the Women in the Law issue of The Houston Lawyer and, like that issue, celebrates the accomplishments of women in the legal profession. It focuses primarily on celebrating how women lawyers excel at supporting other women, including colleagues, law students, and other women in the community who may particularly need the support of a lawyer. The first segment, which is moderated/guest hosted by Nico Zulli, is entitled "Outmaneuvering Bias: How Three Women with Intersectional Identities Have Thrived in the Legal Profession." It features Cindy Dinh, Brittny Mandarino Curry, and Jill Yaziji, whose conversation is centered around Kimberle Crenshaw's definition of intersectionality, which is "basically a lens, a prism, for seeing the way in which various forms of inequality often operate together and exacerbate each other.” The guests discuss ways in which affinity groups, mentors, sponsors, and allies have helped them navigate through their legal careers. In the second segment, "Lending a Hand: How Lawyers Support Women Experiencing Overwhelming Legal Issues - A Conversation with Anne Chandler of HVL," Anne Chandler discusses some of the legal challenges she has been seeing since the pandemic that disproportionately impact women in our community and how lawyers and law students can help HVL support these women. The third segment, "Providing Expertise: A Discussion with Three Women Law Students About How Women Lawyers Can Be a Resource for the Next Generation," features Andriana Webb of Thurgood Marshall School of Law, Victoria Harmeyer of South Texas School of Law Houston, and Chelsea Ogan of University of Houston Law Center. These women are on the executive boards of the women's organizations of their law schools, and they address what they need from women lawyer mentors and what their vision is for the future of women in our profession.This episode ends with some shout outs to amazing women from several different Houston women lawyers. Listeners will be uplifted and inspired by the guests on the episode, and it is well worth the time investment to hear what each of the amazing guests have to say about how to be a source of support to women in the profession, law school, and the community. Members of the HBA who listen to the entire episode can receive 1.75 hours of CLE with .75 ethics. The CLE number is available on the HBA website, hba.org/watchCLE.
We're BACKKKKK!!!! Join the Queens for the 1st episode of Season 2 where they discuss the terms intersectionality and misogynoir and why being called a "Strong Black Woman" should be a thing of the past. Intersectionality- was a term coined by scholar Kimberle Crenshaw and was defined as the unique forms of oppression that Black women face. The term in now more mainstream and the current definition is listed as experiences faced by those with intersecting identities. Misogynoir- is a term coined by Moya Bailey and was developed to describe "the specific hatred, dislike, distrust, and prejudice directed towards Black women." Janice Gassam Asare. "Misogynoir: The Unique Discrimination That Black Women Face." Forbes, 22, September, 2020 https://www.forbes.com/sites/janicegassam/2020/09/22/misogynoir-the-unique-discrimination-that-black-women-face/?sh=440cbb456ef6 Tarji B. Henson Audio Clip: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1-hZ6hyFyt0&t=10s Follow Us on Social Media Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/soundoffqueen/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SoundOffQueen --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/soundoffqueen/message
Mary and Wyatt are pleased as punch to welcome Hollis Wong-Wear to the pod. Hollis is a songwriter, musician, speaker, creative generator and community advocate who lives between Los Angeles and Seattle, WA. She is the lead vocalist of the electronic R&B trio The Flavr Blue, and was GRAMMY nominated in 2014 for her work with Macklemore and Ryan Lewis.With her roots in spoken word and slam poetry through the nationally recognized Youth Speaks program, Hollis is passionate about how creativity and the arts fuel and shape civic discourse, and is dedicated to lending her voice and capacities towards vibrant social equity.Hollis has been a featured speaker at conferences, conventions and speaker series, sharing her spoken word poetry and her candid insights on her experience as an independent artist and engaged activist. She has performed and spoken for an array of organizations and schools, including KEXP, WrapWomen, Planned Parenthood, University of Washington, YWCA and the Eileen Fisher Leadership Institute, has been featured by TedX University of Washington, and has presented alongside such luminaries as Gloria Steinem, Kimberle Crenshaw and Eve Ensler. A native of the Bay Area, Hollis graduated from Seattle University with a major in History and a minor in Global African Studies, and was recently named the recipient of Seattle University's 2016 Outstanding Recent Alumna Award. She is a Google Next Gen Policy Leader, an alumna of the Hedgebrook Residency, and is a Humanity in Action Senior Fellow. Hollis has been appointed to several boards and commissions, including the Board of Directors for 4Culture and the Seattle Center Advisory Commission, and is currently an ad-hoc commissioner on the Seattle Music Commission.Hollis, Mary, and Wyatt talk about friendship, community, and solidarity in a brief but lovely chat. They discuss the perils of social media, especially for artists in the early stages of their careers, and how Hollis and Mary inspired each other when they first met. Also on the agenda: Mary's stinky ballet flats, furniture made of silly putty, and poems by Jon Pineda and Aya Alzubaidy.
Darcy discusses with intersectionality through their journey with MS (Multiple Sclerosis) and her experience dealing with race, gender, and social class issues. They dive into how they live in multiple intersections because their identity belongs to multiple marginalized communities. Reach out to Darcy at: https://linktr.ee/Healgirl2 Resources: "Your body language may shape who you are" - Amy Cuddy https://www.ted.com/talks/amy_cuddy_your_body_language_may_shape_who_you_are?utm_campaign=tedspread&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=tedcomshare Kimberle Crenshaw - creator of the term Intersectionality https://www.law.columbia.edu/news/archive/kimberle-crenshaw-intersectionality-more-two-decades-later Lance Tsosie ("Modern Warrior" on social media) - Lance Tsosie is a Diné activist who was born and raised in the Navajo Nation. He has gained a wide following on TikTok under the username Modern Warrior, where he posts content about Native American culture that exposes the mistreatment and lack of information about Native Americans. Portia Noir - queer activist and abolitionist Crutches and Spice on social media (Imani Barbarin) Comms Director, Disability Blogger, Content Creator, Public Speaker Chelseahartisme on social media (Chelsea Hart) another influencer using her platform to raise up marginalized communities
Christopher "Soul" Eubanks is a collective liberation activist from Atlanta, Georgia, USA. He is a mentor with Animal Activism Mentorship as well as the founder of Apex Advocacy, an intersectional animal protection and equality organization.Host Trey Morrow asks Soul Eubanks about intersectionality, what we can do to make the animal rights movement better, and much more.***Correction from Soul: When speaking about who coined the term "intersectionality" he meant Kimberle Crenshaw rather than Patrice CrenshawSoulEubanks.comIG: @Soul_EubanksTwitter: @Soul_EubanksApexAdvocacy.orgIG: @ApexAdvocacyBook: Antiracism in Animal AdvocacyEssay: As a Black Man, I Felt Uncomfortable Becoming an Animal ActivistSupport Soul Eubanks on PatreonTo keep up with the podcast, follow @AnimalActivismMentorship on Facebook, Instagram, and Youtube. Join the conversation in the AAM club on Clubhouse and the Animal Activism Mentorship Community facebook group.Want to get active for the animals but don't know where to start? Sign up for a free mentor at AnimalActivismMentorship.comAAM is fueled by FARM (Farm Animal Rights Movement)Please remember to rate, review, and subscribe to the podcast!Support Animal Activism Mentorship on Patreon
Episode 5 is all about assumptions, the very best kind. 10 constructive assumptions about survivors. These can help us be more effective at understanding the survivor experience to meet them where they are and potentially help aid in the recovery process. And to enable ourselves to take steps and actions to make a change. Topics/Sneak Peak: The base truths we can lay as the foundation to respect and aid in the healing process for survivors of rape or sexual assault. Steps for survivors to reclaim power in their life. Why engaging in recovery work at any time is useful How life's ups and downs hit differently for survivors. Our original episode on why I believe all survivors. Kimberle Crenshaw's article on Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex. If you took anything away from today's podcast, please share it with someone who may need to hear it. And if you really want to support the podcast please give us a rate/review. If you or anyone you know is suffering through trauma contact the National Sexual Assault hotline at 1-800-656-4673 or online at https://hotline.rainn.org/ for 24/7 support. This podcast is not a replacement for psychotherapy or mental health care. You can obtain a referral for mental health care provider from your primary care physician, or search on Psychology Today's Find a Therapist directory at https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists
Time for a Conversations/grad school mashup! So many folks have asked what I am studying to today is show and tell! In this episode I am chatting about racism, intersectionality, and building better justice movements. Please visit facebook.com/Conversationsofficial to follow along and join the community at Conversations Official Group on Facebook. If you are interested in helping Conversations Official continue to create spiritual minded conversations about life, please subscribe to the podcast and share it on your social media. If you would like to contribute financially, you can visit https://www.patreon.com/Conversationsofficial to establish a monthly contribution or https://www.buymeacoffee.com/convosofficial to drop off a one time donation. Currently donations and merchandise sales are being used to obtain captioning and transcription services to make the podcast and videos more accessible. For more Conversations Official check out conversationsofficial.com or on social media at Facebook.com/conversationsofficial Facebook: Conversations Official Group TikTok spirituallynbleowt Instagram: Conversations_Official For more info on the sources mentioned check out: Kimberle Crenshaw https://www.ted.com/talks/kimberle_crenshaw_the_urgency_of_intersectionality?language=en Patrisse Cullers Queerness on the front lines of #blacklivesmatter https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0YHs9jIH-oo&t=1s Beverly Daniel Tatum https://www.beverlydanieltatum.com/
Rebecca Wheeler Watson - CRT Instagram Live 8/28/2021 NotesRebecca lives in Virginia, has completed Law School at UCLA, holds a Master's in Marriage and Family Counseling, is also a licensed minister.What is Critical Race Theory? We need to define it before we actually step into defending or refuting, coming to the pros and cons, in order to have informed discussions. Rebecca says, CRT is a way of thinking or engaging a topic, event, perspective or field of study, and asking the question are there racial dynamics at play that move beyond the individual intentions of the players involved and looking at structural things “baked into the cake” that are making decisions based on race, often time that are to the detriment of the minority group (or disempowered group). Started in the 1970s by legal scholars - looking at the gains that they thought would come through the Civil Rights Move Act.They saw gains in the legislation and in the law (Brown vs Board of Education) but were not being felt or seen in real time experiences on the ground.Early CRT scholars Derrick Bell and Kimberle Crenshaw were asking questions, why is this happening? If we apply a neutral sounding law to a scenario where racism is already “baked” into the structure, they found that you will not actually get at the structure, the racism that's built into the structure. Classic law case would be regarding: Hate SpeechThere is freedom of speech. The law on its face is neutral and doesn't mention race at all. However, if we apply that basic principle to a cross burning as a freedom of speech, we must take into account the history of the terror that a burning cross was meant to strike terror into the hearts of African Americans and newly freed slaves. We don't at the structure or the symbol if we simply say “all speech is free”Danielle asks, so without including race in the discussion we aren't getting the full picture?Rebecca says yes! And other disciplines have adopted this framework. COVID-19: When the numbers started to show that Black and Brown communities were getting disproportionately affected by COVID, members of the health profession started to take a Critical Race Theory approach and ask are there things ‘baked' into our health system and to our economic system that actually produced the disparate results we are seeing in COVID-19? And if we ask those questions, can we undo some of the inequity and imbalances that are built into the health care system and economic systems so we don't see these disparate impacts moving forward? Danielle says what she is hearing from Rebecca is that it is not an attack on a certain group of people but a way to get to racism that is built in the structure by an invitation to look at the history of how the laws were made (and by whom they were made) and how racism got baked into them. [Can we look at the disparities and care for one another well?]Rebecca says it's a good point -- this is not about an individual but a method for getting at racism built into the structure and therefore transcends individual actions. For example Darrin Chauvin, the police officer who was convicted of murdering George Floyd. You can look at that scenario and say the individual act of one police officer, and if we address that one case with Darrin Chauvin going to prision for the murder of George Floyd, then “the problem has been solved.” But the issue is there are far too many George Floyds and Darrin Chauvins across the police communities across this country. In fact today (8/28) is the anniversary of the death of Emmet Till. There are many names and many scenarios. So if we simply stop with Darrin Chauvin then we don't get at the question of do we have a problem with the way we imagine policing in this country? Do we have a problem with the way we imagine innocent behavior as threatening or criminal when the actor in that scenario has black skin? CRT invites us to look at the structure of policing altogether to engage not in villainizing a single person but to look at the whole system, as a country. Danielle adds, it doesn't sound like it is a villainization of a system either. It is a look at where we are now and saying we don't want to be here now. A historian looks at where we came from in order to help us understand how to make decisions about where we go from now moving forward. Rebecca says recently Professor Crenshaw gave the example of asbestos: The medical community and the science community has now determined that we should not use asbestos because it has been found to contain carcinogens. But there was a previous generation that built every generation with asbestos in it. Same with lead paint. There are hundreds and thousands of buildings across America where asbestos is built into the building. And you don't usually know that until something happens to stir it up and expose it. Would we just ignore that? Of course not. When we discover asbestos in the building we move to remediating. Granted that process is costly. And it's probably painful and expensive. But it is the right thing to do going forward to protect future generations and to make the building safe for those who will inhabit it. It is the same for Critical Race Theory. We go along and things seem fine until something exposes racism and we see that racism is baked into this country and it's harmful to Black and Brown communities. When we encounter it, will we have the guts to pay the cost to remediate it?Danielle said being married to someone who works in constructions, she knows that you have to have extensive training and have special gear to go into buildings with asbestos for removing it. It wasn't just anyone, but you had to know what you were doing and how to do it. It's an invitation for change.Rebecca says you can come at this from a political standpoint: are we going to be the country political and socially that works towards becoming the “more perfect union” that we profess to be? And if that's true, when we come to imperfections, will there be the political capital to address them? Rebecca says we're at one right now with what to do with Afghanistan -- will we have the political guts and the will to address it or not? The same is true from racial issues. The history of slavery and genocity against not just Africans, but Native Americans, Latinx Americans, Asian Americans... There are moments where we are confronted with the realities of these stains and what it brings to present day for people?You can also look at it from a theological standpoint: There are places as believers where we fall short on how we treat our fellow man. And when we are confronted in that moment, do we have the capacity, the spiritual strength to face that moment and decide that it's true that “greater is He who resides in me” and by his strength and in His wisdom I can face this moment and bring His economy to bear in this scenario?There is one place where Rebecca agrees with the opponents of CRT and that is that we should not be segregated by race, it is contrary to the kingdom of God. Danielle says that folks call “White Fragility” the inability to face our history and past and act in the moment. Danielle offers some push back - let's give those younger places that didn't learn about race growing up, a chance to grow. It's not so much that we're fragile but we've not given ourselves chances to grow. When we engage race topics we find ourselves feeling really small (young) because we've not learned about this before. Danielle says this is especially true for those in the dominant culture. This is an area for repentance: What do I know, what don't I know? It's an invitation to learn and embrace what we know now and make change. Danielle likens racism to a thousand little paper cuts - we need to tend to those wounds in an honorable way. Can you engage the harm you've done? How do we move forward together?Rebecca - It is good to engage the white fragility. People will say, “Well I didn't own slaves” or “I'm not racist, I have a Mexican friend.” Okay. Okay. If we could approach the conversation with just what I have personally done, that would be nice. But there is more than that in the text. The Christian faith is built on the idea of the capacity of one standing in the gap for many. Otherwise the cross and person of Jesus is meaningless. Jesus paid a substitutionary death for all of us. Call of scripture is to stand for others in the gap, not for the salvation of all, but also for the repentance of all. One is asked to stand in the gap for many. God honors the naming of that sin, God moves to repair and restore. We can't take the easy way out, and say “I didn't do that, I have no stake in the game.”Danielle, asks why has CRT become a hot button topic right now across the country? The theory is many years old… why now?Rebecca says the answer lies within the cyclical nature of racism. Ta'Nahesis Coates in his book “8 Years in Power” talks about the rhythm of racism - one step forward, two steps back. One step forward, one step back. You can track throughout history the gains and backlashes. Emancipation Proclamation and Beginning of Reconstruction there are massive gains for Black in those two years following the end of the Civil War. And then there is a huge backlash that comes with the rise of the Ku Klux Klan, the invention of “Black Codes” which became Jim Crow. You can see the movement in the 60s and Civil Rights Movement, followed by the massive retraction of that in the 70s. What we're looking at now is the country's reaction, White America, White Evangelicalism's reaction to a summer of reckoning last year when the world's eyes watched America -- Darrin Chauvin and George Floyd. It wasn't a he said she said, it was all televised, for all to see and watch. There is a sense in the country that this is so much bigger than George Floyd and Darrin Cauvin. There were some gains that were made in the collective consciousness but before they can be solidified or codified into law we are feeling and seeing a massive backlash. What has happened, according to Kimberele Crenshaw, is the plucking of this obscure doctrine (CRT) that was really reserved for the legal field. This is not something taught in K-12 or is a part of our everyday lexicon. People on the Right took this unfamiliar obscure category and poured all kinds of information that wasn't accurate, and in many ways were outright lies in an attempt to take away the gains that were made last summer. What we are seeing is the repetition of the cyclical nature of racism. The insidiousness of racism is that we were never supposed to see what is happening, but the curtain got pulled back; we're not supposed to see how it is working in our country and in our systems. When people feel exposed, their reaction is to cover it up, rather than have the individual and collective integrity to face the moment and be better. Danielle says this is what has happened in her community -- in 2019 on the 3rd of July, a Native man was killed at a Independence celebration in front of crowds of people and children. He was supposedly holding a screwdriver when cops surrounding him. There has since been some effort from indegenious community and the police of Poulsbo to form some kind of a bridge back to one another. And then this past weekend a man comes into our town, known for hate speech by the and acknowledges he doesn't know about Critical Race Theory (he got his definition from wikipedia), a wound is just ripped open in our community. The backlash is not just collective but it's also personal to this community and specific bodies in this area, as well as personal to people of faith. Rebecca says we have to keep our eye on what's happening collectively as a country, and also remember that these are individual people whose lives are forever changed. She thinks of George Floyd's daughter who said, “Daddy changed the world” and she's right, but it was at great cost to her and her family because they will spend the rest of their lives without him. Danielle said everywhere she goes they will know her story. What do you think is the step forward?Rebecca thinks we need to note and watch for the cyclical nature of racism and note it when it happens. We need to know how we're going to respond in those moments. We need to recognize there is a system at play in this country that judges people on the basis of race (and gender, class and some other things) and it's baked into the system. We have to be intentional to watch for it, looking for it, and we have to be willing to pay the cost to remediating it. There is work to do:There will be some training and education required. What are the contours of harm? How does it happen? How do we prevent it?We must do this work individually and collectively. We need to be able to have conversations that are calm and reasonable, well-educated. Then we need to move to practically respond to things when we see them. We need to have critical conversations about: Policing, Education. Health Care, Economics...We must be willing to pay the cost -- costs money, time and talent to step into places of remediation, individually and collectively if we want to be a “more perfect union” and bring the kingdom to God bear here on Earth.
This conversation is long overdue. Where is the support for women's rights when we need it. There are too few people that are willing to make known their opinion in the public forum. Nokwanda Dlamini, helps us dissect why some people are more willing to fight for what they believe than others. She offers practical ways that one can be an activist especially if you are not willing to go out on the streets. We also discuss why it is problematic when the majority are passive onlookers on important issues. Nokwanda Dlamini, a Human Capital Consultant (eSwatini, Waterford Kamhlaba United World College of Southern Africa, 2003 – 2009) is a change maker who enjoys solving problems. She has worked in the Human Capital space for over 5 years and is passionate about de-stigmatising mental health in the workplace. Her experience includes consulting in People and Organisation matters as well as project management. Nokwanda holds a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Psychology and International Studies from Earlham College in the USA, attained through the Shelby Davis Scholarship. Because of her passion for youth development and impact, Nokwanda has been part of the Young African Leadership Initiative and is an African Union Youth Volunteer. Her interests are gender, equity & inclusion and sustainable development. Nokwanda is the current Curator of the Global Shapers Community: Mbabane Hub and firmly believes that we should always speak up about injustice, advocate for social change and find ways to give back. To this end, she is part of the Eswatini COVID-19 National Emergency Response Official Technical Working Group and currently serves on the Board of Directors for Kwakha Indvodza, Eswatini's first male mentoring organisation which specialises in behaviour change interventions with men and boys. Quotes: "Once you see injustices, you just can't unsee. You start to see injustices everywhere" "Every real change begins with a conversation" "Find a cause that you believe in" Connect with Nokwanda: Instagram: @kwanda_d Facebook: Nokwanda Dlamini TED Talk: The Urgency of Intersectionality by Kimberle Crenshaw KNOW your Roots, Grow your Purpose LINKS: Website: https://www.africanawoman.com Socials: Instagram: @ChulubyDesign & @AfricanaWoman Facebook: Chulu by Design & Africana Woman Join the Africana Woman Visionaries: https://www.facebook.com/groups/708489836426989 Africana Woman Blog: https://www.africanawoman.com/blog
Your favorite Triple Cs (co-parents, colleagues, collaborators) Drs. Dorimé-Williams and Williams tackle (a) misunderstandings on critical race theory, (b) the Annie E. Casey Foundation's Race for Results 2014 report, and (c) the smoke and mirrors involved in the legislative bans on talking about racism in schools. Our Attempt at Minute Markers: Part 1 Legislative Bans on Racism & Critical Race Theory | 1:00 Race for Results | 6:40 Makaria & Maximilian's Identities | 12:30 Drumpf Trucks & Safe Spaces| 18:00 Finding A Fit - All Families Matter | 22:00 Privileged Circles | 30:15 - 33:05 Links: Critical Race Theory in Education | Ladson-Billings & Tate, 1995 | https://www.researchgate.net/profile/William-Tate/publication/279676094_Toward_a_Critical_Race_Theory_of_Education/links/569803e908aea2d74375dba0/Toward-a-Critical-Race-Theory-of-Education.pdf Ann E. Casey Foundation: Race for Results | https://www.aecf.org/resources/race-for-results Columbia, MO Median Income | https://datacommons.org/place/geoId/2915670?utm_medium=explore&mprop=income&popt=Person&cpv=age%2CYears15Onwards&hl=en Parade Showing Support for Former President | https://www.columbiamissourian.com/visuals/photos/make-america-great-again-black-lives-matter-supporters-trade-chants-the-weekend-before-the-election/article_732b2184-1bcc-11eb-89ca-0fad49c55035.html Jack & Jill of America, Incorporated | https://www.jackandjillinc.org/about/ Columbia Public Schools | https://www.niche.com/k12/d/columbia-school-district-mo/ Meek Mill | https://youtu.be/6rh13do7fig Scholar Shoutouts: Candice Hall | https://www.siue.edu/education/edld/faculty-staff/hall.shtml JT Snipes | https://www.siue.edu/education/edld/faculty-staff/snipes.shtml Kimberle Crenshaw | https://www.law.columbia.edu/faculty/kimberle-w-crenshaw Davis et al. (2004) | “A Fly in the Buttermilk”: Descriptions of University Life by Successful Black Undergraduate Students at a Predominately White Southeastern University | https://doi.org/10.1080/00221546.2004.11772266 Mariana G. Martinez | https://www.linkedin.com/in/dra-mariana-g-martinez-phd/
In recent months, Republican lawmakers in close to a dozen states have been trying to stop schools from teaching Critical Race Theory—or really any examination of America's history of oppression. So what is CRT, why are legislators obsessed with it, and how worried should we all be about these attacks on teachers? Law professor Dr. Kimberlé Crenshaw has the answers—because she helped develop Critical Race Theory to begin with. Listen as host Brittany Packnett Cunningham sits down with Crenshaw (whom she calls “the godmother of our show”—she'll explain) to unpack the whole alarming situation. Plus, Brittany brings us the latest Untrending News. Recorded June 29th To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Kimberle Crenshaw, a black feminist, civil rights activist, and leading scholar of critical race theory, coined the term "intersectionality" in 1989. It has been defined as the interconnected nature of social categorizations such as race, class, and gender as they apply to a given individual or group, regarded as creating overlapping and independent systems of discrimination or disadvantage.
What started as a potential paper for a Harvard Graduate School of Education (HGSE) final project became this special edition of DBC: *an audiovisual podcast campaign (PodPaign, yep I coined that!) that also has a YouTube version. The project -- which features many unheard of Black women Civil Rights greats as well as current Black women voices -- "Black Women: The Need for Centering vs. the Constant Erasure, Exploring this Juxtaposition", was for the course, Say Her Name: From Tituba to Breonna Taylor - Race, Gender, and Punishment, fall 2020 with professors Kaia Stern & Janelle Fouche. Who -- Featuring interviews with experts: Renowned Cardozo law professor Ekow Yankah from the popular PBS NewsHour piece on the contradictory and hypocritical treatment of the opioid vs. crack epidemics Esteemed Harvard Medical School student LaShyra "Lash" Nolen Distinguished Episcopal priest Jenifer Gamber Veteran EdTech & Diversity, Equity, Inclusion practitioner Jonathan Fichter Also, work and thoughts cited from Dr. Bettina Love, Dr. Kimberle Crenshaw, Dr. Janet Bell, Danielle Brooks, and more. Plus hear powerful thoughts of fellow HGSE grad students -- women of color who are not Black. What -- This episode also promotes campaign #ustoo, which I started to Remember, Recognize, Respect, & Regard Black women. Specifically my research posed these questions: "How does centering the ways in which Black women live and love, survive, and struggle for freedom point toward the liberation of all people? How and why is it that Black women, a group of people so pivotal to the well-being of so many other groups, so crucial to this country, so impossible to NOT SEE, have historically been and continue to be invisible often in society? Why are they largely erased? What if they were centered as often instead?" Reach me: Website: wwwsamanthafletcher.com Podcast: https://anchor.fm/dailybordercrossingsInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/csfletcher1/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/csamantha2009 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/dailybordercrossings/message
Tonight we discuss Kimberle Crenshaw, Flavia Dzodan and the book club discussion guide.
Thanks for tuning in to the premier episode of the Sunrise Movement LA Podcast! As promised, here are all the links you've ever dreamed of: ------------------------------------------------------- Black Lives Matter Los Angeles: https://www.blmla.org IG @blmlosangeles FB/Twitter @blmla ACTION ITEM - Defund the Police: https://peoplesbudgetla.com/toolkit ACTION ITEM - Read up on Black LA Demands: https://www.blmla.org/newsfeed/2020/4/16/black-los-angeles-demands-in-light-of-covid-19-and-rates-of-black-death Donate to Los Angeles Action Bail Fund: https://secure.actblue.com/donate/wp4bl Find my local BLM chapter: https://blacklivesmatter.com/chapters/ ------------------------------------------------------- Pilipino Workers Center of Southern California: https://www.pwcsc.org Donate to support COVID-19 relief for domestic workers in LA: https://pwcsc.ourpowerbase.net/civicrm/contribute/transact?reset=1&id=9 Donate to the National Domestic Workers Alliance Care Fund: https://secure.actblue.com/donate/coronavirus-care-fund?refcode=covidfundwebpage ACTION ITEM - Sign the petition to support the Federal Domestic Workers Bill of Rights: https://www.domesticworkers.org/national-bill-rights-domestic-workers ACTION ITEM - Call your CA state senator and urge them to support SB 1257: Template of what to say can be found here https://www.cwlc.org/2020/03/senate-bill-1257-durazo/ Find your CA state senator here http://findyourrep.legislature.ca.gov ------------------------------------------------------- Sunrise Movement Los Angeles https://www.sunrisemovementla.org Find your local Sunrise Hub here https://www.sunrisemovement.org/hubs ------------------------------------------------------- For a deeper dive into what you heard on today's episode, we recommend checking out the Intersectionality Matters Podcast with Kimberle Crenshaw. They do a whole series on how COVID-19 has exposed racial inequity in our society. This episode was reported by Sarah Goldzweig and Danielle Reynolds, with major contributions from Justin Chow, Brahm Genzlinger, Suzie Hicks, Khristina Rhead, and Jeremy Steinberger. Thanks go out to the many Sunrisers who shared their stories for this episode as well. Our Sound Editors for this episode were Brahm Genzlinger and Jeremy Steinberger. Our theme song was recorded by Kaeley Pruitt-Hamm with contributions from several members of Sunrise LA, and it was mixed and mastered by Brahm Genzlinger. This episode's musical score was by Brahm Genzlinger. We are grateful for the contributions of our special guests, Dr. Caroline Goldzweig and Aquilina Soriano-Versoza. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app