Podcast appearances and mentions of lissa jones

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Best podcasts about lissa jones

Latest podcast episodes about lissa jones

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 94 - Pearl Cleage, The Nacirema Society

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2025 40:31


In this episode, Lissa Jones welcomes playright Pearl Cleage back to Black Market Reads as they talk about her play The Nacirema Society Requests the Honor of Your Presence at a Celebration of Their First 100 Years, playing at the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis April 19-May 29, 2025. SYNOPSIS Grande dames Grace Dunbar and Catherine Green prepare for the Nacirema Society's 1964 centennial cotillion — the event of the season in Montgomery, Alabama. The elegant African American debutantes include Grace's granddaughter Gracie, escorted by Catherine's grandson Bobby, and the two grandmothers hope the young couple will soon be engaged. But Gracie and Bobby have other ideas. As the young ladies prepare for their debuts, a blackmail scheme brews behind the scenes and subterfuges unfold, all under the nose of a skeptical reporter covering the ball. Featuring clever storytelling and scandalous plots, this lighthearted comedy winds its way to an ending as charming as its characters.  Our production team for this episode includes co producers Lissa Jones and Edie French, technical director Paul Auguston, the voice Yo Derek, and our artist of inspiration Ta-coumba T. Aiken. We thank Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota for supporting this series focusing on the intersection of health, race, and culture. This is Black Market Reads. 

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 93 - Dr. Gail C. Christopher, Rx for Racial Healing: A Guide to Embracing Our Humanity

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2025 33:12


In this episode Lissa talks with Dr. Gail C. Christopher —a nationally recognized leader in health equity, a pioneer in integrative medicine, and the visionary architect behind the Truth, Racial Healing, and Transformation initiative (TRHT). Dr. Christopher has spent decades designing and leading national programs that advance racial healing, community well-being, and policy change—including her role as Senior Advisor and Vice President at the W.K. Kellogg Foundation. She is also the Executive Director of the National Collaborative for Health Equity. She joins us today to discuss her new book, Rx Racial Healing: A Guide to Embracing Our Humanity—a guidebook, a meditation, and a call to action all in one. For GO DEEPER information, Visit: www.BlackMarketReads.com   Our production team for this episode includes co producers Lissa Jones and Edie French, technical director Paul Auguston, the voice Yo Derek, and our artist of inspiration Ta-coumba T. Aiken. Black Market Reads is a production of the Givens Foundation for African American Literature produced in cooperation with iDream.tv. We thank Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota for supporting this series, focusing on the intersection of health, race, and culture. This is Black Market Reads. The struggle continues.

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 92 - Lisa Williamson Rosenberg, Mirror Me

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2025 30:13


Join Lissa and Lisa as they delve into subjects psycological and literary. Lisa Williamson Rosenberg is the author of Embers on the Wind and Mirror Me (Little A Publishing 2024). She is a former ballet dancer and psychotherapist specializing in depression, developmental trauma, and multiracial identity. Her essays have appeared in Literary Hub, Longreads, Narratively, Mamalode, and The Common. Her fiction has been published in the Piltdown Review and in Literary Mama, where Lisa received a Pushcart nomination. A born-and-raised New Yorker and mother of two college students, Lisa now lives in Montclair, New Jersey, with her husband and dog. Mirror Me is her second novel.  Synopsis: Eddie Asher arrives at Hudson Valley Psychiatric Hospital panicked that he may have murdered his brother's fiancée, Lucy, with whom he shared a profound kinship. He can't imagine doing such a terrible thing, but Eddie hasn't been himself lately. Eddie's anxiety is nothing new to Pär, the one Eddie calls his Other, who protects Eddie from truths he's too sensitive to face. Or so Pär says. Troubled by Pär's increasing sway over his life, Eddie seeks out Dr. Richard Montgomery, a specialist in dissociative identities. The psychiatrist is Eddie's best chance for piecing together the puzzle of what really happened to Lucy and to understanding his inexplicable memories of another man's life. But Montgomery's methods trigger a kaleidoscope of memories that Pär can't contain, bringing Eddie closer to an unimaginable truth about his identity.  

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 89 - Danez Smith, BLUFF

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2024 41:58


In this episode of Black Market Reads: On Health Lissa and Bukata talk with poet Danez Smith about his latest work, BLUFF. Written after two years of artistic silence, during which the world came to a halt due to the COVID-19 pandemic and Minneapolis became the epicenter of protest following the murder of George Floyd, Bluff is Danez Smith's powerful reckoning with their role and responsibility as a poet and with their hometown of the Twin Cities. This is a book of awakening out of violence, guilt, shame, and critical pessimism to wonder and imagine how we can strive toward a new existence in a world that seems to be dissolving into desolate futures. Smith brings a startling urgency to these poems, their questions demanding a new language, a deep self-scrutiny, and virtuosic textual shapes. A series of ars poetica gives way to "anti poetica" and "ars america" to implicate poetry's collusions with unchecked capitalism. A photographic collage accrues across a sequence to make clear the consequences of America's acceptance of mass shootings. A brilliant long poem--part map, part annotation, part visual argument--offers the history of Saint Paul's vibrant Rondo neighborhood before and after officials decided to run an interstate directly through it.   Bluff is a kind of manifesto about artistic resilience, even when time and will can seem fleeting, when the places we most love--those given and made--are burning. In this soaring collection, Smith turns to honesty, hope, rage, and imagination to envision futures that seem possible. Danez Smith is the author of three previous poetry collections, including Homie, a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award, and Don't Call Us Dead, winner of the Forward Prize for Best Collection and a finalist for the National Book Award. Our production team for this episode includes co producers/ Lissa Jones and Edie French, co-host/Bukata Hayes, technical director/Paul Auguston, The Voice/Yo Derek, and our artist of inspiration/Ta-coumba T. Aiken. We thank Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota for supporting On Health focusing on the intersection of health, race, and culture. Black Market Reads: On Health is a collaboration with Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota, as part of Blue Cross' long-term commitment to improving the health of Minnesota communities and ensuring that all people have opportunities to live the healthiest lives possible.   

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 88 -Taiyon J. Coleman, Traveling Without Moving: Essays from a Black Woman Trying to Survive in America

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2024 40:11


In this episode Lissa and Bukata talk with author Taiyon J. Coleman author of Traveling Without Moving: Essays from a Black Woman Trying to Survive in America ( University of Minnesota Press). In Traveling without Moving, Coleman shares intimate essays from her life: her childhood in Chicago—growing up in poverty with four siblings and a single mother. She writes about being the only Black student in a prestigious and predominantly White creative writing program, about institutional racism and implicit bias in writing instruction, about the violent legacies of racism in the U.S. housing market, about the maternal health disparities seen across the country and their implication in her own miscarriage. She explores what it means to write her story and that of her family—an act at once a responsibility and a privilege—bringing forth the inherent contradictions between American ideals and Black reality. Our production team for this episode includes co producers/ Lissa Jones and Edie French, co-host/Bukata Hayes, technical director/Paul Auguston, The Voice/Yo Derek, and our artist of inspiration/Ta-coumba T. Aiken. We thank Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota for supporting On Health focusing on the intersection of health, race, and culture. Black Market Reads: On Health is a collaboration with Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota, as part of Blue Cross' long-term commitment to improving the health of Minnesota communities and ensuring that all people have opportunities to live the healthiest lives possible.  VISIT https://blackmarketreads.com/ for GO DEEPER insights.

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 87 - Sarai Johnson, Grown Women

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2024 30:56


In this episode of Black Market Reads: On Health Lissa and Bukata talk with author Sarai Johnson about her debut novel, Grown Women (Harper Collins 2024). Join us in this lively and thoughtful conversation about what it means to move on—or not move on—from trauma. What it means to ask for forgiveness, what true forgiveness means, how anger can manipulate our relationships, and what happens after the trauma and how it travels through bloodlines. Tracing four generations of remarkable black women, Johnson follows the family across the decades as they grapple with motherhood and daughterhood, inherited trauma, and the deeply ingrained wounds that divide them while they attempt to redefine happiness and healing for themselves. Exploring how race, gender, and class can influence familial relationships, and how pain—and hope—can be handed down from mother to daughter. Black Market Reads is produced by The Givens Foundation for African-American Literature in partnership with iDream.tv.  Funding for Black Market Reads: On Health is provided by Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota, as part of Blue Cross' long-term commitment to improving the health of Minnesota communities and ensuring that all people have opportunities to live the healthiest lives possible. For Go Deeper information and more episodes visit BlackMarketReads.com  

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 83 -Linda Villarosa, UNDER THE SKIN: The Hidden Toll of Racism on Health in America

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2024 33:40


In this inaugural episode of Black Market Reads: On Health, Lissa Jones introduces her series co-host Bukata Hayes, Vice President and Chief Equity Officer at Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota. Together they welcome their guest Linda Villarosa, a Pulitzer Prize Finalist and contributor to the NYT 1619 Project. There's an alarming saying in medical circles that Black people in the US “live sicker and die quicker.” Linda Villarosa, explores this phenomenon in her book UNDER THE SKIN: The Hidden Toll of Racism on Health in America. Villarosa finds that erroneous beliefs about Black bodies, dating from the time of enslavement, continue to influence medical practices today. Coping with the daily stress of racism ages Black people prematurely. And racist beliefs held by doctors and other medical professionals often keep Black people from getting the care they need. Black Market Reads is produced by the Givens Foundation for African-American Literature in partnership with iDream.tv. Funding for this series is provided by Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota, as part of Blue Cross' long-term commitment to improving the health of Minnesota communities and ensuring that all people have opportunities to live the healthiest lives possible. Series artwork created by Ta-coumba T. Aiken  

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 74 - Davu Seru, The Archie Givens, Sr. Collection of African American Literature and Life

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2023 43:49


In this episode Lissa sits down with Davu Seru, the newly appointed Curator of the Archie Givens Sr. Collection of African American Literature and Life at the University of Minnesota. This Collection includes novels, poetry, plays, short stories, essays, literary criticism, periodicals, and biographies that span nearly 250 years of American culture -with particular strength in the areas of the Harlem Renaissance and the Black Arts Movement. With tens of thousands of archival and manuscript materials that document the history of black literature and culture, the Givens Collection is an invaluable community and scholarly resource. In this episode we explore the collection and meet Davu Seru, musician, composer, author and recently named Curator of the Givens Collection.

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 66 - Lynn Nottage, Sweat

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2022 41:51


In this episode Lynn Nottage speaks with BMR Host, Lissa Jones during the run of her play Sweat, performed at the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis. Lynn Nottage is a playwright and a screenwriter. She is the first, and remains the only, woman to have won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama twice. Her plays have been produced widely in the United States and throughout the world. Most recently, Nottage premiered MJ the Musical, directed by Christopher Wheeldon and featuring the music of Michael Jackson, more … http://www.lynnnottage.com/about.html

Hey, it's Cory Hepola
Grand Rapids police shooting/Calls and texts

Hey, it's Cory Hepola

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2022 33:23


Georgia Fort has a deep discussion about the police shooting and killing of Patrick Lyoya in Grand Rapids, Michigan and brings podcaster/broadcaster Lissa Jones on to discuss the history of strain between the Black community and police in this country. We also hear the perspectives from several callers and texters on the issue.

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Special Edition: Race to Write: Black Authors on America's Racial Reckoning

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2022 32:28


In this episode, the tables turn and Lissa Jones is in the spotlight. Lissa joins Dr. Vanessa Weaver, host of Workin' It Out Podcast to discuss the role of Black authors and literature in the current racial reckoning in her hometown of Minneapolis and across the country.  In this Episode The impact of poet Amanda Gorman The origin of “Black Market Reads” The role of literature in the Black experience How Black authors and literature have influenced Lissa's approach to diversity and inclusion.  How the racial reckoning in Minneapolis has shaped “Black Market Reads” How “Black Market Reads” has shaped the national conversation about race Links to show resources  Gain fresh insights and learn actionable steps you can take to address the diversity, equity and inclusion challenges in your life. Each week on the Workin' It Out Podcast, Alignment Strategies' founder and CEO Dr. Vanessa Weaver interviews thought leaders about DE&I issues in society and the workplace and uncovers solutions that can move us forward. Workin' It Out is underwritten by Alignment Strategies, LLC and DITV Media.

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Team Up for Health Equity with Bukata Hayes

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2021 46:41


In this Special Edition of Black Market Reads, in a live production at the Capri Theater, Lissa Jones sits down with Bukata Hayes to talk about the book he co-authored with Stacy Wells, and then hear from a panel of representatives Nneka Sederstrom/Chief Health Equity Officer Hennepin Health Care, Chaz Sandifer/CEO theNEWmpls, and R.T. Rybak/President and CEO The Minneapolis Foundation. Including a reading by Danez Smith from his book Don't Call Us Dead, Summer Somewhere (18:45) This episode brought to you by Stamp-Connect with additional support provided by Hennepin Healthcare, BlueCross Blue Shield Minnesota, s/bes, theNEWmpls, Minneapolis Foundation, Alliant Consulting inc, Minnesota Vikings, JeDunn Construction, Revolution Catering and iDream.tv. Proceeds to benefit The Givens Foundation for African American Literature.   

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 62 - Jayne Allen

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2021 46:58


Black Girls Must Die Exhausted  Like the lead character featured in her new novel Black Girls Must Die Exhausted, our guest today knows all about living life as a successful African American woman and self-proclaimed "serial entrepreneur."   This Harvard Law grad is a popular speaker, thought leader, seasoned business executive, and noted author who writes fiction under her chosen nom de plume, Jayne Allen. The Detroit native and L.A.-based writer began her career as an attorney in the music industry as an executive at Universal Music Group. She later served as a senior digital strategist and business development executive for Lady Gaga and as an attorney and strategist for Prince, whom she credits for teaching her how to truly be an artist.  Tune in for an exciting conversation with Lissa Jones ...

Workin' it Out Podcast
Race to Write: Black Authors on America's Racial Reckoning (Rebroadcast)

Workin' it Out Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2021 32:30


Lissa Jones, host of “Black Market Reads,” joins Dr. Weaver to discuss the role of Black authors and literature in the current racial reckoning in her hometown of Minneapolis and across the country. In this EpisodeThe impact of poet Amanda GormanThe origin of “Black Market Reads”The role of literature in the Black experienceHow Black authors and literature have influenced Lissa's approach to diversity and inclusion. How the racial reckoning in Minneapolis has shaped “Black Market Reads”How “Black Market Reads” has shaped the national conversation about race ResourcesLissa JonesDr. Vanessa WeaverBlack Market ReadsAlignment Strategies“The Hill We Climb” by Amanda GormanThe Givens Foundation for African-American LiteratureClaudia RankineSHARE“Why Some People Be Mad at Me Sometimes,” by Lucille CliftonFollow Us on Social MediaAlignment StrategiesLinkedInFacebookDiversity and Inclusion TelevisionLinkedInFacebook

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 57 - Morgan Jerkins on her debut novel Caul Baby

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2021 44:10


Essayist, memoirist, and, now, novelist Morgan Jerkins sits down with Lissa Jones. She discusses her inspirations for this story, both from her past (as a teenager she worked in her father's OB/GYN practice) and present (she tells us her character Amara was inspired by Vice President Kamala Harris). Though Caul Baby is a work of fiction with hints of magical realism, it is deeply rooted in the experiences of Black womanhood. More information about her work can be found on her website.

Perspective Unplugged
Parenting in Deep Water

Perspective Unplugged

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2021 15:37


Do you ever feel like you were absent the day they passed out the manual on “Perfect Parenting”? Please join Lissa Jones as she discusses “Parenting in Deep Water”.

Workin' it Out Podcast
Race to Write: Black Authors on America's Racial Reckoning

Workin' it Out Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2021 32:30


Lissa Jones, host of “Black Market Reads,” joins Dr. Weaver to discuss the role of Black authors and literature in the current racial reckoning in her hometown of Minneapolis and across the country. In this EpisodeThe impact of poet Amanda GormanThe origin of “Black Market Reads”The role of literature in the Black experienceHow Black authors and literature have influenced Lissa’s approach to diversity and inclusion. How the racial reckoning in Minneapolis has shaped “Black Market Reads”How “Black Market Reads” has shaped the national conversation about race ResourcesLissa JonesDr. Vanessa WeaverBlack Market ReadsAlignment Strategies“The Hill We Climb” by Amanda GormanThe Givens Foundation for African-American LiteratureClaudia RankineSHARE“Why Some People Be Mad at Me Sometimes,” by Lucille CliftonFollow Us on Social MediaAlignment StrategiesLinkedInFacebookDiversity and Inclusion TelevisionLinkedInFacebook

Hey, it's Cory Hepola
Lissa Jones on the Breonna Taylor decision and racial inequalities in America

Hey, it's Cory Hepola

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2020 10:23


Lissa Jones joins Jordana Green with strong and emotional thoughts about Breonna Taylor, the lack of charges brought against the officers involved, and the state of racial inequality in America. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

MPR News with Angela Davis
Community voices on the aftermath of Floyd's killing

MPR News with Angela Davis

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2020 98:23


Black voices have historically been silenced, marginalized or ignored. In the wake of the killing of George Floyd, MPR News guest host Marianne Combs made space to listen to and amplify black voices and experiences. In a continuation of a conversation on Sunday, Combs welcomed a lineup of guests — people who have been working on racial equity for years and who have been in the streets supporting their communities in the past week — to talk racial injustice, police brutality and how we can move forward together. Guests: Joy Marsh Stephens is the director of the Division of Race and Equity for the City of Minneapolis. Tomme Beevas is the co-owner of Pimento Kitchen, a Jamaican restaurant in Minneapolis. Lissa Jones is the host of “Urban Agenda” on KMOJ. Anton Jones is the artistic director and CEO of Climb Theatre. Jeremiah Ellison is a Minneapolis City Council member who represents parts of the north side. Recommended reading by Lissa Jones: Degrees of Freedom: The Origins of Civil Rights in Minnesota, 1865–1912 by William D. Green The Myth of Race/The Reality of Racism by Mahmoud El-Kati White People Facing Race: Uncovering the Myths That Keep Racism in Place by Peggy McIntosh Use the audio player above to listen to the program. Subscribe to the MPR News with Angela Davis podcast on: Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify or RSS.

The Kentucky Momma
Infertility

The Kentucky Momma

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2020 65:13


This week, I tackle the topic of infertility with a good friend of mine, Lissa Jones. After months of not conceiving naturally, ehe went through several failed IUI procedures, and then eventually resulted to IVF to conceive her bundle of joy. This is such an important topic to discuss and this is certainly not the last episode on this.  Email - thekentuckymommapodcast@gmail.com Blog - thekentuckymomma.com Facebook - The Kentucky Momma Facebook Group - The Kentucky Momma Podcast Instagram - keishanicolet

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 41 - Debra J. Stone

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2019 42:27


Minnesota-based writer Debra J. Stone sits down with Lissa Jones for a wide-ranging conversation about writing the stories she wants to read, her upbringing in the Rondo Neighborhood and the Northside, and what it means to be a black woman who loves to bike and camp. Stone’s poetry, short-fiction and essays have appeared in many publications and literary journals including About Place, Wild Age Press, and Random Sample Review. Stone co-founded and co-facilitates the Northside Writers Group, and is currently a fellow at the Loft Literary Center in Minneapolis. She has received grants from Intermedia Arts, Beyond the Pure Fellowship, Jerome Foundation for Emerging Writers and the Minnesota State Arts Board. Currently, Debra serves as Board Member and Engagement Committee Chair for the non-profit independent publisher Graywolf Press.

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 34 - A. Rafael Johnson

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2018 57:17


On this episode, Lissa Jones sits down with author A. Rafael Johnson. He was named a Kimbilio Fellow in African American Fiction in 2014. Last year he published his first novel, The Through, which was a finalist for the Minnesota Book Award in Fiction. Johnson co-owns TerraLuna Collaborative, a social justice-focused consulting firm based in Minneapolis. He has co-produced Writer’s Resist – Twin Cities and Banned Together. He currently teaches Magical Realism at The Minneapolis College of Art and Design.

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 33 - Dr. Artika Tyner

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2018 48:55


Dr. Artika Tyner, educator, author, speaker and advocate, speaks with host Lissa Jones about what led her to dedicate her career to fighting for justice and empowering others to be leaders in their communities. She shares with us why she decided to focus her efforts on children, writing the book Justice Makes a Difference: The Story of Miss Freedom Fighter, Esquire, and how traveling to Africa has impacted the way she understands racism in America. Dr. Tyner serves as the associate vice president of diversity and inclusion at the University of St. Thomas and is the author of several books for adults including The Leader’s Journey. To learn more about Dr. Tyner's work, visit her website www.artikatyner.com

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 32 - Sonya Renee Taylor

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2018 76:46


In this episode, recorded at a live event at Jefferson Community School in Minneapolis, MN, Lissa Jones hosts a fascinating conversation with Sonya Renee Tayor the activist and author at the center of the global movement The Body Is Not an Apology, which advocates radical self-love as tool for political resistance and social justice. Sonya is an activist, award-wining performance poet, radical executive officer of The Body is Not an Apology, and now author of a book by the same name. Her website, theBodyIsNotanApology.com  reaches over a million readers each month in over 140 countries. Special thanks to our friends at Magers & Quinn Booksellers, one of Minneapolis's great independent bookstores, for organizing the event.   

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 31 - Desiree Cooper

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2018 47:52


Desiree Cooper, author of the award-winning short fiction collection Know the Mother talks with host Lissa Jones about the complexities of motherhood and the ways that motherhood interacts, and at times conflicts, with the many other roles that women take on.  Desiree Cooper is a Pulitzer-prize winning journalist, community activist, and a former attorney. She was also a founding board member of Cave Canem, the national residency for emerging black poets. Copies of her book can be purchased from on Amazon or from her publisher: http://www.wsupress.wayne.edu/books/detail/know-mother  

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 30 - Mary Moore Easter

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2018 41:29


In this episode, Lissa Jones talks with writer Mary Moore Easter about history, family, poetry, and her newly published poetry collection titled The Body of the World (Mad Hat Press).  Copies of The Body of the World can be purchased here: https://madhat-press.com/collections/our-books/products/the-body-of-the-world-by-mary-moore-easter

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 29 - Alexs D. Pate

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2018 53:49


On this episode, host Lissa Jones talks with author and educator Alexs Pate. Pate Is the author of five novels, including the New York Times Bestseller Amistad, as well as a collection of poetry, and the non-fiction work In the Heart of the Beat: The Poetry of Rap. He edited the 2015 anthology Blues Vision: African American Writing from Minnesota which highlights Black Minnesota writers of the last century. Pate is also the founder and president of Innocent Classroom.

Our Community, Our Business
Our Community, Our Business: Episode 7: An Interview with Lissa Jones

Our Community, Our Business

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2018 44:55


In this episode, Andrew sits down with Lissa Jones of KMOJ to discuss the history of Black Culture in North Minneapolis. She uses this history to provide context for culture and life on the Northside today. Don't Forget to Subscribe!

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 26 - Joy Dolo, founding member of Blackout Improv

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2018 33:38


In this episode, Lissa Jones speaks with Twin Cites based actress, comedian, and educator Joy Dolo of Blackout Improv. Dolo is a founding member of Blackout, Minnesota’s first and only all-Black improv ensemble whose performances use sketch comedy, improv, and stand-up to tackle current events, race, and social justice issues.  This podcast is made possible by the voters of Minnesota through a Minnesota State Arts Board operating support grant, thanks to a legislative appropriation from the arts and cultural heritage fund. Black Market Reads is a production of the Givens Foundation for African American Literature. Production services provided by iDream.tv.

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 25 - Justice Alan Page

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2017 43:11


In the season three premier, host Lissa Jones sits down with retired Minnesota Supreme Court Justice Alan Page to discuss his children's books, advocacy work, and optimism. Justice Alan Page is widely recognized for his groundbreaking legal career, as well as for his time in the NFL. Page played for the Minnesota Vikings and the Chicago Bears before his retirement to practice law full time; he was elected to the NFL Hall of Fame. In 1992 Page became the first African American elected to Minnesota’s supreme court, where he served as an Associate Justice until his retirement from the court in 2015. Along with his wife Diane Sims Page, he founded the Page Education Foundation which provides scholarships and mentoring for students of color to help them pursue post-secondary education. Now, Page has taken on another role: Children’s book author, releasing three books--most recently Grandpa Alan's Sugar Shack--co-authored with his daughter Kamie Page and illustrated by Minnesota artist Dave Geister. For more information about the Page Education Foundation and to purchase copies of Justice Page's books visit their website (https://www.page-ed.org)

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 24 - Duchess Harris, JD. PhD. on Race and Policing

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2017 54:52


Author and Historian Duchess Harris returns to Black Market Reads, this time to speak with host Lissa Jones to discuss her newest book Race and Policing which will be published in September by Abdo Publishing. Duchess and Lissa discuss the complex history of race, policing, and force in america, and Duchess shares exciting news about her upcoming collection from Abdo. This episode also features 'Blank,' an original spoken word piece from local poet Ashley Oliver.

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 23 - Author Erica Armstrong Dunbar

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2017 41:23


In this episode, host Lissa Jones speaks with Erica Armstrong Dunbar about her recent work, Never Caught: The Washington's Relentless Pursuit of Their Runaway Slave Ona Judge. Dunbar is an author and historian focusing on the experiences of African American women in the context of slavery, racial injustice, and gender inequality. Today, she is a professor of History at Rutgers University.

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 22 - Author James McBride

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2017 22:44


In this episode, host Lissa Jones talks with author/musician James McBride at Minneapolis' Ivy Hotel. McBride is the author of five books including Miracle at St. Anna, which McBride adapted for the Spike Lee-directed film of the same name released in 2008. His most recent novel, The Good Lord Bird, won the National Book Award in 2013 and inspired 'A talking music book,' combining pieces from the novel with music performed by McBride and an ensemble of other musicians called the Good Lord Bird Band. Recordings of The Good Lord Bird: A Talking Music Book were provided by Riverhead Books, and clips were used with their permission.  

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 21 - Dr. Mahmoud El-Kati, Professor Emeritus American Studies at Macalester College

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2017 34:29


A frequent contributor to the opinion pages of both Twin Cities dailies as well as the local Black press, Dr. Mahmoud El-Kati has published dozens of monographs and pamphlets, and has appeared on Minnesota Public Radio, and at a host of community-based conferences and events. From 1970 to 2003, Professor El-Kati taught many generations of Macalester College students in courses such as “The Black Experience Since World War II,” and “Sports and the African American Community.” In this episode, host Lissa Jones talks with Dr. Mahmoud El-Kati at Golden Thyme Coffee & Cafe in St. Paul, MN.  

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 19 - Author Sharon G. Flake; Artist Robin Hickman and Curator Hawona Sullivan Janzen

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2017 58:10


In this episode, host Lissa Jones explores what it means to love the skin you're in. First, she speaks with author Sharon G. Flake, whose 1998 novel, The Skin I'm In, influenced and inspired a generation of young women. Then, Lissa talks with Twin Cities artist Robin Hickman, who created a curriculum inspired by Flake's novel, and curator Hawona Sullivan Janzen about "Doll Power: Black Dolls and the Power of Play", an exhibit of Hickman's work that appeared at North Minneapolis's UROC Gallery earlier this year.

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads
Episode 18 - Duchess Harris, JD. PHD with Lissa Jones

Givens Foundation | Black Market Reads

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2017 44:29


Duchess Harris's grandmother was one of a small group of black women who worked as human computers for NASA in the 1950s, and who have largely been left out space-race narratives--until now. In this episode, Harris sits down with host Lissa Jones to discuss her research on the subject, as well as her personal connection to it, and the importance of exposing these hidden narratives to mainstream historical consciousness. Duchess Harris, JD PHD is the Chair of American Studies at Macalester College in St. Paul, MN. She is the author of four books including, most recently, Black Lives Matter and Hidden Human Computers: The Black Women of NASA which inspired the Oscar-nominated film Hidden Figures.