POPULARITY
La santé mentale, grande cause nationale en 2025, entre progressivement dans le champ des préoccupations de l'École. Et ce n'est pas pour rien : selon une grande enquête sur la santé mentale des collégiens et lycéens en 2024, la moitié de ces jeunes seulement présentent un état de bien-être mental, nombre d'entre eux expriment un sentiment de solitude, des plaintes psychologiques et/ou somatiques, présentent un risque de dépression ou encore ont eu des pensées suicidaires.Face à ce constat, que peuvent, que doivent faire les enseignants et la communauté scolaire ? Dans cet épisode, on évoque les différents axes de réponse : promotion de la santé mentale, prévention et protection, et les initiatives qui se développent pour la formation des personnels aux premiers secours en santé mentale.Avec :Damien Durand, IA-IPR EVS qui pilote la formation sur la santé mentale dans l'académie de Lyon. Il est également référent harcèlement et superviseur du programme Phare ;Anaïs Mangin, professeure d'EPS dans un collège REP+ à Toul. Elle a suivi la formation académique de trois jours « Secourisme en santé mentale » et elle a initié de nombreuses actions autour du bien-être des élèves. En faisant le lien entre activité physique et santé mentale, elle fédère plusieurs profs de différentes disciplines autour du projet « On s'bouge ».Vous pouvez également consulter :Agir pour favoriser la santé mentale et le bien-être des élèves sur éduscol.Le replay de la Conférences du CSEN du 9 octobre 2024 « Santé mentale et bien-être des élèves : mieux connaître pour prévenir et agir » sur la chaîne YouTube du Conseil scientifique de l'Éducation nationale.Le site Psycom, organisme public qui informe, oriente et sensibilise sur la santé mentale, et les vidéos de sa chaîne Youtube.Inspirations des invités :Le site de Premiers secours en santé mentale (PSSM).La Notice du protocole santé mentale des élèves « Du repérage à la prise en charge », ministère de l'Éducation nationale, septembre 2023 (PDF, 427 Ko).Le cartable des compétences psychosociales de l'Instance régionale d'éducation et de promotion de la santé Pays de la Loire (IREPS).Extra classe est sur toutes vos plateformes d'écoute : https://smartlink.ausha.co/extra-classeExtra classe, des podcasts produits par Réseau Canopé Émission préparée et animée par : Hélène Audard et Régis Forgione Directrice de publication : Marie-Caroline Missir Coordination et production : Hélène Audard, Magali Devance Réalisation et mixage : Simon Gattegno Contactez-nous sur : contact@reseau-canope.fr © Réseau Canopé, 2025Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
"Pour moi, le handicap c'était tellement représenté comme une tragédie que je pensais que je ne pourrais plus vivre pleinement."Dans cet épisode engageant et émouvant, j'accueille Pauline Mangin, journaliste et fondatrice d'All Kids Are Cool Kids, un magazine en ligne qui redéfinit la représentation des enfants en situation de handicap. Pauline milite pour une visibilité authentique et esthétique du handicap dans une société encore trop axée sur la norme.Elle est maman de deux enfants, dont Marilou, âgée de quatre ans, atteinte d'un handicap rare. Après avoir découvert la condition de sa fille, elle a choisi de transformer sa colère et sa frustration face à l'invisibilité du handicap en une mission passionnée. All Kids Are Cool Kids ne se contente pas de montrer la beauté du handicap, mais aspire également à élargir les perspectives et à changer les regards sur la différence.Quelques pistes de réflexions :❇️ Les enfants handicapés sont trop souvent enfermés dans des stéréotypes, entre "misérabilisme" ou "hyper-héroïsation". Ce manque de représentations nuancées peut être attribué à une peur inconsciente du handicap, qui freine l'inclusion.❇️ L'art et la culture comme autre forme de communication pour les enfants handicapés❇️ Vers une société qui accepte l'unicité de tous les enfants et célèbre la diversité comme la normeAu programme :⇒ Pauline Mangin et son projet (00:34)⇒ Réactions face au diagnostic de handicap (03:20)⇒ Parentalité et handicap (05:08)⇒ Différences de développement entre les enfants (09:21)⇒ Communication avec les enfants sur le handicap (15:11)⇒ Célébration des petites victoires (17:41)⇒ Lutte contre les stéréotypes du handicap (20:51)⇒ Critique du terme "inclusion" et de la société validiste (23:19)⇒ Changements nécessaires pour une société inclusive (25:51)⇒ Ambitions pour All Kids Are Cool Kids et vœux pour l'avenir (27:58)RessourcesMagasin en ligne : All Kids Are Cool KidsInstagram : @allkidsare_coolkidsLivres cités : "Elmer" de David McKee et "Mon corps à moi !" d'Élise GravelUn épisode qui propose de redéfinir les normes de notre société pour une plus grande ouverture à toutes les différences.
Dans cet extrait, Pauline Mangin, journaliste et fondatrice du magazine engagé "All Kids Are Cool Kids", explore sa vision du handicap avant la naissance de sa fille, Marilou, atteinte d'un handicap rare. Pauline se confie sur l'ignorance initiale qu'elle avait du handicap, le résumant autrefois à des notions simplifiées comme celles du Téléthon, de l'autisme ou de la trisomie. Elle partage comment la réalité du diagnostic de sa fille a bouleversé ses perceptions, l'entraînant dans un chemin de profonde déconstruction et de découverte. Grâce à son expérience personnelle, Pauline remet en question les préjugés et est aujourd'hui engagée dans un combat pour une représentation plus nuancée et belle du handicap. Son témoignage souligne l'importance de dépasser les clichés pour embrasser la diversité dans notre société.L'épisode intégral est à retrouver sur toutes les plateformes d'écoutes de podcast le 24/04/2025.
Découvrez Tanis, la nouvelle série BD de Denis Bajram et Valérie Mangin avec Stéphane Perger aux dessins. Tanis est disponible aux éditions Dupuis. Résumé : 10 000 ans avant notre ère, vallée du Nil. La jeune Tanis, intouchable à cause de ses cheveux blancs, vit avec l'Ancien, son père adoptif et le chaman du village. Une nuit, avec son seul ami, Sepi, elle se découvre le pouvoir d'ouvrir la pyramide d'Osiris, le dernier roi des Atlantes. Mais en y volant le masque du géant, ils commettent un terrible sacrilège : des rochers de feu s'abattent sur le village. Par miracle, Sepi, revêtu du masque, parvient à arrêter leur chute d'un simple geste. On exulte : Osiris est ressuscité ! Une ère de prospérité et de bonheur semble dès lors s'ouvrir pour la vallée. C'était compter sans les Aryanas, un peuple guerrier venu de la mer. Attirés par le jeune royaume divin, ils y apporteront la peur, la violence, l'esclavage et... l'amour.Pour lire l'album : https://www.dupuis.com/tanis/bd/tanis-tome-1-les-tombeaux-d-atlantis/129837Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Pour ce 821eme épisode du NFT Morning, nous acceuillons Luc Mangin, considéré comme l'un des plus grands collectionneurs de crypto-stamps au monde. Passionné de philatélie depuis plus de cinquante ans, il a découvert l'univers des NFT en 2021 grâce à son fils, qui lançait alors sa propre collection numérique. Aujourd'hui, il possède une collection impressionnante de plus de huit cents pièces numériques et physiques, issues de nombreux pays.Le fonctionnement des crypto-stamps et la diversité des modèlesLes crypto-stamps sont une innovation qui mêle philatélie traditionnelle et technologie blockchain. Concrètement, il s'agit de timbres physiques contenant un QR code qui permet de débloquer leur version numérique sous forme de NFT. Une fois le QR code scanné, l'acheteur découvre la rareté de son NFT, certaines variantes étant beaucoup plus limitées que d'autres. Ce modèle repose en grande partie sur le principe de la pochette surprise, qui stimule l'intérêt des collectionneurs et crée un marché de spéculation autour des exemplaires les plus rares.Actuellement, plus de trente-cinq postes officielles à travers le monde ont adopté cette approche. Chaque pays applique une stratégie différente : en France par exemple, le NFT est acheté en premier et le timbre physique est envoyé ensuite, tandis qu'en Autriche, le NFT est révélé après l'achat du timbre. Dans certains cas, les NFT sont même directement vendus sans support physique, comme aux États-Unis, où l'opérateur postal propose des collections entièrement numériques.Un marché en plein essor entre tradition et innovationL'un des aspects les plus marquants des crypto-stamps est leur capacité à créer un pont entre les collectionneurs traditionnels et les adeptes du Web3 en introduisant une dimension numérique et interactive, attirent une nouvelle génération de collectionneurs tout en permettant aux anciens de s'initier aux NFT.L'essor des crypto-stamps artistiques et des nouvelles pratiquesAu-delà de leur dimension purement philatélique, les crypto-stamps deviennent aussi un support d'expression artistique. Plusieurs pays ont collaboré avec des artistes pour concevoir des séries uniques. En Thaïlande, dix-huit artistes ont ainsi participé à une collection où la cote de chaque NFT dépend directement de la notoriété de l'artiste. Au Liechtenstein, un projet novateur a permis de diviser un tableau en plusieurs fragments numériques, chaque propriétaire de timbre possédant ainsi une fraction de l'œuvre originale.Un autre aspect intéressant concerne l'évolution des modèles économiques. La France, par exemple, a introduit le concept de NFT premier jour, ajoutant une rareté supplémentaire aux timbres achetés le jour de leur émission.Les crypto-stamps pourraient bien être l'avenir de la philatélie. En combinant tradition et innovation, ils redonnent une nouvelle dynamique à un secteur en perte de vitesse et attirent un public plus large. La philatélie repose sur la rareté et la découverte. Avec l'ajout d'une dimension numérique et interactive, les crypto-stamps offrent un nouveau terrain d'exploration qui pourrait séduire les collectionneurs de demain.Phrase clé de l'épisode"Les crypto-stamps ne sont pas qu'une simple évolution de la philatélie, ils créent un pont entre tradition et innovation, attirant une nouvelle génération de collectionneurs tout en redonnant vie à un marché en perte de vitesse."Liens utiles*
Inside Wirtschaft - Der Podcast mit Manuel Koch | Börse und Wirtschaft im Blick
Finanzielle Bildung ist oft kein Teil offizieller Lehrpläne. Deswegen startet bald wieder das Tradity-Börsenplanspiel für Schüler und Studenten. Was muss man jetzt wissen? "Es wird im Februar beginnen und dann sechs Wochen lang bis in den März hineingehen. Tradity ist ein Börsenplanspiel, dessen Aufgabe es ist, finanzielle Bildung zu vermitteln. Das Planspiel funktioniert über eine App, wo man 100.000 Euro Demo-Geld hat. Über den Zeitraum kann man dann Aktien kaufen und verkaufen. Dank unseres Sponsors der Deutschen Börse können Schüler und auch Studenten aus dem europäischen Raum teilnehmen", sagt Alec Mangin (Schüler & Projektmanager bei Tradity). Alle Details im Interview von Inside Wirtschaft-Chefredakteur Manuel Koch an der Frankfurter Börse und auf https://inside-wirtschaft.de
Hour 3: Murph & Markus continue to take calls from Giants fans, discuss the new hope with Buster Posey leading the franchise, talk to Brad Mangin, and then talk to 49ers Player of the Week: Kevin Givens.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Hour 3: Murph & Markus continue to take calls from Giants fans, discuss the new hope with Buster Posey leading the franchise, talk to Brad Mangin, and then talk to 49ers Player of the Week: Kevin Givens.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Aujourd'hui, je suis ravie d'accueillir Pauline Mangin.Pauline est maman de deux enfants : Marilou 3 ans et Léon 10 mois. Pauline va nous raconter sa première grossesse compliquée et son accouchement à risque de Marilou à 34 semaines. Peu de temps après sa naissance, le diagnostic tombe, Marilou a une condition génétique très rare. Elle va nous raconter ce parcours, ce manque d'informations et de représentations pour sa fille et pour sa famille. A partir de là, une idée va germer en elle... Pauline va donc réussir à transformer sa colère en force et elle va créer en avril dernier un magazine en ligne ALL KIDS ARE COOL KIDS afin de donner de la visibilité à tous ces enfants porteurs d'un handicap. A travers ce projet, elle veut montrer le beau, intégrer de la mode, du lifestyle, du voyage dans le quotidien de ces familles.On va échanger également autour de son envie d'avoir d'autres enfants et de l'arrivée de Léon, son petit garçon et de toutes les inquiétudes que cela a fait ressurgir.Je remercie Pauline pour avoir accepté de raconter son histoire et de témoigner de son parcours. Je vous invite à partager cet épisode et le projet ALL KIDS ARE COOL KIDS afin de donner de la visibilité à ce très beau projet qui fait sens !***Pour retrouver Pauline :Site Internet : ALL KIDS ARE COOL KIDSInstagram : ALL KIDS ARE COOL KIDSLinkedin : Pauline Mangin***Ce podcast vous plait ? N'hésitez pas à vous abonner pour ne rater aucun épisode et à laisser vos avis (5 étoiles :)) sur Apple Podcast et Spotify :) ! Cela m'aide beaucoup !Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Un épisode où l'on voyage à la découverte de talents plus ou moins anciens. Bonne écoute ! Télécharger l'émission (53 Mo) – Regarder sur YoutubeS'abonner au One Eye Club – S'abonner à toutes nos émissionsChroniques[04:50] Tokyo Mystery Café n°1 Atelier Sento[14:10] La Vieille Anglaise et le Continent Valérie Mangin, d'après Jeanne-A Debats Stefano Martino[27:13] Thorgal Saga : Wendigo Fred Duval Corentin Rouge Walter[37:50] Shelton & Felter n°4 Jacques Lamontagne Scarlett SmulkowskiUn Œil sur …[44:46] Chants of SennaarLégende : Scénario – Dessin – Couleur – Coup de cœur – Service de Presse – Le Vote des TipeursGénérique et jingles : Spanish Samba (Oursvince) / Dialup (Jlew) / backstraight (Heigh-hoo)
Un épisode où l'on voyage à la découverte de talents plus ou moins anciens. Bonne écoute ! Télécharger l'émission (53 Mo) – Regarder sur YoutubeS'abonner au One Eye Club – S'abonner à toutes nos émissionsChroniques[04:50] Tokyo Mystery Café n°1 Atelier Sento[14:10] La Vieille Anglaise et le Continent Valérie Mangin, d'après Jeanne-A Debats Stefano Martino[27:13] Thorgal Saga : Wendigo Fred Duval Corentin Rouge Walter[37:50] Shelton & Felter n°4 Jacques Lamontagne Scarlett SmulkowskiUn Œil sur …[44:46] Chants of SennaarLégende : Scénario – Dessin – Couleur – Coup de cœur – Service de Presse – Le Vote des TipeursGénérique et jingles : Spanish Samba (Oursvince) / Dialup (Jlew) / backstraight (Heigh-hoo)
Pour célébrer la sortie de Vertigéo, le dessinateur Denis Bajram et la scénariste Valérie Mangin font l'interview de Lloyd Chéry, le créateur du podcast pour la sortie de sa première BD de SF. Vertigéo est dessiné par Amaury Bündgen, auteur d'Ion Mud et du Rite. Il s'agit d'une adaptation de la nouvelle éponyme d'Emmanuel Delporte. Pour commander en ligne l'album : https://www.casterman.com/Bande-dessinee/Catalogue/vertigeo/9782203257313Plus qu'une BD ! Lancé en octobre 2022, Vertigéo est né d'une volonté de proposer un récit noir de science-fiction dénonçant la servitude volontaire et la société du travail. Après deux albums remarqués par les libraires et la presse, Amaury Bündgen montre toute sa sa force graphique dans ce one shot qui rend hommage à la science-fiction des années 70. Publié dans le recueil Demain Le Travail des éditions La Volte en 2018, Emmanuel Delporte a imaginé un monde désespéré. L'auteur a longuement raconté la création de ce projet dans notre newsletter. Tout en suivant fidèlement la nouvelle, nous avons voulu rendre crédible au maximum cet univers dystopique et post-apocalyptique. Conçu comme un one shot, le monde de Vertigéo nous manque. Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Jason Mangin fills in for Dean today as we hit three great questions 1 How often are you working on or teaching Leadership skills? 2 What are some ways to build and sustain a strong your program? 3 How do you manage large groups with limited space? If you enjoy the podcast please share it with your athletes- teachers- parents and other coaches. Help us grow our GET YOUR EDGE community! #chop-it GET YOUR EDGE PODCAST Instagram and X- @getyouredgepod Dean Contact www.foxvalleythrowsclub.com Instagram and Twitter- @foxvalleythrows Brian Contact www.sportsadvantedge.com Instagram- @sportsadvantedge / @brianbott23 X- @botter23 / @sportadvantedgeappleton Email- Brian@sportsadvantedge.com Graphics and Logo- Bailey Marash Instagram and X- @bmarasch13 #foxvalleythrows #getyouredge #sportsadvantedge #hardwork #athlete #makernation #foxvalley #fireit #speed #speedtraining #speeddemon #speedmovements #sportsadvantedge
What an awesome weekend in Kimberly with some big time coaches and presenters. Thanks to our guest Jason Mangin for joining us to recap the weekend. TOPICS COVERED 1. Bobby O' Brien talking integrating speed into the classroom setting. 2. Carmen Pata on the warm-up for activity 3. Michael Fahey during the lunch on new technology to change the game. 4. Stephen Linzmeier on Programming to PEAK! 5. Josh Heisler on Lateral Speed progressions. 6. Steve Jones on developing leaders who grow a winning culture 7. Friday night conjugate speed program INTEGRATED into your conjugate strength applications. If you enjoy the podcast please share it with your athletes- teachers- parents and other coaches. Help us grow our GET YOUR EDGE community! #chop-it GET YOUR EDGE PODCAST Instagram and X- @getyouredgepod Dean Contact www.foxvalleythrowsclub.com Instagram and Twitter- @foxvalleythrows Brian Contact www.sportsadvantedge.com Instagram- @sportsadvantedge / @brianbott23 X- @botter23 / @sportadvantedgeappleton Email- Brian@sportsadvantedge.com Graphics and Logo- Bailey Marash Instagram and X- @bmarasch13 #foxvalleythrows #getyouredge #sportsadvantedge #hardwork #athlete #makernation #foxvalley #fireit #Kimberly
How do artists engage living bodies as creative material? How do they engage our ideas and assumptions of what we consider a body to be and what a body can do? How do they challenge the principles of what life is and the relations we take for granted? For this podcast, we invited philosopher, researcher and labour organizer Mijke van der Drift to engage with Agnieszka Anna Wołodźko, lecturer and researcher teaching contemporary philosophy and art-science at AKI Academy of Art and Design ArtEZ. Thinking through the lens of contamination, Agnieszka's recently published book Affect as Contamination: Embodiment in Bioart and Biotechnology uses bioart projects as provocative case studies to rethink affect and bodily practices. Departing from her book, they reflect upon the desire for transformation and the need for its control in our daily infrastructures, ranging from biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries to food production and healthcare. What ethical frameworks are needed to organize and guide our actions when confronted with hard questions and uncomfortable situations that come up when engaging living matter as a creative material? How do we recognize what needs to change and for whom? Can ethics and art prompt us to become more joyful and accountable to transformative processes of justice? We invite you to listen to this conversation and reflect upon the risks involved when artists experiment with bodies and living matter, and to think through which ‘anchors' can orient us through the transformation that life inevitably begets. Show notes - Marion Laval-Jeantet and Benoît Mangin, May the Horse live in me! https://dublin.sciencegallery.com/blood-1/may-the-horse-live-in-me-#:~:text=The%20performance%20May%20the%20Horse,an%20injection%20of%20horse%27s%20blood. - The Center For Genomic Gastronomy, Smog Tasting: Smog Synthesizer https://genomicgastronomy.com/work/2015-2/smog-synthesizer/ - Adriana Knouf, Xenological Entanglements. 001a: Trying Plastic Variations https://tranxxenolab.net/projects/eromatase/ - Be-wildering by Jennifer Willet & Kira O'Reilly, 2017, performance https://waag.org/en/event/performance-be-wildering-jennifer-willet-kira-oreilly/ - - Book Deleuze & Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and Shizophrenia 1980 - Bio artist Boo Chapple invited by Prof. Rob Zwijnenberg's honours class Who owns Life? at Leiden University - Baruch Spinoza, Ethics https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/spinoza/#Ethi - Špela Petrič, Confronting Vegetal Otherness: Skotopoiesis – semiotic triangle, 2015 https://www.spelapetric.org/scotopoiesis - Sandilands, Catriona (2017), ‘Vegetate', in J. J. Cohen and L. Duckert (eds), Veer Ecology: A Companion for Environmental Thinking, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, pp. 16–29. https://www.academia.edu/50082847/Vegetate - Marion Laval-Jeantet and Benoît Mangin, May the Horse live in me! https://dublin.sciencegallery.com/blood-1/may-the-horse-live-in-me-#:~:text=The%20performance%20May%20the%20Horse,an%20injection%20of%20horse%27s%20blood. - Donna Haraway, Response-ability in her book Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene. Durham, NC: Duke University Press Books, 2016. See lecture: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GrYA7sMQaBQ - Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, What Is Philosophy? Translated by Graham Burchell and Hugh Tomlinson. London etc: Verso, 1994. See: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/deleuze/#WhatPhil - Jacques Ellul: Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/technology/ - Michel Serres, Birth of Physics, clinamen press 2000 - The Center For Genomic Gastronomy https://genomicgastronomy.com/work/2009-2/community-meat-lab/ - Adriana Knouf, Xenological Entanglements. 001a: Trying Plastic Variations https://tranxxenolab.net/projects/eromatase/ - Rossi Braidotti : https://rosibraidotti.com/ - Lem, Stanisław (2012), Przekładaniec [Layer Cake]. Warszawa: Agora, e-book. Andrzej Wajda, (1968), Layer Cake, https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0063468/ - Gilles Deleuze Difference and Repetition. Translated by Paul Patton. New York: Columbia University Press, 1995. See: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/deleuze/#DiffRepe - Denise Ferreira da Silva, On difference without separability https://static1.squarespace.com/static/574dd51d62cd942085f12091/t/5c157d5c1ae6cf4677819e69/1544912221105/D+Ferreira+da+Silva+-+On+Difference+Without+Separability.pdf - Michel Foucault https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/foucault/ - Immanuel Kant https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/kant/ - Paul B. Preciado, Testo Junkie: Sex, Drugs, and Biopolitics in the Pharmacopornographic Era. Translated by Bruce Benderson. New York: The Feminist Press at CUNY, 2013 - Dr Luciana Parisi https://scholars.duke.edu/person/Luciana.Parisi - The Commons https://www.newyorker.com/culture/essay/the-theft-of-the-commons About Agnieszka Anna Wołodźko, is a lecturer and researcher teaching contemporary philosophy and art-science relations at AKI Academy of Art and Design ArtEZ since 2017. At AKI, Artez she has founded a biolab space where she runs a BIOMATTERs, an artistic research programme that explores how to work with living matters through hands on engagement, where difficult philosophical, ethical and ecocritical questions are not only discussed but also tangibly faced. Her research focusses on post-humanism, ecocriticism, affect theory and new materialism at the intersection of art, ethics and biotechnology. Her book Affect as Contamination. Embodiment in Bioart and Biotechnology is thus a result not only of her PhD research, but also her work as an experimentative educator, where next to analytical discussion on embodiment she reveals personal, intimate and often difficult because risky implications of being a body outside the possibility of innocence. Contamination equally in her writing and work as an educator, becomes a way of thinking as well as a way of being that implies reimagination of not only what it means to be a body in the age of biotechnological manipulation, but also how to care and feel responsible when practicing embodiment. Mijke van der Drift Mijke van der Drift is a philosopher and educator working on ethics, trans studies, and anti-colonial philosophy. Mijke is a tutor at the Royal College of Art, London. Mijke's work has appeared in the Journal of Speculative Philosophy, the Journal of Aesthetics and Culture, in various independent publications as well as chapters in The Emergence of Trans (Routledge 2020), and The New Feminist Literary Studies Reader (Cambridge UP 2020). Van der Drift is founding member of the art collective Red Forest. They have made work for the Milano Triennale (2022), the Helsinki Biennale (2023) as part of their research into Extractivism, Fossil Fascism, and cultures of resistance. With Nat Raha, Mijke is writing Trans Femme Futures.
In today's episode of the Beginner Photography Podcast I chat with experienced sports and baseball photographer Brad Mangin. Discover how to capture amazing baseball photographs, the importance of planning and context, and the power of storytelling in sports photography through Brads stories.The Big Ideas:The key to great photography is not the camera, but your ability to see and look.Balancing technical elements and capturing emotion is essential in sports photography.Practice and continuous learning are crucial for improvement, regardless of whether photography is a hobby or profession.Surrounding yourself with experienced photographers and seeking feedback helps you grow as a photographer.Enjoying the process and having fun are important aspects of capturing stunning photographs.Resources:Brad Mangin's websiteFollow Brad on InstagramBuster Posey BookInstant Baseball Photo BookConnect with the Beginner Photography Podcast! Join the free Beginner Photography Podcast Community at https://beginnerphotopod.com/group Send in your Photo Questions to get answered on the show - https://beginnerphotopod.com/qa Grab your free camera setting cheatsheet - https://perfectcamerasettings.com/ Thanks for listening & keep shooting!
Stéphane Bern raconte un Français inconnu ici mais connu aux Etats-Unis, où il est devenu urbaniste dans la ville de New York. Ou la véritable histoire de Joseph-François Mangin, l'homme qui imagina Manhattan. Comment ce Lorrain passionné de cartographie s'est-il retrouvé de l'autre côté de l'Atlantique ? Quelle vie a-t-il menée avant ça ? Et que doit le New York d'aujourd'hui aux talents de Joseph-François Mangin ? Pour en parler, Stéphane Bern reçoit Thibaud Leroy, descendant de Charles-Nicolas Mangin, le petit frère de Joseph-François Mangin, auteur de “Joseph François Mangin, l'homme qui imagina Manhattan'.Historiquement Vôtre est réalisée par Guillaume Vasseau. Rédaction en chef : Benjamin Delsol. Auteur du récit : Pierre-Vincent Letourneau. Journaliste : Aude Cordonnier.
Stéphane Bern, s'amuse avec l'Histoire – la grande, la petite, la moyenne… - et retrace les destins extraordinaires de personnalités qui n'auraient jamais pu se croiser, pour deux heures où le savoir et l'humour avancent main dans la main. Aujourd'hui, Joseph-François Mangin, l'homme qui imagina Manhattan.
Stéphane Bern, s'amuse avec l'Histoire – la grande, la petite, la moyenne… - et retrace les destins extraordinaires de personnalités qui n'auraient jamais pu se croiser, pour deux heures où le savoir et l'humour avancent main dans la main. Aujourd'hui, Joseph-François Mangin, l'homme qui imagina Manhattan.
Square dancing has very old roots and has endured as a pastime to present day. Its history, though, comes with some thorns, and scholars don't even agree on its exact origin. Research: Anderson, Virginia C. “It All Began Anew: The Revival of Folk Dancing.” Western Folklore , Apr., 1948, Vol. 7, No. 2 (Apr., 1948). Via JSTOR. https://www.jstor.org/stable/1497379 Blakemore, Erin. “The Slave Roots of Square Dancing.” JSTOR Daily. 6/16/2017. https://daily.jstor.org/the-slave-roots-of-square-dancing/ Burger, Hans, complier. “History and Heritage of Modern American Square Dancing.” Phantom Promenaders Munich. European Association of American Square Dance. Via archive.org. https://web.archive.org/web/20040409113940/http://eaasdc.de/history/shehisto.pdf Dallal, Jenine Abboushi. "French Cultural Imperialism and the Aesthetics of Extinction." The Yale Journal of Criticism, vol. 13 no. 2, 2000, p. 229-265. Project MUSE, doi:10.1353/yale.2000.0016. Damon, S. Foster. “History of Square Dancing.” Barre, Mass. 1957. Gifford, Paul M. “Henry Ford's Dance Revival and Fiddle Contests: Myth and Reality.” Journal of the Society for American Music (2010) Volume 4, Number 3, pp. 307–338. Hunt, Tracie. “Birdie in the Cage.” Produced by Annie McEwen, Tracie Hunte, and Matt Kielty. Radiolab. 10/23/2019. https://radiolab.org/podcast/birdie-cage Jamison, Philip A. “Square Dance Calling: The African-American Connection.” Journal of Appalachian Studies , Fall 2003, Vol. 9, No. 2 (Fall 2003). Via JSTOR. https://www.jstor.org/stable/41446577 Lovett, Benjamin B. and Henry Ford. “'Good Morning': After a Sleep of Twenty-five Years, Old-fashioned Dancing is Being Revived by Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ford.” Dearborn Publishing Company. January 1926. Mangin, Julianne. “The State Folk Dance Conspiracy: Fabricating a National Folk Dance.” Originally published in the Old-Time Herald, v.4(7) p.9-12, Spring 1995. http://juliannemangin.com/the-state-folk-dance-conspiracy/ MasterClass. “All About Square Dance: A Brief History of Square Dance.” https://www.masterclass.com/articles/square-dance-explained Miller, Rebecca S. "Creolizing Contradance in the Caribbean." American Music, vol. 28, no. 4, winter 2010, pp. 501+. Gale In Context: U.S. History, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A401215265/GPS?u=mlin_n_melpub&sid=bookmark-GPS&xid=5ce2f07f. Accessed 1 June 2023. Nelson, Kevin. "Square Dancing." Encyclopedia of Recreation and Leisure in America, edited by Gary S. Cross, vol. 2, Charles Scribner's Sons, 2004, pp. 305-307. Gale In Context: U.S. History, link.gale.com/apps/doc/CX3434800241/GPS?u=mlin_n_melpub&sid=bookmark-GPS&xid=eed3a8c4. Accessed 1 June 2023. Optimist Daily. “The history of square dancing in America—part I of True American.” 8/12/2022. https://www.optimistdaily.com/2022/08/the-history-of-square-dancing-in-america-part-i-of-true-american/ Optimist Daily. “The square dancers of today—part II of True American, a mini-series.” 8/19/2022. https://www.optimistdaily.com/2022/08/the-square-dancers-of-today-part-ii-of-true-american-a-mini-series/ Quigley, Colin. “Reflections on the Hearing to "Designate the Square Dance as the American Folk Dance of the United States": Cultural Politics and an American Vernacular Dance Form.” Yearbook for Traditional Music , 2001, Vol. 33 (2001). Via JSTOR. https://www.jstor.org/stable/1519639 Sabatella, Matthew. “Southern Appalachian Square Dance: A Brief History.” Ballad of America. https://balladofamerica.org/southern-square-dance/ Szwed, John F. and Morton Marks. “The Afro-American Transformation of European Set Dances and Dance Suites.” Dance Research Journal , Summer, 1988, Vol. 20, No. 1 (Summer, 1988). Via JSTOR. https://www.jstor.org/stable/1478814 U.S. House of Representatives. “Can I have This Dance?” Whereas: Stories from the People's House. 4/29/2020. https://history.house.gov/Blog/2020/April/4-29-squaredance/ Warnock, Emery C. “The Anti-Semitic Origins of Henry Ford's Arts Education Patronage.” Journal of Historical Research in Music Education , Apr., 2009, Vol. 30, No. 2. Via JSTOR. https://www.jstor.org/stable/40215355 See omny.fm/listener for privacy information.
Benoît PeetersCréation artistique (chaire annuelle 2022-2023)Collège de FranceAnnée 2022-2023Colloque - Nouveaux chemins de la bande dessinée : Table ronde : Auteurs et autrices, un métier en danger ?Résumé de l'intervention de Pierre NocérinoCette intervention sera l'occasion de revenir sur les divers problèmes professionnels rencontrés par les auteurs et autrices de bande dessinée, de la précarité au sexisme en passant par la difficulté à se constituer comme un véritable groupe professionnel capable de défendre collectivement ses intérêts. Une attention particulière sera portée aux conditions qui permettent (ou au contraire entravent) la formulation de critiques chez les auteurs et autrices de bande dessinée à l'égard de leurs difficultés, que celles-ci soient individuelles ou partagées par l'ensemble de cette communauté de métier.Pierre NocérinoPierre Nocérino est sociologue, chercheur postdoctoral au Lier-Fyt (UMR 8065 - CNRS/EHESS). Sa thèse, soutenue en 2020 sous la direction de C. Lemieux, était consacrée au travail et aux mobilisations des auteurs et autrices de bande dessinée en France. Ses recherches portent plus généralement sur les processus de politisation dans les milieux professionnels, en particulier au sein des industries culturelles. En parallèle de ces travaux, il s'est également investi dans l'écriture graphique de la sociologie en réalisant différentes bandes dessinées, seul ou en collaboration avec l'autrice Léa Mazé.Résumé de l'intervention de Loo Hui PhangÉcrire est un métier : la précarisation des auteurs, autrices et les évolutions nécessaires pour une amélioration de leurs conditions de travail.Loo Hui PhangLoo Hui Phang est née au Laos en 1974. À travers la bande dessinée, le théâtre, le cinéma, le roman, les installations et les performances, elle poursuit une réflexion sur la question de la narration. Multipliant les collaborations (Rodolphe Burger, Moriarty, Bertrand Belin, Barbara Carlotti, Philippe Dupuy, Frederik Peeters…), elle construit un parcours qui traverse divers champs artistiques, mais hanté par des obsessions récurrentes : l'identité, le désir, l'étrangeté.Son premier roman, L'Imprudence (Actes Sud 2019) remporte le prix Léopold Senghor en 2020. Avec Black-out, dessiné par Hugues Micol (Futuropolis, 2020), Loo Hui Phang reçoit le prix René Goscinny 2021 qui distingue un ou une scénariste pour l'ensemble de sa carrière.Résumé de l'intervention de Denis BajramDepuis que je suis entré dans le métier d'auteur de BD, je vois les conditions de travail de la plupart de mes collègues, moins chanceux que moi, se dégrader. En 2015, notre enquête pour les États Généraux de la Bande Dessinée a révélé l'ampleur de leur précarisation. On assiste à la déprofessionnalisation d'un secteur éditorial pourtant historiquement très professionnalisé. Or écrire et dessiner de la BD nécessite du temps, beaucoup de temps. Quid de l'avenir de notre neuvième art si la plupart des auteurs et autrices ne peuvent plus s'y consacrer à plein temps ?Denis BajramNé en 1970, Denis Bajram dessine de vrais petits albums de bande dessinée dès l'âge de neuf ans. Il est surtout connu pour la série Universal War, une référence dans le domaine de la science-fiction, qu'il réalise seul depuis 1998. Il collabore aussi avec son épouse, la scénariste Valérie Mangin, sur des livres concepts et des séries de SF. Ils s'engagent socialement en créant, avec d'autres, le syndicat des auteurs SNAC-BD, les États Généraux de la Bande Dessinée puis la Ligue des auteurs professionnels. Enfin, en 2021, Denis réalise avec quatre confrères une suite en BD des aventures du célèbre Goldorak.
Last time we spoke about Admiral Yamamoto's Operation I-Go. The empire of the rising sun had to do something about the allied advance up the solomons and New Guinea. Yamamoto devised a grand counter air offensive to hinder the allies airfield building in the regions. However, this was not 1941, it was 1943 and the Japanese aviation crews and pilots were not the same men they once were. The war was taking its toll on the effectiveness of Japan's airpower and it was showcased during Operation I-Go. Despite the wild claims of the pilots who would have Japan's leadership believe they shutdown every allied aircraft in existence, the reality was they had only inflicted enough damage to set back the allied timetables for 10 days. Unbeknownst to the Japanese also was that allied cryptanalysts were continuing to break their codes and found out fateful information about the mastermind behind Operation I-Go. But today you need to grab your onions cause were are talking about Chindits. This episode is the return of the Chindits Welcome to the Pacific War Podcast Week by Week, I am your dutiful host Craig Watson. But, before we start I want to also remind you this podcast is only made possible through the efforts of Kings and Generals over at Youtube. Perhaps you want to learn more about world war two? Kings and Generals have an assortment of episodes on world war two and much more so go give them a look over on Youtube. So please subscribe to Kings and Generals over at Youtube and to continue helping us produce this content please check out www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals. If you are still hungry for some more history related content, over on my channel, the Pacific War Channel you can find a few videos all the way from the Opium Wars of the 1800's until the end of the Pacific War in 1945. For a few weeks we have been covering what basically can be described as the major strategic shift during the Pacific War. I know I repeat it so often, but the battle of guadalcanal was the real turning point of the Pacific War. It led the allies to grab the initiative for the rest of the war and as a result the Japanese were forced to take a defensive stance. The taking of guadalcanal and the Buna-Gona-Sanananda areas led to a lot of shuffling for both sides. And with all that shuffling came heavy losses and resources being forcefully allocated to certain areas at the cost of others. Now up in the frigid northern waters of the north pacific, the 6 hour battle of the komandorski islands had nearly ended in an American debacle. If admiral Hosogaya had pressed his advantage, he would have most likely destroyed the Salt Lake City alongside several other warships. But as we saw, the high explosive shell fired by a single man had prompted Hosogay to falsely believe American airforces were attacking him and he pulled out. Hosogaya's conservative decision was condemned by his superiors and he was forced into retirement as a result. Admiral McMorris's force suffered damage to 3 ships and lost 7 men, but he walked away and the Japanese convoy failed its mission. It was to be Japan's last attempt to resupply the Attu and Kiska garrisons with surface ships, all future runs would be done via submarine. Thus the success of Admiral Kinkaids daring blockade had sealed the fate of the Japanese garrisons on the two islands. Yet before the Americans could begin invading these two islands they needed to perform basically the same strategy their colleagues were doing in the south pacific. They needed to secure advance bases and island hop their way west. One of the first major moves came when Admiral Kinkaid and General Buckner made the joint decision to move the Army, Navy and Air Force headquarters out to Adak. Adak was a thousand miles nearer to the enemy, but concentrating so much on the island created its own problems. A year prior, there had been only 5000 people in the Aleutians, now there were nearly 40,000. The bottleneck became so severe, Buckner's soldiers were being supplies with just 10 rounds of ammunition per weapon and food rations were very limited. The men were living off canned vegetables and the occasional shiploads of foul-smelling mutton from New Zealand. Mutton in general was notably not very loved amongst American forces. Australians took a notice of this as Americans began to complain in Australia that they were tired of eating it all the time there. Actually a hilarious rumor emerged amongst the Americans in Australia that General MacArthur owned a sheep ranch and was being enriched at their expense. Yes I managed to toss another punch at Dougey. Medical problems began to emerge in the Aleutians as many American bodies began to reject the environment, that is polite talk for Americans who can't handle a bit of cold. Lingering head colds became so bad, the men began to refer to it as “Aleutian malaria”. I mean I do get it, snow can suck, the cold sucks, waking up at 6am to record this podcast only to look out my window at what is becoming a hours shoveling of my driveway sucks, Canadian problems 101. As for the US Navy, the north pacific submarine force had spent the first few months of Kinkaids command simply gathering strength, building up enough to make a final push, but nothing too exciting. A new PT boat squadron had been assembled employing the Higgens model. Now I don't know about all of you, but the idea of being on a tiny PT boat in the Aleutians sounds horrifying. If you might recall in January, 4 torpedo boats led by Lt CLinton McKeller had departed King cove to sail for Dutch Harbor. They sailed through a squall, coated with 4 inches of ice. The 4 boats made it to the nearest harbor, Dora Harbor on Unimak and were stuck there for nearly a week. There anchored they were bashed around by howling 80 knot winds, and Pt-27 smashed into some jagged rocks, Pt-28 went aground and sank, pt-22 crashed on a reef and sank, but McKellar was able to keep his crews intact. The two surviving boats had to be rescued some days later by the tender Virginia E. The devastating experiences of the McKeller's men led to this new squadron of PT boats being outfitted with hot-air heaters. To compare to the PT boat crews miseries, the experience of the pilots in the Aleutians was not any better. Butler lost 11 planes due to bad weather in January alone. The weather improved in February allowing for some missions, but they were hampered terribly by a technological issue. The B-24 liberators constantly had their bomb-bay rack mechanisms freeze on them. Thus the bombing missions half the time went bust. Now Admiral Kinkaid suggested an attack on Kiska in January of 1943. The plan found its way to the Casablanca conference in north africa where president FDR, Sir Winston CHurhcill and the allied combined chiefs of staff hammered out the fine details. Kinkaid's plan to attack Kiska actually managed to become an item debated at the conference. The allied leaders approved it and sent it over to the US joint chiefs of staff to develop it into a real operation, which became code named Operation Landcrab. The task was handed over to General John DeWitt, who recommended using the 35th infantry division, but the war department decided instead to use the southwestern 7th motorized division. However this division was trained in desert warfare. The rationale for this was due to Rommel's recent defeat and the lack of need for desert trained troops in Europe.Well obviously the desert tactics nor the tanks, truck and other armored vehicles were of any use to the Aleutians, the entire division required training in arctic amphibious operations which would take over 3 months. Luckily amphibious assault specialists like Major General Holland “Howlin Mad” Smith, Colonels Castner, Eareckson, Alexander and Carl Jones were accustomed to the Aleutian theater and helped retrain the 7th division at Los Angeles. By February Washington had assigned an insufficient number of ships for the invasion of Kiska. This prompted Kinkaid to suggest instead of attacking Kiska to bypass her and hit Attu. Attu was believed to only have a garrison of 500 men and Kinkaid believed seizing Attu, just west of Kiska would prompt the Japanese to abandon Kiska. Thus operation Landcrab was greenlit and ready to go, and all the major commanders of the theater would meet at a conference in San Diego to hash out the final details. The San diego conference quickly deteriorated into a series of arguments between two new commanders, rear-admiral William Ward Smith and Vice admiral Francis Warren Rockwell and the experienced Alaskan leaders Buckner and DeWitt. They squabbled over reconnaissance issues, in truth the Americans did not have a good picture of the western Aleutians. Bucker pointed out that the Navy, Army and Airforce had 4 different sets of map coordinates and asked the issue be rectified. This led the Alaska Scout leader Colonel Castner to urge Major General Albert Eger Brown who would be commanding the 7th infantry division to perform a reconnaissance personally. Brown however did not do this. Furthermore Buckner requested they employ a battalion of his ground forces for the operation to improve their low morale. Rockwell argued his shipping capacity was overstretched, leading DeWitt to assign the commercial ship Perida to take Buckner's troops into the battle. Rockwell then complained the commercial ship would not be able to land his troops quickly enough to protect them it the enemy resisted the landings and Brown threw back at him the addition of these troops just disrupted the entire mission. So as you can see a lot of dick waving. In the end they reached a compromise, to hold Buckner's 4th regiment in reserve at Adak, ready to ship out in less than a day to hit Attu if needed. On April 18th, reconnaissance revealed there were at least 1600 Japanese on Attu, prompting Rockwell to commit the entire 7th division, 10,000 men in all and the extra 4th regiment for operation landcrab. Now before the men his the island Rockwell sent a small team of combat specialists to come up behind the Japanese to prevent them from falling back into the mountains where they could hold out for weeks or even months. Captain Willoughby's Scout battalion, 410 officers and men, trained vigorously in a short amount of time for the operation. They replaced all of their rifles and submarine guns with automatic rifles, machine guns and mortars and soft lead bullets for armor piercing bullets as those could penetrate ice without ricocheting. The mens packs were filled to the brim with grenades. Meanwhile General Butler began a bombing campaign to soften up the island. A terrible storm prevented air raids during the first half of april seeing winds his 115 miles per hour and gusts over 127. Nonetheless over 1175 combat sorties would be made in april, with over 4000 pounds of bombs falling on Attu. Though it should be mentioned most of the bombers dropped their loads blind as Attu was covered in a thick fog. Finally on April 24th, the 7th division departed San Francisco at 1pm aboard 5 transports. The Aleutian campaign was soon coming to an end. But now we need to grab our onions and travel back to Burma to talk about good ol Wingate and the boys. Back in Burma, Wingates forces were beginning the last phase of operation Longcloth, fleeing for their lives back to India. Now Fort Hertz and the new Ledo Road had been protectedAt his headquarters in Wuntho Wingate had to make a choice: retire back to India or press on and cross the Irrawaddy. Being Wingate he chose to press on with the Japanese hot on the Chindits trail. Now I do apologize I believe this will be the second time I am rehashing most of the Chindit story, I sort of am forced to do so as a result of how the week by week format laid out this story on the youtube channel. Think of it as a refresher to finish off the operation. Major calvert's Column 3 and Fergussons column 5 headed towards the Gokteik Gorge to blow up its viaduct; Colonel Alexander's southern group was to rendezvous with the Kachin guerillas at Mongmit; and Wingate would personally lead columns 7 and 8 to hit Inywa one of the main based of the Burmese independence forces. Wingates northern force made its way to the Irrawaddy's principal northern tributary, the Shweli by March 17th. Here the river was so wide, their ropes and dinghies would not suffice, the crossing had to be made by boat. The approach to the stream was over open paddy fields, where they could easily be spotted and gundowned. Another major issue of course was the Burmese liberation Army. Wingate began by sending an envoy across the river to treat with the BLA and they promptly decamped. While this was going on Wingate discovered the local boats and their skilled native paddlers could help move his forces. They helped tow the Chindats RAF circular dinghies using 1500 lb net weights. Upon seeing how the locals managed Wingate wrote notes that in the future he should employ at least 40 men to each column who were skilled in handling boats and that 80 percent of his men needed to know how to swim. Yes many of these Chindits did not know how to swim. The mules as usual proved to be difficult to get across, leading 40 to be abandoned while the rest were tethered to boats and paddled across. Fergusson's Column 5 crossed the Irrawaddy at Tigyaing with assistance of local villagers, missing the Japanese pursuers by a hair's breadth. Fergusson turned south, but then received orders from Wingate to abandon his mission to help Calvert and instead rejoin the rest of the brigade. Calvert completely unaware of these orders, faced a game of hide and seek with the Japanese, leaving them boody traps as they marched. At Tigyaing, Calverts group's rearguard were being hit by the Japanese as they crossed the river. Further south of him, the Southern group had crossed the river at Taguang on March 10th, continuing east. Wingate's men were making their own way eastwards, but the supply drops were becoming less and less frequent and the amount of wounded men was increasing. Wingate was forced to leave many men behind as the Japanese continued to pressure them. On march the 15th, the Southern group met up with Calvert's column 3 near Pegon where they exchanged information. Despite orders to head for Mongmit, Major dunlop and Colonel Alexander decided to advance to Namhkan, crossing the Shweliriver and making an escape for China. As the southern group continued they ran into Fergusson's column 5 on March 20th at Inbale Chaung. There they received orders to continue with the original plans, so they redirected themselves to Mongmit again. There they were supposed to meet with the Kachin guerrillas, but they were so late the Kachin had departed. Meanwhile Calvert and Fergusson were having a rough time as an entire Japanese battalion had arrived at Myitson and they were fanning out patrols to hunt them down. On March 23rd, Calvert found one of these patrols near the Nam Mit River and laid a trap killing 100 of them. In his words ‘We let fly with everything we had and a lot of Japs could never have known what hit them. It was one of the most one-sided actions I have ever fought in.' He paid for the ambush with a dozen Gurkhas. Calvert's column made its way towards Gokteik, their glittering prize when disappointment was dealt to them. They received orders from Wingate to withdraw back to India. Wingate also took the care to tell his commanders not to call it a “retreat”, but instead to tell their men they were marching north to cooperate with parachute troops in an attack on Bhamo and Indaw. This was to deceive the enemy if men were captured and to simply boost morale. Calvert complied with the order, but in a bit of defiance decided he wanted to hit a railway on the retreat. Reading Calvert's mind Wingate sent an additional message to Calvert saying he needed to get out as fast as possible and not perform any additional strikes, he finished with this “we can get new equipment and wireless sets. But it will take 25 years to get another man. These men have done their job, their experience is at a premium”. Wingate at this point decided they needed a good supply drop and ordered one for March 24th in a paddy field near the village of Baw, which happened to be held by a Japanese company. This was the same location for the rendezvous with Fergussons column who were in bad need for supplies having been forced to butcher their own mules for meat and eat stews of monkeys, rats, locusts and cockroaches. Disaster struck. Wingate sent his forces to attack the Japanese company at Baw leading the RAF pilots seeing the confused battle to only drop one third of the supplies. Fergusson met up with Wingate on the 25th finding his superior to be a bit manic. Wingate was now claiming because of their actions, the Japanese commander would be hard pressed to annihilate them all to save face. Wingate faced a daunting issue, the Japanese would contest the passage of the Irrawaddy, how would they get through now? He decided to try a bluff, they would march back to Inywa and cross at the identical point they had taken to go east, thinking the Japanese would never expect it. To do this they would have to kill all their remaining mules and lighten their loads, perhaps we can take a moment of silence for these poor mules. Wingate told the men once they got across the river they were to break up into smaller groups, try to sabotage more railway installations and make their way back to Assam. The forces made a dreadful march back to Inywa, slaughtering their mules as they went, much to the grief of the muleteers. It became clear early the Japanese were following them. Colonel Tomotoki Koba had set up three defensive lines between the Chindits and the Indian border: 1 at the Irrawaddy, 1 along the Mu valley and 1 following the line of the Chindits. Koba's orders were pretty simply, to drive the Chindits into a trap as if they were wild beasts to hunt. Wingate attempted feints and decoys, such as sending Fergusson's Column 5 towards the village of Hintha. This decoy worked great for everyone else of course, as Fergussons men suffered heavy casualties for their efforts. The feints and decoys worked as the bamboozled Japanese never fully caught up to the main body, failing to capture the Chindits in the Shweli loop as it was known. By 4pm on 28th, the main body reached Inywa where they lucked out greatly. It turned out the Japanese had neglected to commandeer the boats along the Shweli. Wingate was able to commander a number of local boats and his men began to cross the river. Column 7 went first followed by 2 and 8. But Column 8 as they made their way were fired upon by Japanese patrols. It was fortunate for the Chindits the Japanese patrols were small and lacked heavy machine guns. Even so, the mortar and rifle fire was enough for Wingate to call off the rest of the columns leaving column 7 on the other side of the river to make their own way home to India. Wingate took the rest of the forces to a secure bivouac 10 miles south east of Inywa where he ordered the men to disperse into 5 smaller groups. It was now every man for himself as they say. The first group to really suffer was Fergussons column 5. After the bitter fight at Hintha, he sent word to Wingate advised him where they should be rendezvousing for a supply drop. But when Fergusson got to the location, there was no drop and no Wingate. Fergusson's radio radio was destroyed at Hintha so he had to rely on runners and now knew he basically was on his own. Fergusson decided to take his column and head for the Kachin hills. When his men tried to cross the Shweli it turned into a disaster. Many men were swept away by a flood and most of their animals alone with them. 46 men had to be abandoned on a sandbank in the middle of the river and in Fergusson's words “‘the decision which fell on me there was as cruel as any which could fall on the shoulders of a junior commander'. His men staggered on half crazed with hunger and thirst. After 15 days they reached the Chindwin on April 24th and would limp over to Imphal 2 days later. Their column suffered horribly, 95 survivors out of an original 318. Major Ken Gilkes column 7 managed to get to China with 150 survivors and would fly back to India. Wingates dispersed groups would have a particularly horrible time on their way home. They had tales to tell of Japanese atrocities, the treachery of Burman villagers, the constant battle to stay awake, the agony of hunger and thirst and the feeling of being hunted down like beasts. Their menu more often the naught was python meat and nettles. There also began a rumor amongst the dispersed groups that Wingate had intentionally taken the easy way out for himself while using the rest of them as decoys. As for Wingates group, his original thinking was that the trek would take 2 weeks but it took roughly 22 days. They spent 2 full days around the Irrawaddy trying to find a safe way across as the Japanese patrols attacked them. On April 13th, with the help of friendly locals who provided paddlers and bamboo rafts they got across. They planned to go across in three groups, and unfortunately for the last group who was acting rearguard they would be left behind. The starving survivors made their way to the Wuntho-Indaw railway then through the Mangin range. At this point all of the food ran out, making even the Python stews seem appetizing. They would make the mistake of trying to buy rice from a pro-Japanese village who began hitting gongs to summon the Japanese causing them to run. At another more neutral village they were able to buy some buffalo meat. As they continued through the Mangin range they nearly died of starvation if it was not for a stroke of luck when one of their Burmese interpreters contacted a local monastery who sold them chicken, tomatoes, rice bananas and 5 pigs. Refreshed they continued and by the 23ed of april could see the Chindwin river. Wingate recounted stating ‘Behold the Chindwin. It is a poor heart that never rejoices.' The 30 mile trek to the Chindwin was the hardest part of the journey. When finally facing the great river Wingate was forced to divide his men into those deemed strong enough to swim across and those who needed a boat. It took 5 men 7 hours to hack some elephant grass to make rafts. Wingate and others swam the Chindwin at a narrow point 500 yards or so wide. Even the strong swimmers were in danger of drowning, many forced to float on their backs. Wingate himself was pretty close to being swept away but managed to keep afloat using a pack for buoyancy. Everyone who got to the other side of the river were utterly exhausted. To their misery they soon heard the incoming Japanese on the other side of the river. As they hit the first village they came across they devoured the meals they could find. But they had left countless non swimming comrades on the other side and Wingate was desperate to send rescue parties. They found a post manned by some Gurkha rifles and obtained their help grabbing local boats and taking a flotilla back over the Chindwin to save the men they could find. In the end Wingates small group of 43 would see 34 survivors reach Assam. Meanwhile far to the south, Dunlop and Alexander's southern group were the furthest away from India. They decided to try and head back to Fort Hertz, but would be ambushed many times along the way. They crossed at the head of the Irrawaddy using stealth to avoid clashes with the Japanese. With the help of locals who gave them food and boats they made it across by April 20th, but after crossing were hit again by the Japanese suffering heavy casualties. Now down to 350 men, they continued towards the Mu River where they were ambushed yet again on the 28th. Colonel Alxander would be killed among others, as Dunlop recounted "Clarke told me that the last mortar bomb had blown away most of the Colonel Alexander and officer De La Rue's legs. Edmonds and some orderlies had carried them away into the jungle, but that no one could now be found who knew of their whereabouts." Dunlop led the force of exhausted men to the Chindwin river fighting off multiple Japanese patrols. They would wander into early may and were saved by Karen guerilla forces a very lucky break. Lastly, Calverts column 3 made their way to the Shewli river by March 27th with Japanese patrols hot on their trail. Calvert decided the best course of action was to break up into 9 smaller groups. Out of the 360 men in Column 3, 205 eventually recrossed the Chindwin by mid April. Calvert personally would lead a group to detonate more explosives across the Burmese railway. So ends operation longcloth. Two major things to note were Wingates character and behavior during the expedition. For the first, it is not surprising to see that extreme stress brought up the brittle personality of mr Wingate. It seems in his own mind, Wingate could never be at fault. Wingate clearly had not factored the importance of river crossings, which is unforgivable given Burma's riverine system. The crossings over the Irrawaddy showcased Wingates glory hunting nature. Wingate also was draconian in his punishment of the men. He told his men if any of them plundered villages or lost their own equipment he would have them shot. This went beyond normal army code. If sentries fell asleep and were caught, Wingate gave them 3 choices; be shot, make their own way back home or be flogged, not surprisingly everyone chose to be flogged. Wingate's behavior likewise kept switching from mania to depression given the circumstances. The casualty figures of the operation were appalling. Out of 3000 men of the 77th brigade that Wingate took into Burma, 2182 returned; 450 were killed in action and the rest went missing. Out of the southern group 260 men out of the 1000 survived. What had been achieved to justify such losses? There are arguments made on both sides. General Slim said of the operation “They had blown up bridges and cuttings on the Mandalay–Myitkyina railways that supplied the Japanese northern front, and attempted to reach across the Irrawaddy to cut the Mandalay–Lashio line. Exhaustion, difficulties of air supply, and the reaction of the Japanese, prevented this, and the columns breaking up into small parties made for the shelter of 4 Corps. About a thousand men, a third of the total force, failed to return. As a military operation the raid had been an expensive failure. It gave little tangible return for the losses it had suffered and the resources it had absorbed. The damage it did to Japanese communications was repaired in a few days, the casualties it inflicted were negligible, and it had no immediate effect on Japanese dispositions or plans.'” Even Wingates supporters admit the operation was a failure, some describing it “an engine without a train”. Fergusson would add it ‘What did we accomplish? Not much that was tangible. What there was became distorted in the glare of publicity soon after our return. We blew up bits of railway, which did not take long to repair; we gathered some useful intelligence; we distracted the Japanese from some minor operations, and possibly from some bigger ones; we killed a few hundreds of an enemy which numbers eighty millions; we proved that it was feasible to maintain a force by supply dropping alone.' Really in the end, Wingates exploits were used for propaganda purposes lifting the terrible morale amongst the British. The sacrifice of over 800 men for a rather pointless operation had to be glorified for if not it would have crushed morale further. Sit Winston Churchill would say of Longcloth on July 24th of 1943 ‘There is no doubt that in the welter of inefficiency and lassitude which has characterised our own operations on the Indian front, this man, his force and his achievements stand out; and no question of seniority must obstruct the advance of real personalities in their proper station in war.' Wingate performed a press conference on May 20th to spin the allied propaganda machine. Reuters called them “the british ghost army”, the daily mail hailed Wingate as “clive of Burma”. Wingate had performed the typical British habit of turning obvious defeats into glorious victories, it was very much his Dunkirk. I would like to take this time to remind you all that this podcast is only made possible through the efforts of Kings and Generals over at Youtube. Please go subscribe to Kings and Generals over at Youtube and to continue helping us produce this content please check out www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals. If you are still hungry after that, give my personal channel a look over at The Pacific War Channel at Youtube, it would mean a lot to me. The mad onion man Wingate successfully, or unsuccessfully performed Operation Longcloth. His exploits became legendary, but perhaps one should look closer at the reality behind what occurred in the depths of Burma.
Serge Mangin ist Bildhauer, Aquarellist und Buchillustrator. Er porträtierte Michail Gorbatschow, Helmut Kohl, Henry Miller und andere große Persönlichkeiten. Nun hat er ein Buch geschrieben, inspiriert von Griechenland und dem besonderen Licht dort, das er als Künstler so sehr liebt. Moderation: Norbert Joa
Nowadays, it is very crucial to address the challenges around impact on the planet and society. But how to implement it and engage everyone inside of your organization? The answer: Network Effects. In our latest episode of the PIK podcast we talked to Eric Mangin, CEO, and Paul Thiroloix, CFO, from French platform NooS about that topic. The platform NooS helps organizations to activate and engage with their employees in three ways - raise the awareness - provide education - and create caring culture, for example through donations or fundraising. How? Typically, most of the companies that make donations to support social activities in their neighborhood, but they don't track the impact that has been generated by the donation. Here Noos comes into the game. Tune in to learn more and understand how you can leverage network effects to increase awareness and engagement within your organization.
In this episode we chat with one of the best young and up and coming coaches in various sports and the weight room in the state of Wisconsin Jason Mangin. We have been waiting for this one. TOPICS COVERED 1- Jason gives in depth look at the coaching change at Kimberly and how success was maintained 2 Jason talks about how losses can refocus successful teams. 3 Jason- a very polished basketball official- discusses how being a referee has helped him as a coach 4 Jason shares his GET YOUR EDGE advice! If you enjoy the podcast please share it with your athletes- teachers- parents and other coaches. Help us grow our GET YOUR EDGE community! #chopit Jason Mangin Contact Instagram-@coach_mangin Twitter @coachmangin GET YOUR EDGE PODCAST Instagram and Twitter- @getyouredgepod Dean Contact www.foxvalleythrowsclub.com Instagram and Twitter- @foxvalleythrows Brian Contact www.sportsadvantedge.com Instagram- @sportsadvantedge / @brianbott Twitter- @botter23 / @sportadvantedge Graphics and Logo- Bailey Marash Instagram and Twitter- @bmarasch13
The Return to Embodiment: consciousness, culture, creativity and flourishing
In this conversation, we talk about embodiment from the perspective of acting practice, examining our shared roots in an acting community and the applications and understandings that grew from those roots. Andy reflects on how the creation of the treatre is a humanizing force, which connects people to themselves and others, crafts shared story and community. Andy Mangin has been at Wheaton since 2005, teaching students how to produce theater in a liberal arts environment. He manages the productions, designs and builds sets, acts, teaches and directs. Some of Andy's favorites have been Will Eno's Middletown and Tony Kushner's The Illusion. He teaches Devised Theater, Directing and Acting classes. With an MFA in Acting from Southern Methodist University and a hammer in the other hand, Andy crafts the actual sets as well as the performances for Arena Theatre. Mango Woodworks Link :www.instagram.com/p/Clj4lo1OdUu/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link An article about Andy's woodworking: www.twohandsinteriors.com/journal-page/2020/4/21/working-with-a-talented-maker Here is a video about Andy's shakesphere in the park project from 2016. https://youtu.be/Eq-FY6Lvnak
We talk Bama Vs UT. We talk MNF. Sorry about no intro... coming soon (it was the first time) Twitter- @AllEyesOnSports, Evan_Mangin anchor.fm/alleyesonsports --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/alleyesonsports/message
We talk a lot of college football and recap the boring Thursday night game on todays show. anchor.fm/alleyesonsports --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/alleyesonsports/message
Longtime sports photographer Brad Mangin joins Talkin' Baseball to talk his new book- "28: A Photographic Tribute to Buster Posey." Brad and Brian Murphy teams up with Buster Posey himself in this visual celebration of the star catcher's twelve seasons with the San Francisco Giants.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Longtime sports photographer Brad Mangin joins Talkin' Baseball to talk his new book- "28: A Photographic Tribute to Buster Posey." Brad and Brian Murphy teams up with Buster Posey himself in this visual celebration of the star catcher's twelve seasons with the San Francisco Giants.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Giants photographer Brad Mangin joins Murph and Mac to discuss the release of "28" and the life of Buster Posey.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Giants photographer Brad Mangin joins Murph and Mac to discuss the release of "28" and the life of Buster Posey.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On how fewer and fewer sports photographers are able to make a living; on running out of film during an epic Derek Jeter home run; on shooting for Sports Illustrated and The National; on what makes Buster Posey an ideal subject.
We cover a lot of different types of workflows on this podcast. They're all equally as complicated, and some are very specifically designed for a given industry. In today's episode we'll have Charles Mangin from N-Able on to talk about how the Managed Service Provider (MSP) treats Apple devices and how the latest innovations from Apple have helped to shape how MSPs can be more productive. Hosts: Tom Bridge - @tbridge777 Marcus Ransom - @marcusransom Guests: Charles Mangin - @mac_mgmt_nerd Transcript: Transcription of this episode brought to you by Meter.com Click here to read the transcript Links: https://twitter.com/mac_mgmt_nerd Automation Cookbook Charles Mangin's Blog Frotz Text Adventure Emulator Doom on John Deere Tractors Pitch Dark Eaten by a Grue Sponsors: Kandji Black Glove Mosyle Watchman Monitoring If you're interested in sponsoring the Mac Admins Podcast, please email podcast@macadmins.org for more information. Get the latest about the Mac Admins Podcast, follow us on Twitter! We're @MacAdmPodcast! The Mac Admins Podcast has launched a Patreon Campaign! Our named patrons this month include Weldon Dodd, Damien Barrett, Justin Holt, Chad Swarthout, William Smith, Stephen Weinstein, Seb Nash, Dan McLaughlin, Joe Sfarra, Nate Cinal, Jon Brown, Dan Barker, Tim Perfitt, Ashley MacKinlay, Tobias Linder Philippe Daoust, AJ Potrebka, Adam Burg, & Hamlin Krewson
Bay Area Freelance Photographer Brad Mangin discusses his tribute book to Buster Posey on KNBR Tonight with F.P. Santangelo See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Bay Area Freelance Photographer Brad Mangin discusses his tribute book to Buster Posey on KNBR Tonight with F.P. Santangelo See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Débat entre Marc Ferracci, pour Ensemble!, le parti présidentiel, et Magali Mangin, pour la NUPES - Nouvelle Union populaire écologique et sociale.
Interview de Magali Mangin, membre de la France Insoumise, candidate de la NUPES pour les Français de Suisse et du Liechtenstein.
Brad Mangin joins Murph and Mac to discuss the release of his book "28: A Photographic Tribute to Buster Posey" See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Brad Mangin joins Murph and Mac to discuss the release of his book "28: A Photographic Tribute to Buster Posey" See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Authors Lindsey Sparks and Lindsey Pogue chat with editor and author Holly Hill Mangin about her solo debut, The House on the Lake, philosphical and mysterious gothic romance that is a cross between The Midnight Library by Matt Haig and the movie The Others. WARNING: This episode contains spoilers about The House on the Lake. HOLLY HILL MANGIN's LINKS: Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/Holly-Hill-Mangin/e/B08XVTQ23NFacebook (as an author): https://www.facebook.com/HollyMangin/ Facebook (as an editor): https://www.facebook.com/freshasadaisyediting Website (as an editor): https://www.freshasadaisyediting.com/ BOOK RECS!Blood and Ash series by Jennifer L. ArmentroutThe Fortuna Coin by Karen Ann HopkinsThe Parallel Series by Elle O'RoarkCity of Ruin by Lindsey Pogue (pre-order)War by Laura ThalassaThe Midnight Library by Matt HaigCURRENT FREEBIES (at the time of episode airing):Echo in Time by Lindsey SparksDust & Shadow by Lindsey PogueThe Darkest Winter by Lindsey Pogue--Join the No Shelf Control Podcast Facebook Group:www.facebook.com/groups/noshelfcontrolpodcastLindsey Pogue's website:https://www.lindseypogue.com/Lindsey Sparks' website:https://www.authorlindseysparks.com/Support the show
Drew's College Athlete Spotlight is back for yet another episode! On a bi-weekly series here on Jordon and Drew: The Sports Crew, our very own Drew Skyberg sits down with Seth Mangin, a basketball player for the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay at Manitowoc Blue Devils, to discuss what it is like being involved in a sport at the collegiate level and how his high school career influenced his decision. Make sure to follow Seth on Instagram @sethmangin22! NOTE: Seth Mangin did not score 2,000 points in high school. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/drewsportscrew/support
Drew's College Athlete Spotlight is back for yet another episode! On a bi-weekly series here on Jordon and Drew: The Sports Crew, our very own Drew Skyberg sits down with Seth Mangin, a basketball player for the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay at Manitowoc Blue Devils, to discuss what it is like being involved in a sport at the collegiate level and how his high school career influenced his decision. Make sure to follow Seth on Instagram @sethmangin22! NOTE: Seth Mangin did not score 2,000 points in high school. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/drewsportscrew/support
Louis-David Mangin is the CEO of Confiant, Inc. Confiant is the first company to launch a malvertising product that captured harmful ads in real time, protecting users from forceful redirects and phishing scams (like the very recent Elon Musk bitcoin fiasco). Confiant also just launched the first-ever Privacy Compliance Product to ensure consent matches with GDPR and CCPA and similar evolving regulations (Confiant has a very robust research arm on the pulse of emerging regulatory). What you can do is know what to do with an idea! Infected and broken ads were a problem. How infected ads work. Ads were running in Flash. Industry debt - infrastructure debt that the advertising industry has. 3 types of software - software written by engineer, advertising tech, security tech. In Ad industry 15% of video ads don't work right off the bat. The good news is that the industry is paying attention. Pay attention to the ads that show up. Tell the site that you don't like the ads. Look at whether the site cares about advertising standards. Consent is a currency. Browser fingerprinting is barely legal and cannot be consented to. What does consent mean? Never Split The Difference by Chris Voss - A fake Yes is the easiest thing to get to. In order to be held accountable, you have to know the what are we being held accountable for Malicious clickbait ads are technically cloaked to load as the “correct ad” unless that person matches their target profile. The Cybersecurity 202: The Biden administration rolls out a 100-day plan to improve electric grid cybersecurity Tag Barnakle: The Malvertiser That Hacks Revive Ad Servers, Redirects Victims To Malware Link to the most recent Malvertising and Ad Quality Index Thanks to our mission partner: Buoyancy Digital is proud to be the inaugural Mission Partner for the Cybertraps Podcast series. A digital advertising consultancy with an ethos, Buoyancy was founded by Scott Rabinowitz, who has been in digital media since 1997 and has overseen $300 million in youth safety compliant ad buys across all digital platforms. For IAB, Google and Bing accredited brand and audience safe advertising sales solutions, media buying and organizational training for media publishers, let's chat.
Est-ce la fin du télétravail ? Rémi Mangin, président de CD&B, expert et passionné par le sujet de l'espace de travail nous livre son avis très tranché sur la question. J'ai adoré son approche tranchée et très originale sur le sujet ! Au programme : - Après la Covid, est-ce la fin du télétravail ? - Comment les faire revenir !!! - L'open space est-il efficace ? - Qu'est-ce que le flexoffice ? - Pourquoi Jacques Attali avait tort et raison … - L'environnement de travail peut révolutionner l'entreprise. - Pourquoi aller au bureau ? Lien forum : https://forum.outilsdumanager.com/t/podcast-275-le-teletravail-m-a-tuer-avec-remi-mangin/3476 Lien formactions : https://www.formactions.outilsdumanager.com/MADdesc
Jose Mangin is the host, curator at SiriusXM's Liquid Metal and Octane. We talk about his love for metal, hosting The Mitch Lucker Memorial Show, and much more. instagram.com/josemangin Subscribe on YouTube: https://bit.ly/TheGarzaPodcastOfficial Listen on Spotify and Apple Podcasts: https://open.spotify.com/show/4Re2Ss3prlxFXgX0PsFzjk?si=kGfHFpGeRH6x2VdjNvsn7w https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-garza-podcast/id1551076579 Follow Garza on the internet: instagram.com/chrisgarza Order some merch: kingsroadmerch.com/the-garza-podcast