Podcast appearances and mentions of oscar lewis

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Best podcasts about oscar lewis

Latest podcast episodes about oscar lewis

The P3 Project for Diverse Entrepreneurs
Aviation Expert Oscar Lewis Talks Air Traffic Control and Business After Recent Air Collision

The P3 Project for Diverse Entrepreneurs

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2025 39:16


Air traffic control and aviation expert Oscar Lewis, president of The Lewis Company, visits the P3 Project podcast to discuss the recent midair collision of a military helicopter and passenger airplane near Washington, D.C. Lewis provides his insight on the accident and shares why DEI (Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion) had nothing to do with this mishap. Lewis also discusses his journey to building a successful business in logistics management, aviation science and engineering services. The Lewis Company is based in North Carolina and has Orlando, Florida, and Virginia offices. Visit https://thelewiscompanies.com/ for more information. Shelton Russell, publisher of American DBE Magazine, is the host of the P3 Project. Visit http://www.americandbe.com  

The Extreme History Project: The Dirt on the Past
Pictograph Cave with Tim Urbaniak

The Extreme History Project: The Dirt on the Past

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2023 65:40


Join us as we talk with Tim Urbaniak about his new book, Men of the Cave: The Excavation of Empty Gulch. We discuss the 1937 archaeological excavation of Empty Gulch, now known as Pictograph Cave State Park. This project was financed by the Works Progress Administration (WPA) and employed a group of men, and one woman, to excavate this significant archaeological site. We discuss the key players including Oscar Lewis, William Mulloy, Mel Sayre, and others involved in this excavation. We also talk about the importance of the artifacts documented by Oscar Lewis and his team and what the artifacts can tell us about the people who lived in Pictograph Cave. If you would like a copy of this book, please contact Tim Urbaniak at turbaniak@bresnan.net. A BIG thank you to the Museum of the Rockies for sponsoring this episode of The Dirt on the Past.   

Dancing on Desks
Episode 3 | Carceral Curriculum: It's By Design

Dancing on Desks

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2021 52:46


During our three-part series on the carceral curriculum in our schools, we ask, “How do we abolish carcerality in our schools (and beyond)?” In this second episode, we ask Dr. Rahsaan Mahadeo: “How are schools designed for carcerality?” Rahsaan challenges us to consider how schools become places of racialized disablement for Black and Brown students through curriculum and discipline policies. Mahadeo implores us to consider how educators can refuse to consent to participate in school-based carcerality and to understand our complicity in upholding carcerality in our schools. Special education expert, LeShone Jai, adds complexity to our discussion of IEPs. In “What I Don't Get Paid For,” Kishanna Laurie gets us to delete the email app from our phones and #ReclaimOurTime. Poet Kweku John moves us with a poem about dance inspired by Adinkra symbols. Thank you for listening. Love, us. Intellectual Inheritance: Thank you to Rahsaan Mahadeo for recommending many of these texts in our conversation with him. And the ones he did not recommend were inspired by his words. W.E.B. DuBois, The Negro Criminal and Black Reconstruction in America, 1860-1880 (open rebellion) Saidiyah Hartman, Wayward Lives, Beautiful Experiments Jina B. Kim, Toward a Crip-of-Color Critique: Thinking with Minich's “Enabling Whom?” (racialized disablement) Oscar Lewis, The Children of Sanchez, coined the term “culture of poverty” Mary Oliver, Upstream Dylan Rodríguez, White Reconstruction: Domestic Warfare and the Logics of Genocide Joseph Schumpeter, Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy (creative destruction) Carla Shalaby, Troublemakers Damien Sojoyner, First Strike: Educational Enclosures in Black Los Angeles Music: O. Y Productions, Afrobeat x Amapiano Instrumental | Afrobeat Type Beat 2021 - Happy Smith the Master, Green Tea Original theme music by Mara Johnson, Elliott Wilkes, and monét cooper --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/dancingondesks/message

Then & Now: Philosophy, History & Politics
The Invention Of Individual Responsibility

Then & Now: Philosophy, History & Politics

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2021 52:14


Humans love to fix things, to find the cause of a problem, to probe, tinker, and mend. We ask, in many different ways, Why does this happen? What's the root cause? What's the origin? What or who is at fault? What or who is responsible? But there are three subjects that have intertwined with the topic of responsibly more than others. The idea of responsibility has many forms both historically and culturally. Philosophers have debated whether we can be truly responsible for our actions in the context of discussions about free-will; theologians have wrestled with the idea of taking responsibility for our sins; scientists have joined the discussion by searching for causation and exploring the psychology and neurology of our brains. But today, the idea of individual responsibility is often invoked in discussions about welfare, poverty, and enterprise. Increasingly, throughout the liberal and neoliberal periods, we've – in politics and the media, at least - emphasised ‘responsibility for ourselves' at the expense of other types of responsibilities, moral obligations, or duties. Is poverty a personal inadequacy? A problem of persons? A problem of character? A problem of culture? Or is it a problem of place? Of systems? Of society? The particular form ‘individual responsibility' has taken today – atomised, asocietal, ideally self-dependent, culturally ‘backward', genetically limited – is a relatively new historical and political concept which is used to justify the dismantling of welfare, the rejection of altruism, and the unravelling of community. Any cultural interpretation of responsibility is bound-up with politics, language, culture and society, and, has a history that's not simply progressive and linear. Instead of being responsible for ourselves, the concept of 'mutual obligations' or duties includes the responsibility to work hard and improve ourselves, but can also better accommodate contributing to the world, aiding others, remembering no man is an island and turning our gaze not inwards but outwards. I look at how this idea of individual responsibility developed in parallel with the history of poverty, looking at Edward Banfield's The Moral Basis of a Backward Soceity, Oscar Lewis' Culture of Poverty, Daniel Moynihan's The Negro Family, Charles Murray's Losing Ground and the Bell Curve, and George Gilder's Wealth and Poverty. We look at poverty and responsibility from the Middle Ages, through to the Poor Laws, to Kennedy, LBJ, The Great Society, The War on Poverty, to the Reagan and Thatcher era and to Obama and Fox News today. Of course, Jordan Peterson also makes an appearance. Then & Now is FAN-FUNDED! Support me on Patreon and pledge as little as $1 per video: http://patreon.com/user?u=3517018

The Extreme History Project: The Dirt on the Past
The History of Archaeology in Montana with Nancy Mahoney

The Extreme History Project: The Dirt on the Past

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2021 75:20


Join us this week as Crystal interviews Nancy about her research on the history of archaeology in Montana through the lens of three men including amateur archaeologist Oscar Lewis, academic William Mulloy, and advocate Melville Sayre. We discuss their work to bring archaeology to Montana and the significant archaeological sites they excavated in the 1930s and 1940s, including Pictograph Cave and the Hagan Site. 

From the Archives
La Vida

From the Archives

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2021 34:55


In this week's episode, I talk about the 1966 ethnography by Oscar Lewis (and uncredited co-author Rosita Gonzales) La Vida: A Puerto Rican Family in the Culture of Poverty - San Juan and New York. Join the book conversation every Thursday, 11 AM EST over on the Anthropology Archives YouTube channel! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/anthropologyarchives/support

new york culture oscar lewis
Cool Concept
CCP Episode 50 | Oscar Lewis & Ellis Jackson (X Dorei Samurai & The Fallen) [Interview]

Cool Concept

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2020 45:40


Mikel Miles Interviews Oscar Lewis & Ellis Jackson Discuss The Creation of "X Dorei Samurai" and "The Fallen" Manga, Puzzle Head Entertainment, Black Creators In Comics & More.

fallen samurai dorei oscar lewis
Past Present
Episode 146: Crafting, the 2008 Financial Crisis, and the Marshmallow Test

Past Present

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2018 48:54


In this episode, Niki, Natalia, and Neil discuss the new reality show Making It, the 2008 financial collapse ten years later, and the death of Walter Mischel, the social psychologist who created the “marshmallow test.” Support Past Present on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pastpresentpodcast Here are some links and references mentioned during this week’s show:  Making It, a crafting competition show hosted by Amy Poehler and Nick Offerman, is widely considered a welcome break from the cutthroat culture of reality television and of politics. Natalia recommended this American Conservative article on the limits of television crafting. Ten years after the economic crash of 2008, its effects are still felt. Natalia cited M.H. Miller’s New York Times essay, “I Came of Age During the 2008 Financial Crisis. I’m Still Angry About It”. Neil recommended the New York Times’ entire Sunday Business section’s retrospective on this topic. Social psychologist Walter Mischel, best known for orchestrating the “marshmallow test” that famously connected children’s ability to delay gratification with their long-term prospects for success, has died. Natalia referred to Oscar Lewis’ 1961 book, Children of Sanchez: Autobiography of a Mexican Family.    In our regular closing feature, What’s Making History: Natalia discussed Stanford University’s decision to remove the name of Junipero Serra from a major building and street. Neil reflected on Sigal Samuel’s Atlantic article, “The Sex-Abuse Scandal is Growing Faster Than the Church Can Contain It.” Niki shared Nadra Nittle’s Vox article, “Students Are Waging War On Sexist and Racist Dress Codes – And They’re Winning.”

The P3 Project for Diverse Entrepreneurs
P3 Project Conversation with Oscar Lewis, President and CEO of The Lewis Company

The P3 Project for Diverse Entrepreneurs

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2018 42:52


The P3 Project Podcast Episode 002. A conversation with Oscar Lewis, president and CEO of The Lewis Company discussing business strategy and innovation for diverse firms owned by minority (MBE), women (WBE), and disadvantaged (DBE) business owners. P3 Project host Shelton A. Russell, publisher of American DBE Magazine, talks with Oscar Lewis about his patented 21st Century Smart Runway System the he believes will transform airport design in the future. Lewis also talks about his business strategy of focusing on customer relationships and solving customer problems. The P3 Project is a weekly podcast helping diverse entrepreneurs in the design, construction and transportation industries live their passion, pursue their passion and increase their profits. Visit www.P3Project.biz and www.AmericanDBE.com to learn more about The P3 Project and American DBE Magazine.

MontanaHistoricalSociety

Lewis and a partner launched the first archaeological excavations at Pictograph Cave.

oscar lewis
Oficio de antropólogos
Libros polémicos de antropología: "Los hijos de Sánchez" de Oscar Lewis

Oficio de antropólogos

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2014 7:12


El libro de antropología que nos ocupa en esta ocasión entraña una polémica que se extendió más allá del mundo académico, pues logró incidir en el ámbito político y judicial en México. Se trata de Los hijos de Sánchez. Autobiografía de una familia mexicana, del antropólogo estadounidense Oscar Lewis, publicado originalmente en inglés en el año de 1961 y cuatro años más tarde su traducción al español con el sello editorial del Fondo de Cultura Económica. Por cierto, quizás por la controversia que desató, este libro irrumpió además en el mundo del cine y de la música. En 1978 fue adaptado al guión cinematográfico y dio pie a la filmación de la película que lleva el mismo nombre, la cual fue protagonizada por Anthony Quinn como Jesús Sánchez, Dolores del Río y Lupita Ferrer. Por su parte, la música de la película fue compuesta por el afamado trompetista neoyorquino Chuck Mangione y de hecho constituye su 16vo álbum titulado Children of Sanchez. Oscar Lewis nació en la ciudad de Nueva York en el año de 1914 y falleció en la misma ciudad en 1979, a punto de cumplir 56 años de edad. Lewis es reconocido, entre otras cosas, por proponer la idea de “cultura de la pobreza” y definirla como una adaptación y una reacción a las condiciones de pobreza y marginalidad en el marco de una sociedad estratificada. De hecho, una de sus más importantes obras se titula justamente Antropología de la pobreza. Para poner a prueba esta idea, Lewis realizó diversos estudios etnográficos en México, en la India y en Puerto Rico. Su experiencia de investigación en México, realizada en la década de 1950, así como la interesante polémica que generó, serán los temas que nos ocupe en esta ocasión. Muchas gracias por haber escuchado Oficio de Antropólogos Texto y creación: Eduardo González Múñiz, Antropólogo. Su foco de interés es la historia de la antropología. Voz: Aída Mendoza Producción: Verónica Gutiérrez Los invito a consultar el texto de este podcast, donde también podrán encontrar las referencias bibliográficas entre muchos otros interesantes blogs. La cita es en www.lacifraeditorial.blogspot.mx/ contacto: @anthropologing Eduardo González M. cienciasenlahistoria@gmail.com Podcaster: @Terp_wise terpwise@gmail.com Voz: @__stitches__

Esteri
Esteri di giovedì 21/11/2013

Esteri

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2013 30:45


1-Germania: Angela Merkel cede sul salario minimo...2-Eurozona a rischio deflazione. Intervista a Gertrude Tumpell Gugerell...3-Dallas 22 novembre: vigilia del 50 esimo anniversario dell'assassinio di JFK. ..5-Cop19,in polemica con i governi gli ambientalisti lasciano Varsavia..6-la fine della lotta di classe, da Oscar Lewis a Susan George. Gli appunti di Alfredo Somoza ( dialoghi.info) ..A lunedì 25 Novembre!!

Esteri
Esteri di gio 21/11

Esteri

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2013 30:46


1-Germania: Angela Merkel cede sul salario minimo...2-Eurozona a rischio deflazione. Intervista a Gertrude Tumpell Gugerell...3-Dallas 22 novembre: vigilia del 50 esimo anniversario dell'assassinio di JFK. ..5-Cop19,in polemica con i governi gli ambientalisti lasciano Varsavia..6-la fine della lotta di classe, da Oscar Lewis a Susan George. Gli appunti di Alfredo Somoza ( dialoghi.info) ..A lunedì 25 Novembre!!

Esteri
Esteri di gio 21/11

Esteri

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2013 30:46


1-Germania: Angela Merkel cede sul salario minimo...2-Eurozona a rischio deflazione. Intervista a Gertrude Tumpell Gugerell...3-Dallas 22 novembre: vigilia del 50 esimo anniversario dell'assassinio di JFK. ..5-Cop19,in polemica con i governi gli ambientalisti lasciano Varsavia..6-la fine della lotta di classe, da Oscar Lewis a Susan George. Gli appunti di Alfredo Somoza ( dialoghi.info) ..A lunedì 25 Novembre!!