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Best podcasts about ProQuest

Latest podcast episodes about ProQuest

Strange Country
Strange Country Ep. 299: Charlotte Osgood Mason

Strange Country

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2025 50:25


Charlotte Osborne Mason was one of the biggest benefactors of the Harlem Renaissance but her patronage came with a cost. While she gave noted luminaries Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston monthly stipends to make art, she wanted a say in what the art would be in order to realize her vision: a flaming bridge to connect America to Africa. Strange Country cohosts Beth and Kelly talk about this strange rich white lady who believed she knew more about being Black than the artists she supported with strings. Theme music: Big White Lie by A Cast of Thousands Cite your sources: Boyd, Valerie. “About Zora Neale Hurston.” Zora Neale Hurston, 18 September 2024, https://www.zoranealehurston.com/about/. Accessed 7 May 2025. Hosie, Rachel. “Powerful people act as if they've suffered a traumatic brain injury, find scientists.” The Independent, 26 June 2017, https://www.the-independent.com/life-style/powerful-people-brain-injury-traumatic-empathy-mirroring-keltner-study-science-a7807946.html. Accessed 13 June 2025. “When Hurston Had a (Mule) Bone to Pick with Hughes.” Proquest, 20 June 2018, https://about.proquest.com/en/blog/2018/when-hurston-had-a-mule-bone-to-pick-with-hughes/. Kaplan, Carla. Miss Anne in Harlem: The White Women of the Black Renaissance. HarperCollins, 2013. Panovka, Rebecca. “A Different Backstory for Zora Neale Hurston's “Barracoon.”” Los Angeles Review of Books, 7 July 2018, https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/different-backstory-for-zora-neale-hurstons-barracoon/. Accessed 7 May 2025.  

Strange Country
Strange Country Ep. 297: Elizabeth Dilling

Strange Country

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2025 55:40


Does it make you feel better to know that America has always been populated by horrible people determined to ostracize others and destroy our democratic principles? Probably not. But it's true. The ghouls we see today are repeating the things that ghouls of the past once said. Today's episode of Strange Country, cohosts Beth and Kelly talk about ghoulish Elizabeth Dilling, a self-proclaimed sahm who traveled the country preaching in the 1930s about the communists all around us and wrote crank Glenn Beck's fav book. Theme music: Big White Lie by A Cast of Thousands Cite your sources: ERICKSON, CHRISTINE K. ""I have Not had One Fact Disproven": Elizabeth Dilling's Crusade Against Communism in the 1930s." Journal of American Studies, vol. 36, 2002, pp. 473-489. ProQuest, https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/i-have-not-had-one-fact-disproven-elizabeth/docview/195681500/se-2. Jeansonne, Glen. Women of the far right : the mothers' movement and World War II. University of Chicago Press, 1996. Accessed 6 May 2025. Tan, Sarah. “Quick Facts About Candace Owens: Net Worth, Husband George Farmer, Children and More.” IBTimes UK, 11 February 2025, https://www.ibtimes.co.uk/quick-facts-about-candace-owens-net-worth-husband-george-farmer-children-more-1730903. Accessed 20 April 2025.

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast
Arsenal Pass Ep211 - Rune-Busted!

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2025 77:56


This week on the pod is all about Rune-Busted! The ProQuest dominance of Runeblade in the forms of Aurora and Florian through week two of the season. With Aurora set to also hit Living Legend this coming weekend (3 heroes in 3 weeks!) we take a look at what next for the final two weeks of Pro Quest. Special Thanks to our Tome of Fyendal Patron Derrick Correia  Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ArsenalPass Review Us: https://ratethispodcast.com/arsenalpass Email: arsenalpassfab@gmail.com Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClhUUppHaVDBUOJHXL-a0EQ Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6H2Y8uTHZaVgxpjhnTBn6n?si=R6Uya7paT_e2HOr4n2KC-w X: @Fyen_Dale (Hayden) X: @EthnicSmoke (Pankaj) Hosts: Hayden Dale & Pankaj Bhojwani

Most Controversial
unlocked: old newspapers

Most Controversial

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2025 61:32


I went on the ProQuest archive to find old articles about animals and the accidents related to them.

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast
Arsenal Pass Ep209 - Out with the Old & in with the New in Classic Constructed

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2025 81:15


Enigma and Zen are on the way out of Classic Constructed this weekend at ProQuest Singapore week one! Now all eyes turn to what happens next, and in this pod we break down what the next meta might look like! Which picks are the best positioned for week two of ProQuest, heroes to avoid and possible sleeper picks.  Special Thanks to our Tome of Fyendal Patron Derrick Correia  Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ArsenalPass Review Us: https://ratethispodcast.com/arsenalpass Email: arsenalpassfab@gmail.com Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClhUUppHaVDBUOJHXL-a0EQ Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6H2Y8uTHZaVgxpjhnTBn6n?si=R6Uya7paT_e2HOr4n2KC-w X: @Fyen_Dale (Hayden) X: @EthnicSmoke (Pankaj) Hosts: Hayden Dale & Pankaj Bhojwani

Love Marry Kill
Nancy and Chris Benoit - Part 1

Love Marry Kill

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2025 75:14


Chris Benoit known as the Canadian Crippler or the Rabid Wolverine was a WWE star in the 22nd year of a storied career. He was known to be a wrestler's wrestler- one of the most technically proficient athletes among the corps of actors and performers. Chris Jericho once said Chris Benoit was the “most intense and believable performer I've ever been in the ring with. He could see things that were going to happen before they happened.” Chris won many heavyweight and tag team championships, and he'd made a lot of money doing it. He was doing exactly what he'd wanted to do for his entire life- since he was 3-years-old. His friends and colleagues all knew him to be a respectful, reserved and polite family man. So, it came as quite a shock to everybody when he and his family were found dead under suspicious circumstances, in their sprawling Fayetteville, Georgia home. This is the story of a woman, her child, and to some extent, a man, who were failed by the very institution that should have protected them.The question on everyone's mind…could the tragedy have been prevented?Listen to both parts on Patreon now.Today's snacks: Levain Bakery Dark Chocolate Chocolate Chip CookiesSources:https://concussioninc.net/?p=497 Benoit 911 callsBenoit: Wrestling with the Horror that Destroyed a Family and Crippled a Sport - collected essays by Steven Johnson, Heath McCoy, Irvin Muchnick and Creg OliverRingmaster: Vince McMahon and the Unmaking of America, by Abraham Josephine RiesmanChris and Nancy: The True Story of the Benoit Murder-Suicide & Pro Wrestling's Cocktail of Death, by Irvin Muchnickhttps://www.autopsyfiles.org/reports/Celebs/benoit,%20chris_report.pdf Chris' autopsy reporthttps://www.greenwichtime.com/news/article/Sunday-subscriber-advantage-WWE-steroid-385857.php#page-1https://www.biography.com/athletes/andre-the-gianthttps://youtu.be/0b90OweR0n4?si=d8ZIkwEA_FNkz0wWhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V_9hGvpkvws&ab_channel=Scott%27sWrestlingCollectionhttps://ezproxy.bu.edu/login?qurl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.proquest.com%2Fwire-feeds%2Frepeated-concussions-led-wrestler-chris-benoits%2Fdocview%2F360118700%2Fse-2%3Faccountid%3D9676 (STUFFCO, JERED. "Repeated Concussions Led to Wrestler Chris Benoit's Suicide: CBC Documentary." The Canadian Press, Feb 05 2008, ProQuest. Web. 1 Nov. 2024)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BgOdvHHXlr4&ab_channel=MrAdrenaline1982https://archive.ph/20120629093200/http://slam.canoe.ca/SlamWrestlingArchive2000/jan14_ins.htmlhttps://www.fightful.com/wrestling/jay-white-details-life-inside-njpw-dojohttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HBXZIr6DP-c&t=47shttps://abcnews.go.com/GMA/story?id=3320736https://www.fightful.com/wrestling/phil-carroll-astin-doctor-chris-benoit-passes-away-age-67https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Nq6UZR8YjNHQb56lZ6kuXqlnxJAoSPclc5hh-qfKa48/edit?tab=t.0

Episode 7 Season 6- Paola Cavallari- Historian on a mission

"The Bulldog Educator" with Kirsten Wilson

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2024 52:08


In this episode author, scholar and public historian Paola Cavallari talks about the life and accomplishments of Raye Montague, Little Rock native and creator of the first computer-generated rough draft of a U.S. naval ship. Paola shares her research from her masters thesis, “The Raye Montague Digital Collection,” which catalogs the military and civil accomplishments of Montague and is set for publication on ProQuest in the coming weeks.  How to connect with Paola: @PaolaCavallari on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paola-cavallari-98141527/ To learn more about the life and legacy of Raye Montague: Montague, Raye Jean Jordan - Encyclopedia of Arkansas Check out the Raye Montague Papers 1933- 2019 at the Center for Arkansas History and Culture  Take a look at “Overnight Code: The Life of Raye Montague, the Woman Who Revolutionized Naval Engineering” by Paige Bowers and David Montague Listeners please share your thoughts and ideas with us on our social media accounts on ⁠⁠⁠⁠X, ⁠⁠⁠⁠Instagram ⁠⁠⁠⁠or ⁠⁠⁠⁠Facebook⁠⁠⁠⁠ @thebulldogedu  You can also follow Matt on instagram ⁠⁠⁠⁠@CastIron⁠⁠⁠⁠ or X  ⁠⁠⁠⁠@MatthewCaston⁠⁠⁠⁠ and Kirsten on ⁠⁠⁠⁠Instagram⁠⁠⁠⁠ or  X @teachkiwi, or ⁠⁠⁠⁠Facebook⁠⁠⁠⁠ or ⁠⁠⁠⁠LinkedIN ⁠⁠⁠⁠as Kirsten Wilson. Please subscribe to The Bulldog Educator to continue listening on your favorite podcast platform.

The Arise Podcast
Season 5, Episode 4: Dr. Phillip Allen Jr and Danielle S. Castillejo talk about the Plantation Complex, the Election and Implications

The Arise Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2024 56:20


https://www.philallenjr.comPhil is a man driven by vision, compelled to fulfill God's calling on his life. His passion is not only to see individuals come to know and grow in a relationship with Jesus, but to see social transformation that includes addressing systems and structures that affect the everyday lives of people, especially those typically pushed to the margins because of oppression, injustices, and inequities grounded in race, gender, sexuality, ability, age, and any part of their being that does not fit the dominant group membership.As an All-American high school basketball player, Phil attended North Carolina A&T University to play basketball and study architectural engineering. Upon his call to ministry years later, he went on to receive his Bachelors in Theological Studies, with an emphasis in Christian Ministries from The King's University. While working as a full-time lead pastor of Own Your Faith Ministries (Santa Clarita, CA), Phil completed a Master of Arts in Theology degree from Fuller Theological Seminary, studying Christian Ethics. As a current PhD candidate in Christian Ethics, with a minor in Theology and Culture, his research involves race theory, theology, ethics, culture, and the theology and ethics of Martin Luther King, Jr.He is founder of the non-profit organization Racial Solidarity Project based in Los Angeles, CA. His passion for dialogue, resistance, and solutions to the problem of systemic racism was fostered by his family and personal life experiences as well as his educational journey. Phil was recently named a Pannell Center for Black Church Studies Fellow at Fuller Theological Seminary. As a fellow his research on Black Church theology, liturgy, and ethics further undergirds his own ethics of justice, healing racial trauma, and racial solidarity. He has taught undergraduate classes on biblical ethics toward racial solidarity. His fields of interest include Christian ethics, Black Church studies, race theory, pneumatology, theology of justice and theology of play and sport.When he isn't pastoring, studying, or writing, Phil enjoys running, bowling, basketball, and just watching his favorite television shows. As an all-around creative, he is an author, a teacher, pastor, filmmaker (see his documentary Open Wounds), but first a poet. His diverse experiences and interests have gifted him with the ability to relate to and inspire just about anyone he meets.He is the author of two books, Open Wounds: A Story of Racial Tragedy, Trauma, and Redemption (Fortress Press, 2021) and The Prophetic Lens: The Camera and Black Moral Agency From MLK to Darnella Frazier (Fortress Press, 2022).Speaker 1 (00:13):Welcome to the Arise podcast, conversations on faith, race, justice, gender, and the church. And tune in and listen to this conversation today. Dr. Phil Allen, Jr and myself are going to have a conversation today. And if you go to his website, phil allen jr.com, you can see that his quote is Justice Matters, my neighbors Matter, creation matters, faith Matters. And really in this conversation, I want you to pay attention to those points that he makes in this quote from his website and how that filters through in the research he does in the point of view he's bringing to the table for this conversation on what are we doing? And I think a lot of people are like, are we still talking about the Yes, we're still talking about it. Yes. It's still relevant and we're talking about it because from understanding creates pathways towards action, towards organizing, towards being together with one another in community so that we can support justice, so that we can support our neighbors so that we have faith in creator. And so I want to encourage you to listen through that lens. Go find his website, phil allen jr.com. Look up this amazing man, this professor, he's got a podcast, he's got books, poetry speaking, a documentary. Don't hesitate to reach out, but as you listen, focusing on justice Neighbor and creation and Faith.(01:48):Yeah. What has it been like for you since the election? Or what's that been likeSpeaker 2 (01:57):Since the election? The first couple of days were, I was a bit numb. I was very disappointed in 2016. I wasn't surprised. I had this feeling that he was going to win, even though people thought Hillary would win. I just didn't have the confidence in those battleground swing state. I thought he represented something that a lot of people in this country are drawn to. And this year I really felt like she was going to win. Vice President Harris was going to win because of the coalition, because of the momentum. People can critique and criticize her campaign, but there's nothing orthodox about starting a hundred days before. And I think what they did was calculated. I won't say perfect, but it was good. It was a solid campaign given what she had to work with. And I really thought she would win. And I was just extremely disappointed. It was like this heaviness over me, but then after day two, things started to feel a little bit lighter. I just put things in perspective. I wasn't going to sulk and sit in some sadness because this man won. I think I was more disappointed in the people like what is our standard, particularly Christians, conservative Christians, what is the standard now? How low is the bar?(04:04):And honestly, I don't know if there's anyone else on the planet, any other demographic that could have done that with 34 felonies saying the things that he says about people of color, about women, about veterans. I mean, he just literally does not care. There's no man or woman of color. There's no woman, there's no one else that could do that. And people would ignore everything, do theological gymnastics and to justify everything and still vote for 'em. No one else could pull it off. And I think for me, it just solidified the type of country we live in. So I'm good now, as good as I can be. I can't change it, so I'm not going to sulk and be sad. I'm going to continue to do the work that God has called me to do and continue to chat, put a video out. I think you may have seen it on social media just to put my thoughts out there, put words to my feelings and just move forward. Yep.Speaker 1 (05:24):When you think about, is it okay if I ask you a couple of questions?Speaker 3 (05:28):Yeah.Speaker 1 (05:29):When you think about your research and completing your PhD and the theory and work and the evidence and structures you uncovered in that research, then how does that continue to frame your outlook for where we are today? ItSpeaker 2 (05:52):Couldn't, this election was interesting. This election confirmed for me, my research,Speaker 1 (05:59):Yes.Speaker 2 (06:02):I'll give you one part of it. In my research I talk about the plantation complex and it's made up of three major categories and there are subcategories under each one, organizing properties, modes of power, and operating practices. Three major categories Under organizing properties, there are four properties I list. I'm not saying it's an exhaustive list. Someone else might come in and want to tweak it and change it. That's fine. What I came up with is for vision covenant, spatial arrangement and epistemology, and specifically theological scientific epistemology, specifically white racial covenant. For those two, those are the specific terms I use. And to me, vice President Harris asked a question, this is about what kind of country do we want? That's a statement about what kind of vision do you have? Would you like to see this country embody? So vision is always there. We're always talking about, we're always casting vision when we tell stories, when we talk about how we want the, whether it's the education system, immigration, whatever. We're casting a vision, but what do we want to see? And then that ends up driving so much of what weSpeaker 3 (07:45):Do.Speaker 2 (07:48):We have the vision now of this is what America wants.Speaker 1 (07:52):Yes,Speaker 2 (07:54):They want this man with all, he's not just a flawed human being, in my opinion. He's a vile human being. She also is not a perfect candidate. She's a decent woman. She's a decent person. Two vastly different visions for this country. Then you talk about spatial arrangement. Electoral college is about spatial arrangement. You have your blue states, your red states, but everything comes down to five or six. Sometimes one state decides the election, and it all depends on who's living in that state, how are the districts redrawn. All types of stuff can play out. But to me, I saw that going on and then I saw white racial covenant play out. You look at who voted for who, percentage wise, and I kept seeing this allegiance, this covenant with Donald Trump, and there had to have been independents and even some Democrats that voted for him to have voted at such a high clip when his base is only 37%, 40% at most, and a Republican party is half. And he gets, I don't know. I just started to see those things play out. And from my dissertation, just those four categories, the stuff that we don't even pay attention to, they shape society, vision, spatial arrangement, covenant whose allegiance, who has your allegiance, because that drives decision making that drives what you value. It influences what you value. And epistemology, theological, scientific epistemology, he's the chosen one.(10:03):God chose him for such a time as the, I keep hearing this language. So they're using theological language to justify everything about this man. So yeah.Speaker 1 (10:18):Yeah.Speaker 2 (10:19):It's hard for me not to see through that lens. Now that I spent six years researching it, it's hard for me not to see through those lenses the lens of power, how power is operating, what type of power is operating and the practices and all that stuff.Speaker 1 (10:38):There's so much you said that I know we could jump into. Particularly when you talk about the white racial covenant. I was struck at, there's intersection between our research areas, and I was thinking about in grad school before I even got into my post-grad research, I wrote about three things for the Latinx Latino community that kind of inform the way white supremacy has infiltrated our lives. One is silence, one is compliance, and then lastly is erasure. And as we saw the swing, and they've talked ad nauseum about Latinos when we are a minimal part of the electoral vote, but they've talked ad nauseum about the movement specifically of men. But when you think of the demand to be silent over centuries, the demand to comply, and then the sense that maybe I can erase myself and what can I trade in for the good graces to get into the good graces of white racial identity and vote against my own best interests, vote against protecting my community, vote against even maybe even protecting my grandma or my kid that's on daca, et cetera. What was the cost? And as you were explaining that, I was seeing it through that lens that you were describing.Speaker 2 (12:17):Yep, yep. What's interesting is one of the practices, I talk about tokenization on the plantation or some would say tokenism, and there's always white racial covenant is not just among white people.(12:42):It's anyone from any group, including my community. Those who want, they want to be in closer proximity to whiteness. They want to be accepted into the white way of being. And when I say whiteness, you understand what I'm saying? I'm not just talking about white persons or white ethnicity. We're talking about a way of being in the world, a lens through which you see the world and move in that. And you can be a person of color and totally embrace whiteness, internalize that it only takes a few to then that's an effort to legitimize it, to legitimize. See, look at those. Look at that black guy or that Latino seed. They get it, and it further legitimizes that worldview.Speaker 1 (13:38):Yeah. I know for me, I felt so deeply, I don't think disappointment is the right word, but maybe I felt betrayed, but also I felt deeply, I just felt the weight of what centuries have done. And then I think it was like a Sunday afternoon where he's in Madison Square Garden using the most vile of comments, the most vile of comments to degrade our race, our ethnicity, where we come from, and then to turn around and garner a vote. I mean, it fits into your theory.Speaker 2 (14:26):So think about what he said when he first ran in 2016. I can stand on Fifth Avenue in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot someone and I won't lose any votes. Now, fast forward to 2024 in Madison Square Garden, the lineup, the things he said, he didn't condemn anything. He invites white supremacists into his home for dinner. He welcomes them. He literally does not care because he understands the allegiance, not just from his base, but even those adjacent to his base. And that's why I keep saying, how low is this bar that you can have those people? Because everyone thought, oh, this is it. That just killed it for 'em. It did not matter. No, it did not matter. Some of it is, I think based on race, and some of it is based on gender. Some of it's a combination of both. And that's why I said in my video, she didn't stand a chance anytime people kept saying, we need to hear more and I need to get to know her more. Well, what are you watching?Speaker 3 (15:47):WhatSpeaker 2 (15:47):Else do you need to know? She's told her whole story over and over again. She's literally laid out bullet point, what she wants to do. What else is there half the people who say that don't even understand these concepts anyway?Speaker 3 (16:04):Yeah,Speaker 2 (16:05):They don't understand it. They're not understand this stuff.Speaker 1 (16:11):I guess what you say, really, it triggered something in my mind and see what you do with it. He stood in Madison Square Garden, and I actually wonder now, looking at it with the lens of a tiny bit of space that maybe if even that was riveting for people, even some of the adjacent people of color that voted for him, because it's riveting that someone could have that much power and get away with it and move in the world without consequence. And I think a lot of people are looking for that sort of autonomy or freedom to move or it's appealing. The power of it is appealing in a way that I didn't think about it before you said it, and I don't know that that's it, but I get curious about it because it definitely didn't take any votes away.Speaker 2 (17:09):And I'm glad you used the word curious because we're just theorizing right now, sharing opinions how we feel. And so I'm curious as well about a lot of these things. I'm just at a loss for words. I don't even know how to wrap my mind around that. I do think is an appeal though. I do think there is in my dissertation that the type of power that I talk about is autocratic ideological power where the ideology, it's not a person, the autonomous sovereign power. And I borrowed from Fuko, so I'm using a little bit of fuko, Michelle Fuko, and he uses the term sovereign power like king, a dictator, Vladimir Putin type of person. And I'm saying, don't have a king. And it's not one person with that type of autonomy, but there's an ideology that has that type of autonomy and we can add appeal, and it's the ideology of white supremacy. And it's almost like, well, he should be able to get away with that subconsciously. Not saying that people are saying that consciously, but it's almost like it's normalized like he should because had she said any of those things, oh, she shouldn't say those things. How dare she?(18:44):Or if Obama, when Obama said they clinging to their guns and their religion, they wanted to crucify. He shouldn't say those things. How dare he? But Trump can say, grab him by the lose no votes,Speaker 1 (19:04):Right?Speaker 2 (19:06):I don't like some of the things that he says. I wish he would tone down some of the things that he says, but so there's an autonomy. So where is it? Is it in him or is it in the ideology that he embodies? And it's appealing because so many people can share in that on different levels. So the idea is that if you go back to the plantation, every white person had some level of power over a black body and immunity, unless they got in trouble with a slave owner for killing or damagingSpeaker 1 (19:45):Property.Speaker 2 (19:47):But every person on every level shared to varying degrees in this autocracy of ideology, autocracy of white supremacy, same thing is happening today. So he can say it, the comedian can say it, congressmen and women can say it, Marjorie till green can say whatever she wants. Gates can say, I mean, these people can say whatever they want, especially if they're in closer proximity to him because he is the ultimate right now, the ultimate embodiment of the superiority of whiteness. And so there is this subconscious, I think, appeal to that. How we are drawn to the bad guy in the film. We're drawn to the villain in the wrestling match. We just kind of drawn to them a bit. There's an appeal to that type of power and to get away with it. So I like that word appeal to it,Speaker 1 (21:04):Man. I mean, I started getting really scared as you were talking because this power and this appeal and the way you're describing it, well, how did you say it? The ideology or is, what did you call it? Autonomous powerSpeaker 2 (21:27):Autocratic. Ideological power.Speaker 1 (21:29):Autocratic. Ideological power isn't just one person. It's embodied in this feeling. And that I think fits with the way I'm thinking. I got scared as you were talking because it's been hyper-focused on immigration and on a certain group of people so you can gain proximity to power. And I kind of wonder how is that going to play out? How will people play that out in their imaginations or in their communities is like what gets them closer to that power? Especially if, I mean, we could debate on tariffs and all that stuff, but no one I'm hearing from is telling me that tariffs are going to bring down the cost of goods. I've heard that nowhere. So then what are you going to do if you feel more hopeless and you're part of that working, let's say white or white adjacent class, where will you focus your energy? What can you control? So I think as you were talking, I started getting scared. I was like, this is a dangerous thing.Speaker 2 (22:34):So here's what I've told someone. Sadly, the only person who could have beaten Trump in 2020 was Joe Biden, a white man. A white woman wouldn't have been able to do it. Black woman, black man, Latino, Asian. It took a white man because people still needs to be, they needed to vote against him. They needed to see themselves. That's the majority of the country. They need to see themselves. Biden wasn't the best candidate by far. No, but he was the only one who could beatSpeaker 1 (23:16):Trump.Speaker 2 (23:17):Now, he wasn't going to win this election, even though Trump has shown signs over the last year or so of aging, doesn't matter. He's loud and boisterous. So he gets a little bit of a pass. But guess what? If that hopelessness sets in the left, the Democrats are going to have to present another white man. You're not going to beat the part. You're not going to win the next election with someone other than a white man to beat this. He is the embodiment. He is the golden calf. You need at least a beige calf. You're not going to win the next election with with someone that looks like me or you, or its going to be, that's the sad part. So with that hopelessness, if they feel that and they feel like, okay, it is been the last four years has not been what he's promised, you're going to have to present them with an alternative that's still adjacent, at least in aesthetics, optics. And then you might, after that, if everything is going well, now someone can come off of that. This is the unfortunate reality. Biden is the only one that was going to be able to beat him in 2020, and I think it's going to take the same thing in 2020. It's definitely going to take a man because he's got the movement, the masculine movement. He's brought that up to serve. It's going to take a man to do it. Unfortunately, a woman may not be able to push back against that, but I think it's going to have to take a white man.Speaker 1 (25:08):Yeah, I think you're right. I don't think another female can win against him. There's no waySpeaker 2 (25:15):He embodies the ideology of white in his posture, his tone, his rhetoric, his height, everything about him embodies, if you look at the history in this country of whiteness is the physical manifestation of it. And I'm not the only one that has said that.Speaker 1 (25:37):No,Speaker 2 (25:39):He is not just a physical manifestation. He is, at least in this era, he is the manifestation of it. He is the embodiment of it, attitude and everything.Speaker 1 (25:59):Yeah, I guess you just find me silent because I believe you. It's true. There's no doubt in my mind. And it's also stunning that this is where we're at, that people, again, I mean to fall back on what you've researched, people chose the plantation owner,Speaker 2 (26:31):And many people who do don't see themselves in the position of the enslaved,Speaker 1 (26:39):No,Speaker 2 (26:39):They see themselves as benefiting from or having favor from the plantation owner. They're either the overseer or the driver, or they're one of the family members or guests on the plantation. But no one's going to willingly choose a system that they don't benefit from. So they believe they will benefit from this, or they're willing to accept some treatment for the promise of prosperity. That's the other issue that we have. People see this. They see the world through an economic lens only. For me, I got to look at the world through a moral lens, an ethical lens. That's how I'm trained, but that's just how I've always been. Because if I look at it through an economic lens, I'll put up with anything, as long as you can put money in my pocket, you can call me the N word. If that's my, you can probably call me the N word. As long as you put money in my pocket, I'll tolerate it. And that's unfortunately how people see, again, when people talk about the economy, how many people understand economics,Speaker 1 (27:53):Honestly, whatSpeaker 2 (27:54):Percentage they do understand how much it's costing me to pay these groceries. What they don't understand is the why underneath all that, because I think they did one thing they could have done better. The Democrats is explain to people corporate greed. The cost of living is always going up. It may drop a little bit, but it's always doing this.Speaker 1 (28:29):But Phil, I would argue back with you that I don't think these people wanted to understand.Speaker 2 (28:35):You don't have to argue. I agree. ISpeaker 1 (28:38):Talked to some folks and I was like, dude, tariffs, your avocado's going to be $12. They mostly come from Mexico. How are you going to afford an avocado? And it's like, it didn'tSpeaker 2 (28:52):Matter. The golden calf.Speaker 1 (28:57):The golden calf, Elliot comes back. I mean, I want to work to make these people, in a sense, ignorant. I want to work to think of it like that, not because it benefits me, but maybe it does. To think that some people didn't vote with the ideas that we're talking about in mine, but they absolutely did.Speaker 2 (29:23):And I think you're dead on. It's a willingness or unwillingness to want to know. I'm just simply saying that many don't. You may see people interviewed on television or surveys, or even when you talk to people, I'm just simply saying they don't really understand. I got three degrees. I still need to read up and study and understand economics. That's not my field, right? So I'm still learning the nuances and complexities of that, but I'm a researcher by nature. Now most people aren't. So I'm just simply saying that they just don't know. They think they know, but they really don't. But a more accurate description of that is what you just said. Most people are unwilling to know. Because here's the thing, if you learn the truth about something or the facts about something, now you're forced to have to make a decision you might not want to make.Speaker 1 (30:28):Exactly. That's exactly right. Yep.Speaker 2 (30:35):It's like wanting to ban books and erase history and rewrite history. Because if you really did, to this day, whether I'm teaching or having conversations, I share basic stuff, stuff about history. And there's so many people that I never knew that, and I knew this stuff when I was a kid. I never knew that. What are we learning? Is everything stem.Speaker 1 (31:11):When Trump referenced the operation under Eisenhower Wetback, operation Wetback, I knew about that. I had researched it after high school in college, and I knew at that point, part of the success of that project was that they were able to deport citizens and stem the tide of, they didn't want them having more kids or reproducing, so they got rid of entire families. That was very intentional. That's purposeful. And so when they talk about deporting criminals, well, there just aren't that many criminals to deport. But for the Latino to understand that they would have to give up the idea that they could become adjacent to that power structure and benefit.Speaker 2 (32:12):Absolutely.Speaker 1 (32:14):YouSpeaker 2 (32:14):Have to give up something.Speaker 1 (32:15):You have to give up something. And so they traded in their grandma, literally, that's what's going to happen.Speaker 2 (32:27):And so now there's a connection between the golden calf and fear. So not only is he the idol, but he has the rhetoric to tap the fear, the anxiety. And when you've been in majority for a few hundred years now, the idea of no longer being the majority in the country scares a lot of people. It doesn't scare people of color. We don't really think about it because we've always been the minority. And I don't think one group is going to be the majority, maybe the Latino community because of immigration one day, maybe, probably not in my lifetime, but most of us are used to being in the minority that scares the dominant group, the white group. I've had conversations within the church years ago where this anxiety, not just with Latinos, but Muslims,Speaker 1 (33:41):Yep, MuslimsSpeaker 2 (33:42):As well. This fear that they're having so many more babies than we are, and how they try to pull people of color who are Americans into this by saying they're trying to have more babies than Americans. So now they want us to also have this fear of the other. So you got the idol who has the rhetoric to tap into the sentiments,Speaker 1 (34:13):Right? Yeah. Sorry, keep going. No,Speaker 2 (34:15):Go on. Go, go.Speaker 1 (34:17):Well, I mean, it just brings up the whole idea of when he said, the migrants are taking the black jobs. I was like, what jobs are these? And the intent is only to divide us.Speaker 2 (34:31):Yes. So I've had conversations with some African-Americans who I know are not, I know these people. These are just random people. They're not as in tune with politics. They're just kind of speaking the taglines that they heard. And I said, what jobs are they taking? And they can't answer that. But it's the same thing that happened 400 years ago almost. When they created the very terms white and black. There was this revolt among poor whites and poor and enslaved black people, particularly in Virginia. And I'm thinking of Bacon's Rebellion and how do you defeat that coalition? You divide them, you find a way to divide them. How's that? They came up with the term 1670s. They came up with the term white and black, and they had a range, I think it was somewhat white, almost white. White, somewhat black, almost black, black. But they had the termed white and black. And if you were of European descent, you could now be considered a white person. And with that came privileges, or as WEB, the voice would say the wages of whiteness, theSpeaker 1 (35:55):WagesSpeaker 2 (35:55):Of you could own property. And if you own a certain amount of property, you could vote. You could be a citizen. You had freedom of mobility. If you were black, you were meant to be enslaved in perpetuity. So now the poor whites, even though they did not benefit from slavery,Speaker 3 (36:20):BecauseSpeaker 2 (36:22):The free enslaved Africans took the opportunities from poor whites who were able to work the land and earn some type of money, but now you've got free labor. So slavery actually hurt them. And the hierarchy, it hurt them. Wealthy white folks did not look well upon for white people. But why were they so had such allegiance? Because they had this identity, this membership into whiteness. And at least they weren't on the bottom.Speaker 1 (37:04):At least they weren't on the bottom. That's right.Speaker 2 (37:07):And so the same tactic is happening here is find a way to divide black and brown, divide black and Palestinian divide, because you knew black women were going to vote 90 plus percent. I thought black men would be 80 plus percent. Turns out they were 78, 70 9%. I thought black men would've been a little bit higher than that, but you knew black folks were going to vote in mass. But you find a way to divide and separate others from that coalition.Speaker 1 (37:53):Yeah. Well, here we are, Phil. What gives you, and I know we could talk about this for a long time. What are you operating on right now? I know you said you're not going to wallow in the sadness at the very beginning, but what is your organizing moment? What is your faith compelling you to do in this moment? How do you see the coming year?Speaker 2 (38:19):I am doubling down on my voice being more direct, being more the truth teller. I never want to lose truth with grace. I don't want to become the thing I disdain, but it is through my writing that I'm now doubling down and able to publish and put out what I believe is truth. It's factually based evidence-based. Some may call controversial, some may not. I don't know. But that's where I put my energy because I have more energy now to do that since I graduated, so I can invest more time, whether it's working on my next book, project op-Eds articles in the next year. So that's what I'm hoping to write. I'm hoping to take a lot of what I learned in the last six years and put it out there for the world. So it is just motivating me even more, whether it's poetry, academic stuff, teaching, and I've already been doing some of that. I just have the energy now to engage more.Speaker 1 (39:54):And sadly, you have more material to work with.Speaker 2 (39:57):Yeah, yeah, that'sSpeaker 1 (39:59):True. It's happening in real time. Yeah,Speaker 2 (40:03):Real time.Speaker 1 (40:05):Well, how can folks get ahold of you if they want to invite you to be part of their group or to come speak orSpeaker 2 (40:12):Easiest would be phil allen jr.com. And they can go to, and you can email me through there, social media on Instagram, Phil Allen Jr. PhD, Facebook at Phil Allen Jr. Not the author page, the personal page. I'm still trying to delete the author page, but for whatever reason, Facebook makes it very difficult to delete your own page.Speaker 1 (40:42):They do,Speaker 2 (40:44):But Phil Allen Jr. My personal page is on Facebook. Those are only two social media platforms I have other than threads. Phil Allen, Jr. PhD on Instagram and Threads, Phil Allen Jr. On Facebook, Phil Allen jr.com, and those are the ways to reach me.Speaker 1 (41:04):How can folks get ahold of the writing you've already done in your research and read more about what we've been talking about? How can they get ahold of what you've already done?Speaker 2 (41:15):So my first two books, open Wounds and the Prophetic Lens, you can get 'em on Amazon, would love it if you could purchase a copy and after you've read, even if you read some of it and you felt led to leave a review, that helps. I'm currently revising my dissertation so that it's more accessible, so I'm changing, you get it, the academic language, that's not my true voice. So I'm trying to revise that so I can speak and sound more like me, which is more of a poetic voice. So I want to write in that sweet spot where it's still respected and used in academic spaces, but it's more accessible to people beyond academia who are interested in the subject matter. So that hopefully, I've been shopping it to publishers and I'm still shopping. So hopefully, if not next fall, hopefully by early 2026, that book can be published.Speaker 3 (42:21):Okay.Speaker 2 (42:24):The dissertation, you can go to ProQuest and you can type in my name Phil Allen Jr. You can type in the plantation complex.Speaker 3 (42:35):Okay.Speaker 2 (42:36):No, not the Plantation Complex America. The PlantationSpeaker 1 (42:41):America, the Plantation.Speaker 2 (42:43):That's the title. And it's on proquest.com. That's where dissertations are published. So right now, it may cost something to read it, to get ahold of it, but you can look for it there until we revise and rewrite and publish the book.Speaker 1 (43:01):I'm really looking forward to, I haven't read your dissertation, but I want to, and I'm really looking forward to reading that book that's coming out.Speaker 2 (43:09):Thank you. Yes. And my YouTube channel, I don't really talk much. You can just type in my name, Phil Allen, Jr. There's quite a few spoken word videos, some old sermons I on there as well.Speaker 1 (43:25):Okay. Thank you, Phil.Speaker 2 (43:29):Lemme stop. Thank you.Speaker 1 (43:32):Thank you for joining us today, and I'm just honored to be in conversation with folks that are on this journey. We are not alone. If you need other kinds of resources, please don't hesitate to look up in our notes, some of the resources we listed in previous episodes, and also take good care of your bodies. Well, first I guess I would have to believe that there was or is an actual political dialogue taking place that I could potentially be a part of. And honestly, I'm not sure that I believe that.

The SpokenWeb Podcast
Virtual Pilgrimage: Where Medieval Meets Modern

The SpokenWeb Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2024 51:52


SUMMARYFrom medieval itineraries to modern livestreams, Christian pilgrimage is often, if not always experienced through an imaginative transposal from a physical reality to a spiritual truth. In this episode, hosts Lindsay Pereira and Ella Jando-Saul explore the concept of virtual pilgrimage through conversations with two guests: Michael Van Dussen, a professor in the Department of English at McGill University in Tiohtià:ke/Montreal, teaches us about the medieval experience of pilgrimage in the British Isles while Simon Coleman, a professor in the Department for the Study of Religion at the University of Toronto teaches us about the modern reconstruction of pilgrimage to Walsingham in Norfolk, England.Simon Coleman's latest book, Powers of Pilgrimage: Religion in a World of Movement, can be found here.*VOICE AND SOUND CREDITSInterviewees:Dr. Michael Van Dussen, Professor of English Literature, McGill University.Dr. Simon Coleman, Professor of Anthropology and Religion, University of Toronto.Theme music:“Ai Tal Domna”: composed by Berenguier de Palou, recorded by Zep Hurme ©2014. Licensed under Creative Commons BY-NC. Available at https://ccmixter.org/files/zep_hurme/38429Voice credits:Stephen Yeager, voice of the HostGhislaine Comeau, voice of the MillerAndre Furlani, voice of the Reeve, drunkard, beggar, and donation collectorSound credits:Magical Minstrelsy: Where Medieval Meets Modern Through Mimesis, Season 1 Episode 1: Virtual Pilgrimage uses sounds from Freesound. All sound samples that were used in this episode are licensed under CC0 1.0:Footsteps on dirt: https://freesound.org/people/lzmraul/sounds/389454/Birds: https://freesound.org/people/MATRIXXX_/sounds/519110/Water: https://freesound.org/people/BurghRecords/sounds/415151/Cows: https://freesound.org/people/Nontu_Lwazi00/sounds/541920/Sheep: https://freesound.org/people/rent55/sounds/709921/Horse on dirt: https://freesound.org/people/Ornery/sounds/233345/Horse with cart: https://freesound.org/people/bruno.auzet/sounds/538438/Footsteps on cobblestone: https://freesound.org/people/SpliceSound/sounds/260120/Medieval city: https://freesound.org/people/OGsoundFX/sounds/423119/Church bells: https://freesound.org/people/Audeption/sounds/425172/Coins: https://freesound.org/people/husky70/sounds/161315/Blacksmith: https://freesound.org/people/Emmaproductions/sounds/254371/Music: https://ccmixter.org/files/asteria/2615Church coins: https://freesound.org/people/scripsi/sounds/335191/Gregorian chant: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ecce.lignum.Crucis.oggCrowd gasping: https://freesound.org/people/craigsmith/sounds/480774/Baby crying: https://freesound.org/people/the_yura/sounds/211527/Breath: https://freesound.org/people/launemax/sounds/274769/Heartbeat: https://freesound.org/people/newlocknew/sounds/612642/Works Cited and ConsultedAhmed, Sara. The Cultural Politics of Emotion. Routledge, 2015.Arsuaga, Ana Echevarría. “The shrine as mediator: England, castile, and the pilgrimage to Compostela.” England and Iberia in the Middle Ages, 12th–15th Century, 2007, pp. 47–65, https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230603103_4.Arvay, Susan M. “Private passions: The contemplation of suffering in medieval affective devotions.” (2008).Bailey, Anne E. “Reconsidering the Medieval Experience at the Shrine in High Medieval England.” Journal of Medieval History, vol. 47, no. 2, Mar. 2021, pp. 203–29. DOI.org (Crossref), https://doi.org/10.1080/03044181.2021.1895874.Beckstead, Zachary. “On the way: Pilgrimage and liminal experiences.” Experience on the Edge: Theorizing Liminality, 2021, pp. 85–105, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-83171-4_5.Beebe, Kathryne. Reading Mental Pilgrimage in Context: The Imaginary Pilgrims and Real Travels of Felix Fabri's “Die Sionpilger.” West Virginia University Press, 2009.Benjamin, Walter. “The work of art in the age of mechanical reproduction.” Modern Art and Modernism: A Critical Anthology, 2018, pp. 217–220, https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429498909-39Cassidy-Welch, Megan. “Pilgrimage and embodiment: Captives and the cult of saints in late medieval bavaria.” Parergon, vol. 20, no. 2, 2003, pp. 47–70, https://doi.org/10.1353/pgn.2003.0101.Coleman, Simon, and John Elsner. “Tradition as play: Pilgrimage to ‘England's Nazareth.'” History and Anthropology, vol. 15, no. 3, 2004, pp. 273–288, https://doi.org/10.1080/0275720042000257430.Coleman, Simon, Ellen Badone, and Sharon R. Roseman. “Pilgrimage to ‘England's Nazareth': Landscapes of Myth and Memory at Walsingham.” Intersecting Journeys: The Anthropology of Pilgrimage and Tourism, University of Illinois Press, Urbana, IL, 2004, pp. 52–67.Coleman, Simon, and Marion Bowman. “Religion in Cathedrals: Pilgrimage, Heritage, Adjacency, and the Politics of Replication in Northern Europe.” Religion, vol. 49, no. 1, Jan. 2019, pp. 1–23. Taylor and Francis+NEJM, https://doi.org/10.1080/0048721X.2018.1515341.Coleman, Simon, and John Elsner. “Pilgrimage to Walsingham and the Re-Invention of the Middle Ages.” Pilgrimage Explored, edited by J. (Jennie) Stopford, York Medieval Press, 1999. WorldCat Discovery Service, https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=16637.Díaz-Vera, Javier E. “Exploring the relationship between emotions, language and space: Construals of awe in medieval English language and pilgrimage experience.” Studia Neophilologica, vol. 88, no. 2, 2015, pp. 165–189, https://doi.org/10.1080/00393274.2015.1093918.Foster, Elisa A. “As You Came from the Holy Land: Medieval Pilgrimage to Walsingham and Its Crusader Contexts.” Crusading and Ideas of the Holy Land in Medieval Britain, edited by Kathryn Hurlock and Laura J. Whatley, Brepols, Turnhout, Belgium, 2022, pp. 91– 114.Gertsman, Elina, and Marian Bleeke. “The Eve Fragment from Autun and the Emotionalism of Pilgrimage.” Crying in the Middle Ages: Tears of History, Routledge, New York, NY, 2013, pp. 23–41.Grazia Di Stefano, Laura. “How to be a time traveller: Exploring Venice with a fifteenth-century pilgrimage guide.” Making the Medieval Relevant, 2019, pp. 171–190, https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110546316-008.Gregg, Melissa, and Gregory J. Seigworth. The Affect Theory Reader. Duke University Press, 2010.Hill, Joyce. “Rome in Ripon: St Wilfrid's Inspiration and Legacy.” History, vol. 105, no. 367, 2020, pp. 603–25. Wiley Online Library, https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-229X.13027.Hill‐Smith, Connie. “Cyberpilgrimage: The (virtual) reality of online pilgrimage experience.” Religion Compass, vol. 5, no. 6, 2011, pp. 236–246, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1749-8171.2011.00277.x.Hundley, Catherine. “Pilgrims in the Parish: A Method and Two Herefordshire Case Studies.” Peregrinations: Journal of Medieval Art and Architecture, vol. 8, no. 3, Oct. 2022, pp. 40–87.Hurlock, Kathryn. “Virtual Pilgrimage.” Medieval Welsh Pilgrimage, C1100-1500, Palgrave Macmillan, New York, NY, 2018, pp. 145–174.Jenkins, John. “Replication or Rivalry? The ‘Becketization' of Pilgrimage in English Cathedrals.” Religion, vol. 49, no. 1, Jan. 2019, pp. 24–47. DOI.org (Crossref), https://doi.org/10.1080/0048721X.2018.1515327.Kempe, Margery, and Anthony Paul Bale. The Book of Margery Kempe. Oxford University Press, 2015.Kuefler, Mathew. The Making and Unmaking of a Saint: Hagiography and Memory in the Cult of Gerald d'Aurillac. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2014.Langland, William, and Schmidt A. V. C. Piers Plowman: A New Translation of the B-Text. Oxford University Press, 2009.Nickell, S. A. The Limits of Embodiment: The Implication of Written and Artistic Portrayals of Mary at the Foot of the Cross for Late Medieval Affective Spirituality, Graduate Theological Union, United States -- California, 2011. ProQuest, https://lib-ezproxy.concordia.ca/login?qurl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.proquest.com%2Fdissertations-theses%2Flimits-embodiment-implication-written-artistic%2Fdocview%2F875240824%2Fse-2%3Faccountid%3D10246.Ousterhout, Robert. “‘Sweetly Refreshed in Imagination': Remembering Jerusalem in Words and Images.” Gesta, vol. 48, no. 2, Jan. 2009, pp. 153–68. www-journals-uchicago-edu.lib-ezproxy.concordia.ca (Atypon), https://doi.org/10.2307/29764905.Powell, Hilary. “Saints, Pilgrimage and Landscape in Early Medieval Kent, c. 800-1220.” Early Medieval Kent, 800-1220, Boydell Press, 2016, pp. 133–53.Sinnett-Smith, Jane. “Ætheldreda in the North: Tracing Northern Networks in the Liber Eliensis and the Vie de Seinte Audree.” Late Medieval Devotion to Saints from the North of England: New Directions, edited by Christiania Whitehead et al., Brepols, Turnhout, Belgium, 2022, pp. 285–303.Wynn, Mark. “God, pilgrimage, and acknowledgement of Place.” Religious Studies, vol. 43, no. 2, 2007, pp. 145–163, https://doi.org/10.1017/s0034412506008778.

Flesh and Pod - Flesh and Blood Podcast
Episode 152 Welcome Back!

Flesh and Pod - Flesh and Blood Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2024 128:50


Charmer is back! Logan won a ProQuest! Does this mean the world is ending? Maybe...but that won't stop Darick and Logan from hitting all the hot #fabtcg news including the results of ProQuest Week 3, the World Championship in Osaka this weekend, and a revisit with JARLS BARKLEY. Plus some...interesting...listener questions...Subscribe to our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/fleshandpodCheck us out on Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3lWbhCfWe're available on Apple Podcast: https://apple.co/3dF4IQ3Join our Discord here: https://discord.gg/nrGegbag4uQuestions and comments can be sent to @FleshPod on Twitter, as well as fleshandpod@gmail.comPod Twitter: @FleshPodPod Blue Sky: @fleshandpod.bsky.socialCharmer Twitter: @ThatCHARM3RDoa Blue Sky: @charm3r.comLogan Twitter: @LoganPetersenLogan Blue Sky: @loganpetersen.bsky.social

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast
Arsenal Pass Ep182 - Enigma is the Best Deck in Classic Constructed

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2024 53:49


Fresh off the back of the Calling Lyon and a top24 finish, Mr. Matt Rogers the most decorated FABTCG player to date joins us to breakdown playing Enigma for the Calling. We also discuss the new best meta deck and what to look out for and play this coming weekend, week one of the latest ProQuest season! Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ArsenalPass Review Us: https://ratethispodcast.com/arsenalpass Email: arsenalpassfab@gmail.com Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClhUUppHaVDBUOJHXL-a0EQ Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6H2Y8uTHZaVgxpjhnTBn6n?si=R6Uya7paT_e2HOr4n2KC-w X: @Fyen_Dale (Hayden) X: @MattRogersNZ Host: Hayden Dale

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast
Arsenal Pass Ep181 - The New Faces of Classic Constructed with Rosetta!

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2024 80:56


The Rosetta meta is here! Fresh off the Battle Hardened in Sydney Hayden is joined this week by Pankaj Bhojwani to break down this new meta and Hayden's CC experience. Pankaj, aka EthnicSmoke is a pro player and current LSS caster for Pro Tours and Callings. A Nuu enjoyer and former Iyslander aficionado!  What is the best deck for week one of ProQuest season? What are the decks to beat and what will we be playing? Find out in episode 181 of Arsenal Pass! Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ArsenalPass Review Us: https://ratethispodcast.com/arsenalpass Email: arsenalpassfab@gmail.com Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClhUUppHaVDBUOJHXL-a0EQ Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6H2Y8uTHZaVgxpjhnTBn6n?si=R6Uya7paT_e2HOr4n2KC-w X: @Fyen_Dale (Hayden) X: @EthnicSmoke Host: Hayden Dale

Stuff You Missed in History Class
Domenica Guillaume Walter and l'Affaire Lacaze

Stuff You Missed in History Class

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2024 42:31 Transcription Available


Dominica Guillaume Walter's life was full of drama and scandal. She was accused of attempted murder, blackmail, and forgery as she tried to maintain control of her late husband's art collection. Research: Bondar, Yaroslava. “Domenica Guillaume Walter's Crimes of Dispassion.” Cultured. 3/21/2023. https://www.culturedmag.com/article/2023/03/21/domenica-guillaume-walter-art-scandal By ROBERT C. DOTY, Special to The New York Times. "THE PARIS SCANDALS: INTRIGUE IN HIGH PLACES." New York Times (1923-), Feb 08 1959, p. 1. ProQuest. Web. 8 Aug. 2024 . Clerc, Christine. “L'Étonnante Histoire de la Collection Walter-Guillaume a l'Orangerie.” Revue des Deux Mondes. February 2020. Via JSTOR. URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/26891298 Fraquelli, Simonetta and Cindy Kang. “Marie Laurencin: Sapphic Paris.” The Barnes Foundation, Philadelphia. Yale University Press. HARRISS, JOSEPH A. "THE Pygmalion OF THE AVANT-GARDE : WHILE THE ART ESTABLISHMENT SCOFFED AT MODERN PAINTING, PAUL GUILLAUME AMASSED ONE OF THE WORLD'S FINEST COLLECTIONS, NOW TRAVELING IN NORTH AMERICA." Smithsonian, vol. 31, no. 8, Nov. 2000, p. 88. Gale In Context: U.S. History, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A66278406/GPS?u=mlin_n_melpub&sid=bookmark-GPS&xid=6623725e. Accessed 7 Aug. 2024. Mahler, Luise, "Paul Guillaume," The Modern Art Index Project (January 2015), Leonard A. Lauder Research Center for Modern Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art. https://doi.org/10.57011/WMTE1884 Musée de l'Orangerie. “History of the collection.” https://www.musee-orangerie.fr/en/collection/les-arts-a-parishistory-of-the-collection Musée de l'Orangerie. “Musée de l'Orangerie: catalogue of the Jean Walter et Paul Guillaume collection.” Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication, Editions de la Réunion des musées nationaux. 1987. https://archive.org/details/musedelorangerie0000muse/ Richardson, John. “Crimes of the Art.” Vanity Fair. 4/5/2012. https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2001/03/domenica-guillaume-walter-art-scandal Snell, David. “France Again Enjoys a Notable Scandal.” Life. 3/16/1959. Special Correspondent of the Post-Dispatch. “Murder for $160,000,000?” St. Louis Post-Dispatch. 4/19/1959. Special to The New York Times. "LACAZE AFFAIR REVIVED: REST OF ALLEGED MURDER MONEY SURRENDERED IN PARIS." New York Times (1923-), Jul 08 1959, p. 3. ProQuest. Web. 8 Aug. 2024 . Special to The New York Times. "LACAZE CHARGES CUT: TWO ACCUSATIONS IN AFFAIR OF PARIS FAMILY DROPPED." New York Times (1923-), Jun 15 1960, p. 6. ProQuest. Web. 8 Aug. 2024 . Special to The New York Times. "PHYSICIAN JAILED IN PARIS SCANDAL: DOCTOR-FRIEND OF WEALTHY WIDOW REPORTED ACCUSED OF PLOT TO KILL STEPSON." New York Times (1923-), Mar 14 1959, p. 5. ProQuest. Web. 8 Aug. 2024 . Special to The New York Times. "SENSATIONAL CASE STIRS PARIS ANEW: RICH WIDOW SEES BLACKMAIL AIMED AT HER IN LACAZE CONSPIRACY CHARGE." New York Times (1923-), Feb 06 1959, p. 7. ProQuest. Web. 8 Aug. 2024. “Foreign News: The Lacaze Labyrinth.” 3/9/1959. https://time.com/archive/6888465/foreign-news-the-lacaze-labyrinth/ “FRANCE: LAffaire Lacaze.” 2/2/1959. https://time.com/archive/6829115/france-laffaire-lacaze/ Murrell, Denise. “African Influences in Modern Art.” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/aima/hd_aima.htm (April 2008) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

History For Weirdos
Episode 137: The Mysterious Disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa

History For Weirdos

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2024 64:13


Have you ever heard of a labor leader / mobster vanishing into thin air? Buckle up, Weirdos, because this week we're diving deep into the perplexing disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa, a man whose life was as captivating as his vanishing act. Andrew takes you on a wild ride through Hoffa's fascinating backstory, his meteoric rise to power as the head of the Teamsters Union, and the accomplishments that made him a legend... or a villain, depending on who you ask. We'll look into the shady dealings, the whispers of mafia connections, and the events that led up to that fateful day on July 30th, 1975 when Hoffa simply vanished from a suburban Detroit restaurant. Was it a mob hit? Did he fake his own death? Or did aliens abduct him for some intergalactic labor negotiations? Okay, maybe not that last one, but we'll explore all the theories, from the plausible to the downright bizarre, as we try to unravel this enduring mystery. So grab your detective hats and join us on this deep dive into one of history's most perplexing unsolved cases. It's a tale of power, corruption, and a disappearance that continues to baffle even the most seasoned investigators. - *We had a technical issue recording this episode so please excuse the audio in this episode. Thanks for your understanding!* - Thank you for listening Weirdos! Show the podcast some love by rating & subscribing on whichever platform you use to listen to podcasts. Your support means so much to us. Let's stay in touch

Social Yet Distanced: A View with an Emotionalorphan and Friends
The Poetry of Healing, the Healing of Poetry.

Social Yet Distanced: A View with an Emotionalorphan and Friends

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2024 4:01


The poetry of healing, the healing of poetry.  Poetry has long been recognized for its therapeutic and healing qualities, both for the writer and the reader. The act of creating or engaging with poetry can be a powerful tool for processing emotions, finding meaning, and fostering personal growth. Poetry offers a unique language that can express complex emotions and experiences that may be difficult to articulate in everyday speech. It can provide solace during times of grief, trauma, or illness by offering words that resonate with one's inner experiences. For those struggling to find language for their pain, poetry can serve as a bridge, helping to connect thoughts, feelings, and memories. Many medical professionals, including Dr. Rafael Campo, have recognized the value of poetry in healthcare settings. Campo, a poet and physician, incorporates poetry into his medical practice and teaching, using it to foster empathy and understanding among healthcare providers. He believes that poetry can help doctors better connect with their patients and understand the human experience of illness. The healing power of poetry extends beyond individual experiences to community healing as well. Poems can offer comfort, inspiration, and a sense of shared humanity. Collections like "Poems of Healing" anthologize works that address illness, recovery, and spiritual healing, providing readers with a diverse array of voices and perspectives on the healing journey. Ultimately, the relationship between poetry and healing is reciprocal. As poetry aids in healing, the process of healing itself often inspires new poetry, creating a continuous cycle of expression, understanding, and growth. Poetry can be a powerful tool for processing traumatic experiences in several ways: 1. Expression of complex emotions: Poetry provides a unique language to articulate complex emotions and experiences that may be difficult to express in everyday speech. This can help individuals give voice to feelings that might otherwise remain bottled up. 2. Gentle approach to difficult topics: Poetry allows for the use of metaphor and imagery to address trauma indirectly, providing a gentler way to approach painful memories. This can make the process of confronting trauma less overwhelming. 3. Creation of meaning: Writing poetry about traumatic experiences can help individuals make sense of what happened and find meaning in their suffering. This meaning-making process is crucial for healing and growth after trauma. 4. Bilateral brain activation: The act of constructing a poem engages both emotional and cognitive processes, activating different parts of the brain. This integration can help in processing and reframing traumatic memories. 5. Safe exploration: Poetry offers a safe space to explore and process trauma at one's own pace. The use of persona or metaphor allows for some emotional distance while still addressing the core issues. 6. Coping mechanism: Writing poetry can serve as a coping strategy, providing an outlet for difficult emotions and a way to manage trauma-related symptoms. 7. Connection and validation: Sharing poetry about trauma can help individuals feel less alone in their experiences and can foster a sense of connection with others who have gone through similar ordeals. By offering a unique blend of emotional expression, cognitive processing, and creative exploration, poetry can be a valuable tool in the journey of healing from trauma. Counselors can integrate poetry into the healing process for trauma through several methods: 1. Receptive/Prescriptive Approach: Read poems aloud to clients and encourage them to react, either verbally or non-verbally. This can help clients connect with their emotions and start processing their trauma. 2. Expressive/Creative Writing: Encourage clients to write their own poetry. This can help them discover and articulate blocked emotions and memories. Prompts can be used to facilitate this process. 3. Symbolic/Ceremonial Techniques: Use metaphors and similes to help clients express emotions that are difficult to describe literally. Ceremonial acts, like writing and then burning a letter, can also be therapeutic. 4. Meaning-Making: Poetry helps clients create meaning from their experiences, which is crucial for healing. This can involve constructing narratives around their trauma, which aids in cognitive and emotional integration. 5. Gentle Exploration: Use metaphor and persona to allow clients to address trauma indirectly, providing a safer way to explore painful memories. These methods can be tailored to the client's readiness and comfort level, ensuring a supportive and effective therapeutic experience. Here are some examples of healing poetry from the search results: 1. "The Uses of Sorrow" by Mary Oliver - This short poem conveys how even painful experiences can be gifts, offering a perspective shift on suffering. 2. "Love after Love" by Derek Walcott - Explores healing through the passage of time and learning to love oneself again. 3. "Still I Rise" by Maya Angelou - An inspirational poem about resilience and rising above adversity. 4. "Kindness" by Naomi Shihab Nye - Reflects on how experiencing loss allows us to understand and practice true kindness. 5. "The Wild Geese" by Mary Oliver - Offers reassurance about one's place in the world and connection to nature. 6. "The Peace of Wild Things" by Wendell Berry - Evokes finding peace and healing in nature. 7. "The Guest House" by Rumi - Uses the metaphor of welcoming all emotions as guests to encourage acceptance. 8. "The Journey" by Mary Oliver - Depicts the quest of following one's own path despite obstacles. These poems use vivid imagery, metaphor, and reflective language to offer comfort, perspective, and encouragement in times of difficulty. They touch on themes like resilience, self-acceptance, connection to nature, and finding meaning in hardship - all of which can contribute to emotional and psychological healing. Several contemporary poets are known for their healing poetry. Here are some notable examples: 1. Mary Oliver - Her nature-inspired poems like "The Journey" and "Wild Geese" offer solace and perspective, encouraging readers to find healing in the natural world. 2. Naomi Shihab Nye - Known for poems like "Kindness" that explore empathy and human connection as paths to healing. 3. Joy Harjo - The current U.S. Poet Laureate often addresses themes of healing, particularly in relation to Native American experiences and spirituality. 4. Gregory Orr - His work frequently deals with trauma and healing, drawing from his own experiences of loss and grief. 5. Maggie Smith - Her poem "Good Bones" went viral for its hopeful message in difficult times, and much of her work touches on resilience and healing. 6. Rupi Kaur - While controversial in some circles, her accessible poetry on trauma, femininity, and self-love has resonated with many readers seeking healing. 7. Ocean Vuong - His poetry often explores themes of identity, trauma, and resilience, particularly in the context of immigrant experiences 8. Trapeta B. Mayson - As the founder of the Healing Verse Poetry Line, she uses poetry to promote mental health and well-being. These poets approach healing from various perspectives, addressing personal, societal, and environmental wounds through their work. Sources [1] Poet Healer: Contemporary poems for health and healing - ProQuest https://search.proquest.com/openview/1d45ad3cf273ef6d89fb314f25da139b/1?cbl=18750&diss=y&pq-origsite=gscholar [2] Healing Verse Poetry Line | Philadelphia Contemporary https://philadelphiacontemporary.org/projects/healing-verse-poetry-line [3] Poet Healer: Contemporary Poems for Health and Healing https://www.amazon.com/Poet-Healer-Contemporary-Health-Healing/dp/0975442104 [4] Healing Poems - Modern Award-winning Healing Poetry https://allpoetry.com/poems/about/healing [5] THE HEALING POEMS - HOME https://www.thehealingpoems.com [1] Famous Healing Poems - PoetrySoup.com https://www.poetrysoup.com/famous/poems/healing [2] Short Poems About Healing https://poemsworld.net/short-poems-about-healing/ [3] THE HEALING POEMS - HOME https://www.thehealingpoems.com [4] Poems That Heal - Poetry Is Pretentious - https://poetryispretentious.com/poems-that-heal/ [5] Healing Poetry: Healing Poems at One Year of Writing and Healing https://writingandhealing.org/healing-poetry síocháin, and solidarity,Jack --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/socialyetdistanced/support

Fresh and Buds
142. Kayo's ProQuest Season? w/ Florin-Cristian Loghin

Fresh and Buds

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2024 66:39


Buds! Is Kayo on the LL speedrun? Our bud, Florin, joins us this week to chat about the implications of Kayo's success and much more! Like, comment, and subscribe! FRESH JUICE: An Indie Game Podcast:https://www.youtube.com/@FreshJuicePod Merch! - https://www.berrygoodembroidery.com/freshandbuds Tommy's Linktree: linktr.ee/freshbudspod

Flesh and Pod - Flesh and Blood Podcast
Episode 124 Double Tap

Flesh and Pod - Flesh and Blood Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2024 87:24


@fabtcg has certainly give us more questions than answers in regards to Part the Mistveil but FIRST, the crew checks to make sure that Dromai is gone for good! Logan and Darick break down Battle Hardened events in Atlanta and Poland as well as talk some ProQuest events and address several elephants in the room...YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCoLSSfLUQQ___-M9sNVUJFwSubscribe to our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/fleshandpodJoin our Discord here: https://discord.gg/nrGegbag4uMerch Link: https://www.berrygoodembroidery.com/fapThe Realm Brawl Tickets: http://tinyurl.com/3rjnm386 Questions and comments can be sent to @FleshPod on Twitter, as well as fleshandpod@gmail.com, or dropped in our Discord! Pod Twitter: @FleshPod Charmer Twitter: @ThatCHARM3RLogan Twitter: @LoganPetersenThe Realm Twitter: @TheRealmGames1Editing & Thumbnail by: @darth_prentiss www.greinerproductions.com

Just Minding My Business
How To Defeat The Strategy Trap

Just Minding My Business

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2024 29:46


"Strategists First is a burn-the-boats movement,and this book is the manifesto for innovators andentrepreneurs.” — Jim Goetz, Partner at Sequoia Capital, BoardMember at Intel, Three-time Winner of Forbes' The Midas ListEver wonder why you've had more strategyconversations than you can count, but not asinglestrategist discussion you can remember?That's because strategy has made a career out ofignoring the strategist—until now. Strategists First helps you learn what every strategist needs to know, including: who strategists are, what strategists believe, how strategists behave, where strategists thrive, when strategists strike,and why strategists matter.Ryan Hays has been doing strategy work for more than two decades atsome of the nation's leadingacademic institutions, including Dartmouth,Emory and Princeton. During this time, he has provided strategic counselto multiple university presidents and governing boards and co-authored several strategic plans. He currently serves as executive vice president andchief innovation and strategy officer at the University of Cincinnati.Hays received a BA from DePauw University and a PhD in psychoanalyticstudies and postmodern theory from Emory University. His dissertation onSigmund Freud has ranked among the top 25 Most-Accessed Dissertations and Theses on ProQuest, an electronic library of more than 2 million dissertations and theses.Get the book today: ryan.hays@uc.eduRemember to SUBSCRIBE so you don't miss "Information That You Can Use." Share Just Minding My Business with your family, friends, and colleagues. Engage with us by leaving a review or comment. https://g.page/r/CVKSq-IsFaY9EBM/review  Your support keeps this podcast going and growing.  Visit Just Minding My Business Media™ LLC at https://jmmbmediallc.com/  to learn how we can support you in getting more visibility on your products and services.

Stuff You Missed in History Class
'Doctress' Rebecca Crumpler

Stuff You Missed in History Class

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2024 38:53 Transcription Available


Rebecca Crumpler was the first Black woman in the United States to earn a medical degree. She also wrote one of the first, if not the first, medical texts by a Black person in the United States. Research: Allen, Patrick S. “‘We must attack the system': The Print Practice of Black ‘Doctresses'.” Arizona Quarterly: A Journal of American Literature, Culture, and Theory, Volume 74, Number 4, Winter 2018. https://doi.org/10.1353/arq.2018.0023 Boston African American National Historic Site. “Dr. Rebecca Lee Crumpler.” National Park Service. https://www.nps.gov/people/dr-rebecca-lee-crumpler.htm The Boston Globe. “Boston's Oldest Pupil.” 4/3/1898. Britannica, The Editors of Encyclopaedia. "Rebecca Lee Crumpler". Encyclopedia Britannica, 1 Jan. 2024, https://www.britannica.com/biography/Rebecca-Lee-Crumpler. Accessed 7 February 2024. Cazalet, Sylvain. “New England Female Medical College & New England Hospital for Women and Children.” http://www.homeoint.org/cazalet/histo/newengland.htm  “The Colored People's Memorial.” The News Journal. 17 Mar 1874. Crumpler, Rebecca. “A Book of Medical Discourses: In Two Parts.” Boston : Cashman, Keating, printers. 1883. https://archive.org/details/67521160R.nlm.nih.gov/mode/2up Granshaw, Michelle. “Georgia E.L. Patton.” Black Past. 12/19/2009. https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/patton-georgia-e-l-1864-1900/  Gregory, Samuel. “Doctor or Doctress?” Boston, 1868. https://digirepo.nlm.nih.gov/ext/dw/101183088/PDF/101183088.pdf Herbison, Matt. “Is that Dr. Rebecca Lee Crumpler? Misidentification, copyright, and pesky historical details.” Drexel University Legacy Center. 6/2013. https://drexel.edu/legacy-center/blog/overview/2013/june/is-that-dr-rebecca-lee-crumpler-misidentification-copyright-and-pesky-historical-details/ Herwick, Edgar B. III. “The 'Doctresses Of Medicine': The World's 1st Female Medical School Was Established In Boston.” WGBH. 11/4/2016. https://www.wgbh.org/lifestyle/2016-11-04/the-doctresses-of-medicine-the-worlds-1st-female-medical-school-was-established-in-boston Janee, Dominique et al. “The U.S.'s First Black Female Physician Cared for Patients from Cradle to Grave.” Scientific American. 11/2/2023. https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/americas-first-black-female-physician-cared-for-patients-from-cradle-to-grave/ Klass, Perri. “‘To Mitigate the Afflictions of the Human Race' — The Legacy of Dr. Rebecca Crumpler.” New England Journal of Medicine. 4/1/2021. https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp2032451 Laskowski, Amy. “Trailblazing BU Alum Gets a Gravestone 125 Years after Her Death.” Bostonia. 8/7/2020. https://www.bu.edu/articles/2020/rebecca-lee-crumpler-first-black-female-physician-gets-gravestone-130-after-death/ Markel, Howard. “Celebrating Rebecca Lee Crumpler, first African-American woman physician.” PBS NewsHour. 3/9/2016. https://www.pbs.org/newshour/health/celebrating-rebecca-lee-crumpler-first-african-american-physician "Rebecca Lee Crumpler." Contemporary Black Biography, vol. 89, Gale, 2011. Gale In Context: U.S. History, link.gale.com/apps/doc/K1606005213/GPS?u=mlin_n_melpub&sid=bookmark-GPS&xid=0b5b3c23. Accessed 7 Feb. 2024. Sconyers, Jake. “Dr. Rebecca Crumpler, Forgotten No Longer (episode 200).” HUB History. 8/30/2020. https://www.hubhistory.com/episodes/dr-rebecca-crumpler-forgotten-no-longer-episode-200/ "SETS IN COLORED SOCIETY.: MRS JOHN LEWIS IS THE MRS JACK GARDNER OF HER PEOPLE--MISS WASHINGTON A LEADER IN ARTISTIC CIRCLES--MEN AND WOMEN IN BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL WALKS--THE PROMISE OF A POET." Boston Daily Globe (1872-1922), Jul 22 1894, p. 29. ProQuest. Web. 8 Feb. 2024 . Shmerler, Cindy. “Overlooked No More: Rebecca Lee Crumpler, Who Battled Prejudice in Medicine.” New York Times. 7/16/2021. https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/16/obituaries/rebecca-lee-crumpler-overlooked.html Skinner, Carolyn. “Women Physicians and Professional Ethos in Nineteenth-Century America.” Southern Illinois University Press, 2014. Project MUSE. muse.jhu.edu/book/28490 Spring, Kelly A. “Mary Eliza Mahoney.” National Women's History Museum. https://www.womenshistory.org/education-resources/biographies/mary-mahoney Tracey, Liz. “The ‘Doctress' Was In: Rebecca Lee Crumpler.” JSTOR Daily. 3/9/2020. https://daily.jstor.org/the-doctress-was-in-rebecca-lee-crumpler/ Wells, Susan. “Out of the Dead House: Nineteenth-Century Women Physicians and the Writing of Medicine.” University of Wisconsin Press, 2012. Project MUSE. muse.jhu.edu/book/16736 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Buddy Check
It Takes Two to Tango

Buddy Check

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2024 38:33


In the first episode of season 1 of Buddy Check, Freddie tells her story of how she first learned to climb. Then, we dive into the preliminary findings from Céline Hequet's PhD research on the climbing community. Céline is a sociology PhD student at McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. She is observing and interviewing rock climbers who identify as men about their experience with mentorship and mentoring others, their romantic relationships within climbing, and about how they perceive and understand their own masculinity. Her research will help to explain a pattern we're seeing in climbing today, where many more women are participating in the sport and many attribute at least part of their mentorship to a heterosexual, romantic relationship.Resources:Donnelly, Peter Alexander, "The Subculture and Public Image of Climbers” (1980). Doctoral Dissertations Available from Proquest. AAI8019455. https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI8019455Robinson, Victoria. Everyday Masculinities and Extreme Sport. Berg, 15 Oct. 2008.Reych, Zofia, “Climbing Women and Nice Media: Beyond Alternative Femininities” (2013). Dissertation in Anthropology and Sociology 15PANC999, Programme: MA Anthropology of Media from University of London. https://www.academia.edu/5651891/Climbing_Women_and_Niche_Media_Beyond_Alternative_FemininitiesLauren Delaunay Miller. Valley of Giants: Stories from Women at the Heart of Yosemite Climbing. Seattle, Wa, Mountaineers Books, 2022. https://www.laurendmiller.com/valleyofgiants

Tea with the Muse
2 Women Carpenters + the Magi of Neurons

Tea with the Muse

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2023 7:36


Dear Ones,I think a lot about what women have experienced in our lives and the evolution of our rights. I am grateful to be raised by women who were laborers, carpenters, seamstresses, potters…even plumbers. My mom Caron used to brag that her mother Eden could plumb a whole house and shoe a horse lol. She could also fix most machines, made our clothing and could feed us from her garden. I think about how the brain development of our ancestors and grandparents would be so different than it is today, simply based on the way we use to labor. I love to labor and use my body and I know it is because of what they taught me - to use my hands and my body. I do not know the origins of this photo but I read that they are in men's overalls - I have a pair like those myself, and that they are Dutch women. Today's episode is just a teensy story about remembering to truly hold the vision and how Intentional Creativity can help us do just that. Shiloh Sophia Who wears the pants: On May 28th, 1923, the US Attorney General declared that it was legal for women to wear trousers anywhere. Women dressed as men for many reasons: practical necessity, fighting in wars, independence, safety from rape and murder while traveling, orientation or identity, etc. Legal restrictions and punishments were necessary because, “by wearing pants, women appropriated male dress, and by association, male privilege, and power.” Punishment ranged from burning at the stake to prison time and using sexist character assassination: for wearing Turkish trousers, Frances Wright (1795-1852) was called “The Great Red Harlot of Infidelity, The W***e of Babylon, The Voluptuous Preacher of Licentiousness, The Priestess of Beelzebub, Miss Epicene Wright,” etc. Dress codes were used as a loophole: female senators were banned from wearing trousers on the senate floor until 1993. (Fischer, Gayle V. ""Pantalets" and "Turkish Trousers": Designing Freedom in the Mid-Nineteenth-Century United States." Feminist Studies 23.1 (1997): 111. ProQuest. Web. 10 Apr. 2023) LINK“Good mental health and clear thinking depend upon our ability to store and manipulate thoughts on a sort of “mental sketch pad.” In a new study, Yale researchers describe the molecular basis of this ability and describe how a breakdown of the system contributes to diseases such as schizophrenia and Alzheimer's disease.”LINK Get full access to Tea with the Muse at teawiththemuse.substack.com/subscribe

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast
Arsenal Pass Ep138 - How to Build a Testing Team

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2023 75:33


The competitive FAB world is getting more prepared with every large event. If you're an aspiring pro player or someone who is looking to dip their toes into a ProQuest - we have advice and guidance for groups large and small. There's a lot of little things that go into crafting mutual success, from communication avenues to roles and even KPIs (those are 'key performance indicators' for those who haven't been subjected to the corporate world yet). We address how to find and craft a testing group even if one isn't available locally.  Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ArsenalPass Review Us: https://ratethispodcast.com/arsenalpass Email: arsenalpassfab@gmail.com Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClhUUppHaVDBUOJHXL-a0EQ Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6H2Y8uTHZaVgxpjhnTBn6n?si=R6Uya7paT_e2HOr4n2KC-w Twitter: @BrendanAPG (Brendan) & @Fyen_Dale (Hayden) Hosts: Brendan Patrick and Hayden Dale

M.O.V.E. with Eileen + Amy
S1 E5 Alex: Because honoring yourself is the only way.

M.O.V.E. with Eileen + Amy

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2023 78:42


Guest: Alex SheppardDance Professor & Movement FacilitatorIn Episode 5, we talk with Alex about good and bad auditions, self love, viewing dancers as athletes, how dancers can ask more questions and make mistakes, how we are hard on other dancers and how dance is subjective (and how that can actually let us off the hook).  This episode is a FULL one. It's a little longer than our other interviews so far because Alex's son, Finley, was present for the first half. We ended up extending our conversation a bit once Alex was able to get childcare during the interview so we kept our discussion going as it was so rich and we were all getting so much from it.Alex (she / her) started dancing at Modesto Junior College where she fell in love with dance. After graduating from San Jose State with her BFA in dance she moved to New York to pursue her professional dance career. She set out to NYC with a plan to be there for 2 years (max)…almost 8 years later she moved back to California. During her time in NYC, Alex had the pleasure of dancing with many talented artists; Mike Esperanza, Jana Hicks, Marijke Eliasberg, Alison Chase, and Omri Drumlevich to name a few. She now lives in Oakland with her husband, fur babies and human baby; Finley. When Alex is not in the dance studio or at home she is teaching Yoga, Pilates or various other classes that involve moving the body. Follow & Learn More:IG: @dancinggingeralexWebsite: https://www.dancingginger.com/Podcast IG: @husbandandwifetalkPodcast Website: https://www.husbandandwifetalk.com/Additional Resources:Thesis Info: https://worldcat.org/en/title/1245512540 - This is a link to borrow the book from the university library and get it shipped to you.https://www.proquest.com/openview/f060559765010dcc51afe6de848bd88d/1.pdf?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=51922&diss=y - This is the ProQuest preview.Gibney Dance: https://gibneydance.org/Support the Show.M.O.V.E. with Eileen + Amy is a Kaia Evolutions Podcast.New episodes air on Wednesdays when in season.To learn more about Eileen + Amy, be sure to follow them on instagram at @ekielty + @amyreah and keep up to date on the podcast at @movewitheileenandamy. For more information about Kaia Evolutions, a culmination of Eileen's life's work and a love letter to her sister, Katie, who died by suicide in 2019 - visit https://www.kaiaevolutions.com/ or follow on instagram at @kaia.evolutions If you want to share part of your dancer / movement artist journey with us, email us at movepod@kaiaevolutions.comThank you for moving with us.-Eileen + Amy*If you or anyone you know is in need of support, please call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800.273.8255 OR text 988. You are not alone.

Push the Point: A Flesh and Blood Podcast
Push the Point Ep 60: Bright Lights Burn Fast!

Push the Point: A Flesh and Blood Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2023 59:07


We talk about how we're feeling about ProQuest, Bright Lights sealed, and the big one - WORLDS. We're all gonna be there baby! You can now order Metal Fab Tokens in the UK with Royal Mail postage prices! Just head over to the UK tab on the Metal Fab Tokens website and follow the instuctions! Check out Metal Fab Tokens here: https://metalfabtokens.com For all your Flesh and Blood singles, head over to Thistle Tavern: Push the Point Patreons receive a 10% discount. https://thistletavern.com/

Fresh and Buds
114. ProQuesting for Dummies w/ Pat Shaw

Fresh and Buds

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2023 68:29


Buds! ProQuest season is finally upon us! We bring on our dear friend, Pat Shaw, to chat about our thoughts leading into the next few weekends and much more! FRESH JUICE: AN INDIE GAME PODCAST - https://www.youtube.com/@FreshJuicePod Like, Comment, and Subscribe! Pat's links: https://twitter.com/PatSmashGood https://www.youtube.com/@offtherailstcg Tommy's links: https://linktr.ee/freshbudspod

Synapsen. Ein Wissenschaftspodcast von NDR Info
(84) Kriegstraumata: Wie bekommt die Seele wieder Frieden?

Synapsen. Ein Wissenschaftspodcast von NDR Info

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2023 74:08


Die gute Nachricht: Traumafolgestörungen lassen sich therapieren. Die schlechte: Nur für die wenigsten Geflüchteten gibt es Therapiemöglichkeiten. Wie sehen die Folgen von Folter, Gewalt und Gefangenschaft aus und was ließe sich theoretisch tun? Was richtet eine Traumatisierung im Gehirn eines Kindes oder Jugendlichen an? Was ist traumatisches Wachstum? Welche Therapieformen gibt es, um Traumafolgen anzugehen? Und was wissen wir über die transgenerationale Vererbung von Traumata? Journalistin Astrid Wulf hat recherchiert und spricht mit Host Korinna Hennig über ihren Besuch in einer Traumaambulanz und den aktuellen Forschungsstand. Außerdem darüber, wie die Generation der Kriegskinder womöglich ihre Trauma des Zweiten Weltkriegs vererbt hat, warum Kriegsenkel Ängste haben und was die Forschung darüber weiß. DIE HINTERGRUNDINFORMATIONEN: Studie: Angst, Depressionen und Posttraumatische Belastungssymptome und Störungen gehören zu den häufigsten psychischen Belastungen bei Geflüchteten: Schäfer I. et al. Angst, Depressionen und posttraumatische Belastungsstörungen bei Flüchtlingen – eine Bestandsaufnahme. www.thieme-connect.com https://www.thieme-connect.com/products/ejournals/abstract/10.1055/s-0043-103344 [aufgerufen am 21. September 2023] US-Studie über Langzeitfolgen von posttraumatischer Belastungsstörung: Günak, M. et al. Post-traumatic stress disorder as a risk factor for dementia: systematic review and meta-analysis Post-traumatic stress disorder as a risk factor for dementia: Cambridge University Press https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/the-british-journal-of-psychiatry/article/posttraumatic-stress-disorder-as-a-risk-factor-for-dementia-systematic-review-and-metaanalysis/2C7CB7708472ADAE1484C8E658D8F892 [aufgerufen am 21. September 2023] Postmigrationsstressoren – Stressfaktoren nach der Flucht halten eine Traumatisierung aufrecht: von Denkowski C. Das Trauma nach der Flucht. Spektrum.de. https://www.spektrum.de/news/das-trauma-nach-der-flucht/1369633 [aufgerufen am 21. September 2023] Michael Ermanns Forschungen zu Traumatisierungen nach dem 2. Weltkrieg: Ermann M. Wir Kriegskinder. Lindauer Psychotherapiewochen https://www.lptw.de/archiv/vortrag/2003/ermann-michael-wir-kriegskinder-lindauer-psychotherapiewochen2003.pdf [aufgerufen am 21. September 2023] Michael Ermanns Forschungen zu transgenerationaler Vererbung von Traumata an die Kriegsenkel nach dem 2. Weltkrieg: Ermann M. Verdeckte Spuren deutscher Geschichte Kriegskinder und ihre Kinder – ein ungewolltes Erbe. Proquest.com https://www.proquest.com/openview/a594f4c7210091312e17d79410313f3c/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=54082 [aufgerufen am 21. September 2023] Brian G. Dias' Tierversuche zur Epigenetik: Dias B, Ressler, K. Nature neuroscience Parental olfactory experience influences behavior and neural structure in subsequent generations. www.nature.com. https://www.nature.com/articles/nn.3594 [aufgerufen am 22. September 2023] Avi Sagi Schwartz' Studie zur Weitergabe von Traumata der Holocaust-Generation: Sagi-Schwartz A. Does extreme trauma transfer? The case of three generations of the holocaust. APA PsycNet. https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2015-46177-008 [aufgerufen am 22. September 2023] Übersicht über die Erforschung transgenerationaler Folgen des Zweiten Weltkrieges in Deutschland: Glaesmer, H. et. al. Transgenerationale Übertragung traumatischer Erfahrungen. https://elibrary.klett-cotta.de. https://elibrary.klett-cotta.de/article/99.120130/tg-5-4-330 [aufgerufen am 21. September 2023] Einführung in die Narrative Expositionstherapie (NET): Akademie für Wissenschaftliche Weiterbildung an der Universität Konstanz. https://afww.uni-konstanz.de/de/narrative-expositionstherapie [aufgerufen am 22. September 2023] Studien zur Wirksamkeit der „Prolonged Exposure-Traumatherapie“: http://www.prolongedexposure.de. http://www.prolongedexposure.de/studien.html [aufgerufen am 22. September 2023] Cortisol könnte bei der Traumatherapie helfen: de Quervain D. Wie weiter in der Behandlung von Angsterkrankungen? Universität Basel. https://www.unibas.ch/de/Aktuell/News/Uni-Research/Wie-weiter-in-der-Behandlung-von-Angsterkrankungen.html [aufgerufen am 22. September 2023] Betablocker werden als unterstützende Medikamente in der Traumatherapie erforscht: Trauma-Killer Betablocker. Müller T. ÄrzteZeitung https://www.aerztezeitung.de/Medizin/Trauma-Killer-Betablocker-223865.html [aufgerufen am 22. September 2023] Berliner Charité erforscht, wie THC traumatisierten Menschen mit Albträumen helfen kann: Charité Universitätsklinik Berlin Albtraumbehandlung bei Patienten und Patientinnen mit Posttraumatischer Belastungsstörung. https://psychiatrie-psychotherapie.charite.de/forschung/affektive_erkrankungen/ag_psychotraumatologie/forschungsprojekte/ [aufgerufen am 22. September 2023] PTBS-Forschung bei der Bundeswehr: https://www.bundeswehr.de/de/betreuung-fuersorge/ptbs-hilfe/trauma-ptbs/forschung [aufgerufen am 22. September 2023] Psychosozialer Versorgungsbericht der bundesweiten Arbeitsgemeinschaft psychosozialer Zentren für Flüchtlinge und Folteropfer (BAfF): https://www.baff-zentren.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/BAfF_Versorgungsbericht2023.pdf [aufgerufen am 22. September 2023] Studie des wissenschaftlichen Instituts der AOK (WidO) zur Gesundheit von Geflüchteten aus dem Sommer 2018: Schröder H. et al. Gesundheit von Geflüchteten in Deutschland – Ergebnisse einer Befragung von Schutzsuchenden aus Syrien, Irak und Afghanistan. https://www.wido.de/fileadmin/Dateien/Dokumente/Publikationen_Produkte/WIdOmonitor/wido_monitor_2018_1_gesundheit_gefluechtete.pdf [aufgerufen am 22. September 2023] Studie zu Effekten von Miltäreinsätzen bei der Bundeswehr: Kühn S, Butler O, Willmund G, Wesemann U, Zimmermann P, Gallinat J. The brain at war: effects of stress on brain structure in soldiers deployed to a war zone. Transl Psychiatry 11, 247 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-021-01356-0 Literaturreview zu Resilienz und Lebensqualität von Holocaust-Überlebenden und deren Familien: Shmotkin D, Shrira A, Goldberg S, Palgi Y. Resilience and vulnerability among aging holocaust survivors and their families: an intergenerational verview, Journal of Intergenerational Relationships, 9:1, 7-21 (2021). DOI: 10.1080/15350770.2011.544202 Studie zu Stress von Holocaust-Überlebenden (mit Beteiligung von Avi Sagi-Schwartz): Fridman A, van IJzendoorn M H, Sagi-Schwartz A, Bakermans-Kranenburg M J. Genetic moderation of cortisol secretion in Holocaust survivors: A pilot study on the role of ADRA2B. International Journal of Behavioral Development, 36(1), 79–84 (2012) https://doi.org/10.1177/0165025411406859 Studien zur transgenerationalen Vererbung von Traumata von Großeltern auf Enkel: Sagi-Schwartz A, van IJzendoorn M H, Bakermans-Kranenburg M J. Does intergenerational transmission of trauma skip a generation? No meta-analytic evidence for tertiary traumatization with third generation of Holocaust survivors, Attachment & Human Development, 10:2, 105-121 (2008). DOI: 10.1080/14616730802113661

NDR Info - Logo - Das Wissenschaftsmagazin
(84) Kriegstraumata: Wie bekommt die Seele wieder Frieden?

NDR Info - Logo - Das Wissenschaftsmagazin

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2023 74:08


Die gute Nachricht: Traumafolgestörungen lassen sich therapieren. Die schlechte: Nur für die wenigsten Geflüchteten gibt es Therapiemöglichkeiten. Wie sehen die Folgen von Folter, Gewalt und Gefangenschaft aus und was ließe sich theoretisch tun? Was richtet eine Traumatisierung im Gehirn eines Kindes oder Jugendlichen an? Was ist traumatisches Wachstum? Welche Therapieformen gibt es, um Traumafolgen anzugehen? Und was wissen wir über die transgenerationale Vererbung von Traumata? Journalistin Astrid Wulf hat recherchiert und spricht mit Host Korinna Hennig über ihren Besuch in einer Traumaambulanz und den aktuellen Forschungsstand. Außerdem darüber, wie die Generation der Kriegskinder womöglich ihre Trauma des Zweiten Weltkriegs vererbt hat, warum Kriegsenkel Ängste haben und was die Forschung darüber weiß. DIE HINTERGRUNDINFORMATIONEN: Studie: Angst, Depressionen und Posttraumatische Belastungssymptome und Störungen gehören zu den häufigsten psychischen Belastungen bei Geflüchteten: Schäfer I. et al. Angst, Depressionen und posttraumatische Belastungsstörungen bei Flüchtlingen – eine Bestandsaufnahme. www.thieme-connect.com https://www.thieme-connect.com/products/ejournals/abstract/10.1055/s-0043-103344 [aufgerufen am 21. September 2023] US-Studie über Langzeitfolgen von posttraumatischer Belastungsstörung: Günak, M. et al. Post-traumatic stress disorder as a risk factor for dementia: systematic review and meta-analysis Post-traumatic stress disorder as a risk factor for dementia: Cambridge University Press https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/the-british-journal-of-psychiatry/article/posttraumatic-stress-disorder-as-a-risk-factor-for-dementia-systematic-review-and-metaanalysis/2C7CB7708472ADAE1484C8E658D8F892 [aufgerufen am 21. September 2023] Postmigrationsstressoren – Stressfaktoren nach der Flucht halten eine Traumatisierung aufrecht: von Denkowski C. Das Trauma nach der Flucht. Spektrum.de. https://www.spektrum.de/news/das-trauma-nach-der-flucht/1369633 [aufgerufen am 21. September 2023] Michael Ermanns Forschungen zu Traumatisierungen nach dem 2. Weltkrieg: Ermann M. Wir Kriegskinder. Lindauer Psychotherapiewochen https://www.lptw.de/archiv/vortrag/2003/ermann-michael-wir-kriegskinder-lindauer-psychotherapiewochen2003.pdf [aufgerufen am 21. September 2023] Michael Ermanns Forschungen zu transgenerationaler Vererbung von Traumata an die Kriegsenkel nach dem 2. Weltkrieg: Ermann M. Verdeckte Spuren deutscher Geschichte Kriegskinder und ihre Kinder – ein ungewolltes Erbe. Proquest.com https://www.proquest.com/openview/a594f4c7210091312e17d79410313f3c/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=54082 [aufgerufen am 21. September 2023] Brian G. Dias' Tierversuche zur Epigenetik: Dias B, Ressler, K. Nature neuroscience Parental olfactory experience influences behavior and neural structure in subsequent generations. www.nature.com. https://www.nature.com/articles/nn.3594 [aufgerufen am 22. September 2023] Avi Sagi Schwartz' Studie zur Weitergabe von Traumata der Holocaust-Generation: Sagi-Schwartz A. Does extreme trauma transfer? The case of three generations of the holocaust. APA PsycNet. https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2015-46177-008 [aufgerufen am 22. September 2023] Übersicht über die Erforschung transgenerationaler Folgen des Zweiten Weltkrieges in Deutschland: Glaesmer, H. et. al. Transgenerationale Übertragung traumatischer Erfahrungen. https://elibrary.klett-cotta.de. https://elibrary.klett-cotta.de/article/99.120130/tg-5-4-330 [aufgerufen am 21. September 2023] Einführung in die Narrative Expositionstherapie (NET): Akademie für Wissenschaftliche Weiterbildung an der Universität Konstanz. https://afww.uni-konstanz.de/de/narrative-expositionstherapie [aufgerufen am 22. September 2023] Studien zur Wirksamkeit der „Prolonged Exposure-Traumatherapie“: http://www.prolongedexposure.de. http://www.prolongedexposure.de/studien.html [aufgerufen am 22. September 2023] Cortisol könnte bei der Traumatherapie helfen: de Quervain D. Wie weiter in der Behandlung von Angsterkrankungen? Universität Basel. https://www.unibas.ch/de/Aktuell/News/Uni-Research/Wie-weiter-in-der-Behandlung-von-Angsterkrankungen.html [aufgerufen am 22. September 2023] Betablocker werden als unterstützende Medikamente in der Traumatherapie erforscht: Trauma-Killer Betablocker. Müller T. ÄrzteZeitung https://www.aerztezeitung.de/Medizin/Trauma-Killer-Betablocker-223865.html [aufgerufen am 22. September 2023] Berliner Charité erforscht, wie THC traumatisierten Menschen mit Albträumen helfen kann: Charité Universitätsklinik Berlin Albtraumbehandlung bei Patienten und Patientinnen mit Posttraumatischer Belastungsstörung. https://psychiatrie-psychotherapie.charite.de/forschung/affektive_erkrankungen/ag_psychotraumatologie/forschungsprojekte/ [aufgerufen am 22. September 2023] PTBS-Forschung bei der Bundeswehr: https://www.bundeswehr.de/de/betreuung-fuersorge/ptbs-hilfe/trauma-ptbs/forschung [aufgerufen am 22. September 2023] Psychosozialer Versorgungsbericht der bundesweiten Arbeitsgemeinschaft psychosozialer Zentren für Flüchtlinge und Folteropfer (BAfF): https://www.baff-zentren.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/BAfF_Versorgungsbericht2023.pdf [aufgerufen am 22. September 2023] Studie des wissenschaftlichen Instituts der AOK (WidO) zur Gesundheit von Geflüchteten aus dem Sommer 2018: Schröder H. et al. Gesundheit von Geflüchteten in Deutschland – Ergebnisse einer Befragung von Schutzsuchenden aus Syrien, Irak und Afghanistan. https://www.wido.de/fileadmin/Dateien/Dokumente/Publikationen_Produkte/WIdOmonitor/wido_monitor_2018_1_gesundheit_gefluechtete.pdf [aufgerufen am 22. September 2023] Studie zu Effekten von Miltäreinsätzen bei der Bundeswehr: Kühn S, Butler O, Willmund G, Wesemann U, Zimmermann P, Gallinat J. The brain at war: effects of stress on brain structure in soldiers deployed to a war zone. Transl Psychiatry 11, 247 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-021-01356-0 Literaturreview zu Resilienz und Lebensqualität von Holocaust-Überlebenden und deren Familien: Shmotkin D, Shrira A, Goldberg S, Palgi Y. Resilience and vulnerability among aging holocaust survivors and their families: an intergenerational verview, Journal of Intergenerational Relationships, 9:1, 7-21 (2021). DOI: 10.1080/15350770.2011.544202 Studie zu Stress von Holocaust-Überlebenden (mit Beteiligung von Avi Sagi-Schwartz): Fridman A, van IJzendoorn M H, Sagi-Schwartz A, Bakermans-Kranenburg M J. Genetic moderation of cortisol secretion in Holocaust survivors: A pilot study on the role of ADRA2B. International Journal of Behavioral Development, 36(1), 79–84 (2012) https://doi.org/10.1177/0165025411406859 Studien zur transgenerationalen Vererbung von Traumata von Großeltern auf Enkel: Sagi-Schwartz A, van IJzendoorn M H, Bakermans-Kranenburg M J. Does intergenerational transmission of trauma skip a generation? No meta-analytic evidence for tertiary traumatization with third generation of Holocaust survivors, Attachment & Human Development, 10:2, 105-121 (2008). DOI: 10.1080/14616730802113661

Ideas to Innovation
University Students and Mental Health

Ideas to Innovation

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2023 21:04


Among the consequences of COVID-19 is its adverse impact on the mental health and wellbeing among university students in the United States.  Today's students deal with many challenges from coursework, relationships and adjustments to campus life, to economic strain, social injustice, mass violence and various forms of loss related to the pandemic. In a 2021 survey, nearly 75 percent of college presidents listed students' mental health as their most pressing issue. And key findings from a report released this year by non-profit Mental Health America shows more than 10 percent of young people are experiencing depression that severely impairs their ability to function at school or work, at home, with family or in their social life.  Many school leaders have started to think outside the box about how to help. They're finding ways to incorporate a broader culture of wellness into their policies, systems and day-to-day campus life. In this episode of “Ideas to Innovation Season 2” from Clarivate, we speak with Lisa O'Donnell, assistant professor for the department of social work at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan. An expert in bipolar disorder and severe mental illness, she brings a compelling perspective to the topic of university students and mental health. Lisa has served as a clinician for the state of Michigan for more than 18 years, primarily working with adults who have severe mental illness as well as anxiety disorders and OCD-related disorders.   For information on subscriptions to mental health e-books from ProQuest, part of Clarivate, go to https://bit.ly/proquestmentalhealth 

Against The Grain - The Podcast
ATGthePodcast 208 - Whole Ebook ILL Redux

Against The Grain - The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2023 52:06


Audio from the 2022 Charleston Conference from a Neopolitan Session titled “Whole EBook ILL Redux.” In this session, panelists discussed results and updates on ProQuest's, a part of Clarivate,  successful Whole Ebook ILL pilot. This session was presented by Allen Jones (the New School), Whitney Murphy (ProQuest), George Machovec (Colorado Alliance of Research Libraries) , Sylvia Bonadio (Brill), and Lisa Nachtigall (Oxford University Press).  Video of the presentation available at: https://youtu.be/5-XQUXZGia4 Social Media: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ajones3066/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/wkmurphy/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/george-machovec-3a649a4/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/sylviabonadio/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/lisanachtigall/  Keywords: #LibraryResources, #eresources, #ebooks, #ebookLending, #interlibrarylending, #ProQuest, #EbookCentral,  #pilotproject, #technology, #innovation, #collaboration,#engagement, #problemsolvers, #libraries, #librarians, #information, #ChsConf,  #LibrariesAndVendors, #LibrariesAndPublishers, #libraryissues, #libraryneeds,#librarylove, #librarychallenges, #libraryconference #podcast  

High Brow
in defense of the bridezilla

High Brow

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2023 69:27


This is an extended version of Mina's the "perfect" wedding dress is a myth video, including digressions in royal weddings and bridezilla discourse, as well as some crazy wedding stories from the listeners! Keep up with High Brow on Instagram! Subscribe to the Patreon! and keep up with Mina on Youtube, Instagram, and Tiktok! Written by Mina Le, Ella Gray, and Sophie Carter Edited by Sophie Carter Music by Olivia Martinez Cover by Lindsay Mintz SOURCES The Fake Poor Bride How 20-Year-Old Queen Victoria Forever Changed Wedding Fashion | Vanity Fair Creating her space - Philippa, princess of England, queen of Sweden, Denmark and Norway, and Vadstena Abbey | Mia Åkestam - Academia.edu A Natural History of the Wedding Dress - JSTOR Daily Etiquette of Trousseau - White Wedding Dress Origins - Godey's Lady's Book, August 1849 White Wedding Dress: The History Of The Most Popular Bridal Gown | British Vogue The Wedding Dress: 300 Years of Bridal Fashions by Edwina Ehrman The exchange of the princesses Royal Weddings Are a Fairy Tale. They Used to Be High-Stakes Diplomacy. The royal weddings that shaped European history - Vox Modernising royal weddings: a historical perspective Public reception - Royal Weddings History's most lavish royal weddings Grace Kelly's bridal gown is cited as a masterpiece and best-remembered bridal gown of all time 4 Ways Royal Weddings Have Influenced the Modern Wedding Industry | Wed Society The Ugly Incest Secret Behind History's Royal Families Tongan crown prince marries second cousin Wedding Costs: Who Pays for What Traditionally? Japan's Princess Mako marries and loses royal status. Royal flush? How much are taxpayers paying for the Royal wedding? - Full Fact Royal wedding 2018: Who's paying? - BBC News Princess Beatrice's Tiara Came With Deep and Symbolic Royal Connections | Vanity Fair The Evolution of Bridal Style Through the Years They Were the First - NYTimes.com "Pity June Bride! War Trims Trousseau." UPIs 20th Century Top Stories, May 08 1943, ProQuest. Web. 21 June 2023. Queen Elizabeth II bought her wedding dress with WWII ration coupons Bridalwear Through the Decades: How Historical Events Have Impacted Bridal Fashion What To Wear To A Wartime Wedding | Imperial War Museums Grace Kelly's Royal Wedding Dress A Brief History of the Strapless Wedding Dress - Racked How Did Priscilla Presley Find Her Dream Las Vegas Wedding Dress? Priscilla Presley Didn't Like Wedding Dress She Wore to Marry Elvis The Story Behind Bianca Jagger's Seminal YSL Wedding Suit Vera Wang said Mariah Carey's voluminous 1993 wedding dress was influenced by Princess Diana 25 Years Later, Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy's Wedding Dress Still Stuns | Vanity Fair Everything We Know About Meghan Markle's Wedding Gown Our Legacy - Becker's Bridal - Michigan Bridal Shop Hedda Kleinfeld Schachter Dies at 99; Built an Empire of Tulle and Satin - The New York Times How David's Bridal went from bridal-dress domination to the 'Walmart of weddings' and its second bankruptcy filing in 5 years The best and worst wedding dresses worn in movies A history of wedding dresses This is the Average Wedding Dress Cost in 2023 Count Down to a Wedding: Bucking Tradition by Wearing a Short Dress How ‘bridezilla' became this summer's biggest sexist slur AITA for refusing to go to my best friend's wedding because of her bad attitude towards my girlfriend? : r/Bridezilla The Average Wedding Cost in 2022, According to Data The Agonizing Wedding Expectations Behind the Sexist 'Bridezilla' Stereotype Opinion | A Feminist Defense of Bridezillas - The New York Times  When the Bridezilla label was thrown my way, I realised no one was safe from this sexist trope Strapless wedding gowns: They're unflattering. Why are they so popular? Section: DoubleX It's OK to Spend $12.50 on a Wedding Dress Now

Did That Really Happen?
Boston Strangler

Did That Really Happen?

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2023 59:45


This week we're going back to the 1960s with Boston Strangler! Join us as we learn about the Boston PD's bad advice to women, raids on queer communities, the death of Albert DeSalvo, and more! Sources: James H. Hammond, "Boston 'Strangler' Flees Hospital; Women Are Told to Lock Doors," The Washington Post (25 Feb 1967): 1.  Douglas Crocket, "What Did the Five Strangle Victims Have in Common?" Boston Globe (24 Aug 1962): 4.  Charles Claffey, "9 Stranglings Still Unsolved--And Circle of Fear Widens," Boston Globe (15 Sep 1963): 38.  "Police Working Without Result on Stranglings," Boston Globe (8 July 1962): 6.  Douglas Crocket, "Police Have Queried 3000 Persons in Strangling Case," Boston Globe (20 Jan 1963): 9.  Evening star. [volume] (Washington, D.C.), 09 Dec. 1962. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress. https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045462/1962-12-09/ed-1/seq-7/  "What Police Say: 'Women Too Trusting.. Careless'." Boston Globe (1960-), Sep 19, 1965. "Public Faces/Private Lives," The History Project: Documenting LGBTQ Boston, https://www.historyproject.org/exhibition/public-faces-private-lives  Robert B. Kenney, "South Cove Branded Degenerates' Hangout," Boston Globe (8 July 1965): 1.  Joseph Keblinsky, "The Dapper Strikes Out," Boston Globe (11 Jly 1965): A4.  "Remember Scollay Square?" Boston Globe (2 November 1963): 4.  "Rowdy Ways of Scollay Sq. Soon Will Go: Proper Boston Stands the Death Watch," Chicago Daily Tribune (11 March 1962): B8.  Anthony J. Yudis, "Renewal to Oust 28 Liquor Spots: Battle for South Cove," Boston Globe (30 May 1965): 11.  Sixtieth Annual Report of the Police Commissioner for the City of Boston for the Year Ending December 31, 1965. https://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.hl2k7i?urlappend=%3Bseq=33%3Bownerid=116415389-37  Blackwood, Harold. "What People Talk about: Boston Revisited After 20 Years, Ex-Navy Man Likes what He Sees." Boston Globe (1960-), Apr 14 1963, p. 1. ProQuest.  Jan Brogan, The Combat Zone: Murder, Race, and Boston's Struggle for Justice (University of Massachusetts Press, 2021). https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv29g2gxr.6  Anne Gray Fischer, "Boston: The Place is Gone! Policing Black Women to Redevelop Downtown," in The Streets Belong to Us: Sex, Race, and Police Power from Segregation to Gentrification (University of North Carolina Press, 2022). https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5149/9781469665061_fischer.8   "DeSalvo, Confessed Boston Strangler, Found Stabbed to Death in Prison Cell," New York Times, 11/27/1973, available at https://www.nytimes.com/1973/11/27/archives/desalvo-confessed-boston-strangler-found-stabbed-to-death-in-prison.html Susan Kelly, "The Boston Stranglers," Kensington, 2013. Nathan Smith, "The Tenacious Woman Reporters Who Helped Expose the Boston Strangler," Smithsonian, available at https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-tenacious-women-reporters-who-helped-expose-the-boston-strangler-180981786/ Kevin Slane, "Separating Fact From Fiction in the Boston Strangler Movie," Boston.com, available at https://www.boston.com/culture/movies/2023/03/17/boston-strangler-movie-whats-real-not/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Strangler_(film)

I am an Alpha Woman - Interview with Dr. Silnettra Barnhill

"The YMIT Podcast" Young Millionaires In Training

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2023 34:26


Today we have Cuzzo in the house! Yes my actual biological first cousin. I was so excited to have on her on the show and highlight some of her accomplishments and talents! Dr. Silnettra Barnhill is a native of Kinston NC, and an Alumnus of North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University and Winston Salem State University. She has her Doctorate in Special Education and is a recent graduate from Northcentral University. Dr. Barnhill is a single mother of 3, a motivational speaker, a poet, an author, and an Occupational Therapist. In addition, Dr. Barnhill loves spending time with her family and just enjoying life. Her motto is "Live life to the fullest". One of her many endeavors, includes her love for her sorority. She is a proud member of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority Incorporated where she serves as President of her chapter, Alpha Alpha Epsilon Zeta Chapter of Pittsboro NC. In her chapter she loves serving the community as well as helping her chapter soar through new heights through many community service activities. Another passion of Dr. Barnhill's is writing poetry, which has driven her writing of books and becoming an author. She is a 4x time published author as well as poet. She released her first poetry book in 2019, "Unveiling the Shadow: Beyond the Counterfeit Image Second Edition", available on Amazon and has since published her first relationship book, "21 Lessons My Mother Never Taught Me: I am an Alpha Woman", released in July 2020. In addition, she has published her dissertation on Proquest titled "Post-Secondary Transition Planning Among African American Special Needs Graduates and Parents in North Carolina: A Phenomenological Study", released February 2022. As a poet, she has spoken at college graduations, book clubs, professional meetings, fashion shows, scholarship fundraisers, and open mics. In life her goal has always been to inspire others. Beyond the many achievements her lighter first shines and starts within her and once that has evolved, others are able to manifest from her many words of inspiration, encouragement, and motivation. So keep pushing and keep soaring cause remember....YOU GOT THIS!!!! Social Media:  Facebook: Silnettra Barnhill https://www.facebook.com/silnettra Instagram: @silnettra @vivid.the poet Amazon Book: 21 Lessons My Mother Never Taught Me: I am an Alpha Woman https://www.amazon.com/Lessons-Mother-Never-Taught-Alpha/dp/1733136886 CashApp:$SilnetB --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/warren-ganues7/support

M-n-R Cast
M-n-R Episode 35: ProQuest and Battle Hardened Decklist Deep Dive

M-n-R Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2023 54:14


Join Michael Hamilton and Roger Bodee for the thirty-fifth episode of the M-n-R (Manner) Cast. This week we go over the decks that have performed well in the first weekend of Battle Hardens and ProQuests in the new Dynasty meta!Find us on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/MnRcast Join our Discord: https://discord.gg/jBWCwvYRuP Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/MnR_Cast

Bottom Tier: A Flesh and Blood Podcast

Ladies and Gentlemen, we have a short episode today because Greg wasn't feeling the greatest, so Matt goes solo to talk about his experience at ProQuest! Hope the episode isn't to boring or feel to drawn out, and hopefully you get some fun info from our local Meta!   As always if you enjoy Bottom Tier Content and want to see the stats mentioned follow us on IG or Twitter! @bottomtierpod   Our theme music was created by none other than Emilio Alcaraz, you can follow him on IG @emilio__alcaraz!

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast
Arsenal Pass Ep83 - ProQuest Deck - Oldhim

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2023 64:11


Oldhim has emerged from his icy realm to dominate the first week of ProQuests! This week we cover how to pick up Oldhim for the remainder of the season. What are some signals that you should jump on or off of the bandwagon? What does a great build of Oldhim look like right now and how should you prepare moving forward? Austin Marathon Registration https://eventdog.com/a/events/refLink/42RU9S2K3I/U6jws8A-refer Team Name: Arsenal Pass Sunday, FEB 19th 2023 Downtown Austin, Congress Ave, Austin, TX Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ArsenalPass Review Us: https://ratethispodcast.com/arsenalpass Email: arsenalpassfab@gmail.com Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClhUUppHaVDBUOJHXL-a0EQ Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6H2Y8uTHZaVgxpjhnTBn6n?si=R6Uya7paT_e2HOr4n2KC-w Twitter: @BrendanAPG (Brendan) & @Fyen_Dale (Hayden) Hosts: Brendan Patrick and Hayden Dale

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast
Arsenal Pass Ep92 - ProQuest Deck - Fai

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2023 70:20


Fai has been a powerhouse since the hero's release. We discuss the strengths to lean on and weaknesses to exploit to help your chances both with and against this hero. What are the indicators that your meta is ready for the draconic ninja and what are signals you might want to pivot your deck choice? Join us this week to explore! Rutkowski - https://fabtcg.com/decklists/daniel-rutkowski-fai---proquest-season-3-gauntlet-30062022/ Catton - https://fabtcg.com/decklists/rob-catton-fai-deck---world-championship-110422/ Austin Marathon Registration https://eventdog.com/a/events/refLink/42RU9S2K3I/U6jws8A-refer Team Name: Arsenal Pass Sunday, FEB 19th 2023 Downtown Austin, Congress Ave, Austin, TX Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ArsenalPass Review Us: https://ratethispodcast.com/arsenalpass Email: arsenalpassfab@gmail.com Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClhUUppHaVDBUOJHXL-a0EQ Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6H2Y8uTHZaVgxpjhnTBn6n?si=R6Uya7paT_e2HOr4n2KC-w Twitter: @BrendanAPG (Brendan) & @Fyen_Dale (Hayden) Hosts: Brendan Patrick and Hayden Dale

Fresh and Buds
74. On the Eve of ProQuest Season 3 w/ Daniel Rutkowski

Fresh and Buds

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2023 55:58


Buds! ProQuest season is upon us and the Dynasty meta is about to show its fangs! This week we are joined by the one and only Daniel Rutkowski as we get to know him, make some predictions for the next couple weeks, and even talk a bit about Jersey! Leave a Review, Rate, and Subscribe! Daniel's links: https://twitter.com/Disc_Golf_Dan https://www.youtube.com/@tcgrunaways Tommy's links: https://linktr.ee/freshbudspod

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast
Arsenal Pass Ep91 - ProQuest Deck - Iyslander

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2023 69:31


Proquest season is looming large over the Flesh and Blood community - but we have you covered! In our first pod in a series designed to explore the decks we would take to a ProQuest, this week we dive into Iyslander. Why should you consider picking up the ice queen? What are her favorable matchups? What are her weaknesses?  AA Decklist: https://fabrary.net/decks/01GF92CFDHGGEXVJNSP0CR3ZVQ   Spell Decklist: https://fabrary.net/decks/01GC168BARY5VTXVCCX8FDJ4CX Austin Marathon Registration https://eventdog.com/a/events/refLink/42RU9S2K3I/U6jws8A-refer Team Name: Arsenal Pass Sunday, FEB 19th 2023 Downtown Austin, Congress Ave, Austin, TX Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ArsenalPass Review Us: https://ratethispodcast.com/arsenalpass Email: arsenalpassfab@gmail.com Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClhUUppHaVDBUOJHXL-a0EQ Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6H2Y8uTHZaVgxpjhnTBn6n?si=R6Uya7paT_e2HOr4n2KC-w Twitter: @BrendanAPG (Brendan) & @Fyen_Dale (Hayden) Hosts: Brendan Patrick and Hayden Dale

M-n-R Cast
M-n-R Episode 33: ProQuest Meta Overview With Pheano Black

M-n-R Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2023 60:49


Join Michael Hamilton and Roger Bodee for the thirty-third episode of the M-n-R (Manner) Cast. This week Michael and Roger invite Pheano Black onto the cast to help predict what heroes will help players win their upcoming ProQuests and how that information will update over time. Find us on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/MnRcastJoin our Discord: https://discord.gg/jBWCwvYRuPSupport us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/MnR_Cast

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast
Arsenal Pass Ep86 - How to Win A ProQuest

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2022 62:10


While this pod was available as a live experience, it's a topic worth revisiting! We cover how to interpret local metagames, picking a deck and how to navigate the tourney itself all in service of qualifying for the Pro Tour! Austin Marathon Registration https://eventdog.com/a/events/refLink/42RU9S2K3I/U6jws8A-refer Team Name: Arsenal Pass Sunday, FEB 19th 2023 Downtown Austin, Congress Ave, Austin, TX Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ArsenalPass Review Us: https://ratethispodcast.com/arsenalpass Email: arsenalpassfab@gmail.com Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClhUUppHaVDBUOJHXL-a0EQ Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6H2Y8uTHZaVgxpjhnTBn6n?si=R6Uya7paT_e2HOr4n2KC-w ChannelFireball Affiliate Code: ARSENALPASS Twitter: @BrendanAPG (Brendan) & @Fyen_Dale (Hayden) Hosts: Brendan Patrick and Hayden Dale

True Creeps: True Crime, Ghost Stories, Cryptids, Horrors in History & Spooky Stories

Join us while we discuss the infamous killer, Ed Gein. We'll discuss his victims, Bernice Worden and Mary Hogan, as well as his history and other potential victims. Join our Facebook group here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/449439969638764 (https://www.facebook.com/groups/449439969638764) https://www.patreon.com/truecreeps (https://www.patreon.com/truecreeps) https://theweirdemporium.net/pages/true-creeps-podcast-merch (https://theweirdemporium.net/pages/true-creeps-podcast-merch) www.truecreeps.com Have an episode idea or a question about a case? Submit them here: https://www.truecreeps.com/ideasandquestions (https://www.truecreeps.com/ideasandquestions) Twitter @truecreeps Instagram @truecreepspod Facebook.com/truecreepspod Email us at truecreepspod@gmail.com Sources: http://maamodt.asp.radford.edu/Psyc%20405/serial%20killers/Gein,%20Ed.pdf (Ed Gein) https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/8570712/henry-george-gein (Henry George Gein (1901-1944) - Find a Grave Memorial) https://www.alittlebithuman.com/the-story-of-serial-killer-ed-gein-and-his-house-of-horrors/ (Meet Ed Gein: The Twisted Real-Life Inspiration for Leatherface, Norman Bates, and Buffalo Bill) https://screenrant.com/the-silence-of-the-lambs-the-real-buffalo-bills-true-story-explained/ (The Silence Of The Lambs: Buffalo Bill's True Story & Real Inspiration) https://fanac.org/fanzines/SF_Five_Yearly/sffy7-05.html (Science-Fiction Five-Yearly #7 - Page 5 - an outerview with robert bloch by the author of PSYCHO - Arthur O. Cycko) https://galaxypress.com/backstory-to-psycho/ (The Backstory to Robert Bloch's “Psycho” – Galaxy Press) https://www.proquest.com/openview/87c152bc4eacb6d66834997ad24f1051/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=18750&diss=y (“A boy's best friend is his mother”: Cinematic re -tellings of the Ed Gein story - ProQuest) https://minds.wisconsin.edu/bitstream/handle/1793/70262/McMahon_Fall2014.pdf?sequence=2&isAllowed=y (Not So Black and White: Media Coverage of the Ed Gein Homicides) http://maamodt.asp.radford.edu/Psyc%20405/serial%20killers/Gein,%20Ed.pdf (Edward Theodore Gein Time Line) http://www.robertcdaniels.com/ed_gein.htm (Robert C. Daniels -- Ed Gein The Cannibal Myth Exposed) https://hannemanarchive.com/tag/bernice-worden/ (Bernice Worden | The Hanneman Archive) https://groups.google.com/g/alt.obituaries/c/6v3iD0Jxlbg (Gein Land for sale) https://www.wisconsinfrights.com/ed-gein-auction-film/ (Ed Gein's House - Rare 8mm Film Footage) https://youtu.be/3NO4BA-WurI (Deadly Possessions S01E05 II {Ed Gein's Cauldron and The Crying Boy Paintings}) https://www.cultofweird.com/curiosities/ed-gein-cauldron/ (Ed Gein's Cauldron - Is It Really Cursed or Haunted?) https://www.roadsideamerica.com/tip/13463#:~:text=Ed's%20house%20was%20burned%20to,%22The%20House%20Of%20Horrors.%22 (Plainfield, WI - Site of Ed Gein's Murder House) https://www.houseofgein.com (Ed Gein - Biography, Photos, and Legacy) https://allthatsinteresting.com/ed-gein (Ed Gein: The Story Of The Serial Killer That Inspired Every Horror Movie) https://www.denofgeek.com/movies/the-real-texas-chainsaw-massacre-how-ed-gein-inspired-classic-horror-movies/ (The Real Texas Chainsaw Massacre: How Ed Gein Inspired Classic Horror Movies | Den of Geek) This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: Podsights - https://podsights.com/privacy Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy

What We're Learning About Learning
Inspiring Student Excellence

What We're Learning About Learning

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2022 26:20


We're kicking off our third season with a deep dive into how faculty inspire academic excellence in students. Listen to this episode to hear questions about how faculty support students in succeeding in and outside classrooms, how to design curriculum that brings out their best work, and what excellence means in the current era. _______________ Bios Mun Chun (MC) Chan, Assistant Teaching Professor, Biology Department and Faculty Fellow at CNDLS Charisma X. Howell, Visiting Associate Professor and Street Law Director, Georgetown Law Abigail Marsh, Professor, Department of Psychology and the Interdisciplinary Program in Neuroscience Georgetown Resources Georgetown's Street Law Program website Understanding Student Learning, resources from CNDLS Center for New Designs in Learning and Scholarship website (C The Prospect blog Additional Resources Brockman, A.J. (2021). “‘La Crème de la Crème': How Racial, Gendered, and Intersectional Social Comparisons Reveal Inequities That Affect Sense of Belonging in STEM.” Sociological Inquiry, 91(4), 751–777. Cardamone, C. (2021). “Balancing Flexibility and Rigor to Advance Equity in Course Design.” Teaching@Tufts. Gruber, M. J., Gelman, B. D., & Ranganath, C. (2014). “States of Curiosity Modulate Hippocampus-Dependent Learning via the Dopaminergic Circuit.” Neuron (Cambridge, Mass.), 84(2), 486–496. Holstead, C.E. (2022). “Why Students Are Skipping Class So Often, and How to Bring Them Back.” The Chronicle of Higher Education. McMurtrie, B. (2022). “Teaching: Staying Flexible Without Becoming Overwhelmed.” The Chronicle of Higher Education. Mathews, J. (2022). “Should we be easy on students after the pandemic? Maybe not.” Washington Post. Newman, J., & O'Brien, E. L. (1973). Street law. District of Columbia Project on Community Legal Assistance, Georgetown University Law Center Pryal, K.R.G. (2022). ““When ‘Rigor' Targets Disabled Students.” The Chronicle... Saul, S. (2022). “At N.Y.U., Students Were Failing Organic Chemistry. Who Was to Blame?” ProQuest.

Stuff You Missed in History Class
Paul Robeson and the Peekskill Riots

Stuff You Missed in History Class

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2022 38:18


The Peekskill Riots surrounded a concert by singer and activist Paul Robeson. His stances on political and civil rights issues and his communist affiliations catalyzed protests that were fueled with an undercurrent of racism and antisemitism. Research: American Civil Liberties Union. “Violence in Peekskill: A Report on the Violations of Civil Liberties at Two Paul Robeson Concerts near Peekskill, NY.” 1949. By LANSING WARREN Special to THE NEW YORK TIMES. "Paris 'Peace Congress' Assails U. S. and Atlantic Pact, Upholds Soviet: MEETING AT 'PEACE CONGRESS' IN PARIS CONGRESS IN PARIS ASSAILS U. S. POLICY." New York Times (1923-), Apr 21 1949, p. 1. ProQuest. Web. 31 Aug. 2022 . Congress, House, Committee on Un-American Activities, Investigation of the Unauthorized Use of U.S. Passports, 84th Congress, Part 3, June 12, 1956; in Thirty Years of Treason: Excerpts from Hearings Before the House Committee on Un-American Activities, 1938–1968, Eric Bentley, ed. (New York: Viking Press, 1971), 770. Courtney, Steve. “Peekskill's days of infamy: The Robeson riots of 1949.” The Reporter Dispatch, September 5, 1982. http://www.bencourtney.com/peekskillriots/ Democracy “VIDEO: Pete Seeger Recalls the 1949 Peekskill Riot Where He And Paul Robeson Were Attacked.” 1/31/2014. https://www.democracynow.org/2014/1/31/video_pete_seeger_recalls_the_1949 Dorinson, Joseph. “Paul Robeson and Jackie Robinson: Athletes and Activists at Armageddon.” Pennsylvania History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies , Winter 1999, Vol. 66, No. 1, Paul Robeson. Via JSTOR. https://www.jstor.org/stable/27774174 Horne, Field. "Peekskill riots." Encyclopedia of New York State, edited by Peter R. Eisenstadt and Laura-Eve Moss, Syracuse UP, 2005, p. 1190. Gale General OneFile, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A194197875/GPS?u=mlin_n_melpub&sid=bookmark-GPS&xid=25d15b16. Accessed 30 Aug. 2022. Horne, Gerald. “Paul Robeson: The Artist as Revolutionary.” Pluto Press. Via JSTOR. https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt19b9jxj.9 Hudson River Maritime Museum. “Paul Robeson and the Peekskill Riots.” 1/18/2021. https://www.hrmm.org/history-blog/paul-robeson-and-the-peekskill-riots Huggins, Nathan Irvin. "Paul Robeson." The Nation, vol. 248, no. 11, 20 Mar. 1989, pp. 383+. Gale In Context: Opposing Viewpoints, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A7424117/GPS?u=mlin_n_melpub&sid=bookmark-GPS&xid=6617e02c. Accessed 30 Aug. 2022. Karp, Jonathan D. “Performing Black-Jewish Symbiosis: The ‘Hassidic Chant' of Paul Robeson.” American Jewish History, Volume 91, Number 1, March 2003. https://doi.org/10.1353/ajh.2004.0032 "Remembering Peekskill." Jacobin Magazine, 22 June 2017, p. NA. Gale General OneFile, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A675159334/GPS?u=mlin_n_melpub&sid=bookmark-GPS&xid=459a974b. Accessed 30 Aug. 2022. Robeson, Paul. “The Negro people and the Soviet Union.” 1950. https://palmm.digital.flvc.org/islandora/object/ucf%3A4785 Salkin, Jeffrey K. “Inside The 1949 Westchester KKK Attack Where Rioters Chanted ‘We're Hitler's Boys'” Forward. 8/26/2019. https://forward.com/culture/113279/peekskill-riots-1949-westchester-kkk-fascist-attack-jewish-black-attendees/ Shea, Rich. “Paul Robeson Football Star.” Rutgers Today. 3/13/2019. https://www.rutgers.edu/news/paul-robeson-football-star Smith, Ronald A. “The Paul Robeson—Jackie Robinson Saga and a Political Collision.” Journal of Sport History , Summer 1979, Vol. 6, No. 2 (Summer 1979). Via JSTOR. : https://www.jstor.org/stable/43608951 Walwik, Joseph. “Pennsylvania History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies Vol. 66, No. 1, Paul Robeson (1898-1976)—A Centennial Symposium (Winter 1999).” Via JSTOR. https://www.jstor.org/stable/27774178 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Verbal Surgery podcast
Verbal Surgery -962- “Proquest”

Verbal Surgery podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2022 37:15


    Does competition play a role in your life?  Who's your main competitor?  Stop fighting with Verbal Surgery “Proquest” and feel good, NOW!

Identity Talk 4 Educators LIVE
"The Identity Conscious Educator" (Dr. Liza Talusan)

Identity Talk 4 Educators LIVE

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2022 65:49


In this episode, I had the pleasure of interviewing Dr. Lisa Talusan to learn about her journey in education, growing up as a second-generation Filipino-American, and her book, "The Identity-Conscious Educator". To learn more about Liza's work, you can visit her website at lizatalusan.com or follow her on Instagram (@ltalusan), Twitter (@ltalusan), and LinkedIn. BIO: Dr. Liza (LIE-zuh) Talusan (taLUS-ahn) is an educator, speaker, leader, writer, leadership coach and parent. With over 25 years of experience in PreK-20 education, Liza is an engaging facilitator in conversations about diversity, anti-racism, bias, privilege and power and creates environments that allow for people to discuss these difficult topics openly. Through her direct work with organizational leaders, staff, students, teachers, and communities, Liza empowers individuals to create a more inclusive organization, environment, community and team. Dr. Talusan has been invited to more than 350 organizations across the country and internationally to deliver keynote addresses and facilitate dialogue groups, training workshops, to develop strategic planning, support change management, and empower leaders. Having achieved her Professional Certified Coaching (PCC) level credentials, Liza helps clients set and achieve goals by tapping into what it means to lead a goal-centered life. Additionally, Liza is certified in the Intercultural Development Inventory, a tested assessment to guide teams in developing greater cross-cultural capacity and determining pre-and-post DEI outcomes. Liza is the recipient of numerous awards including "Best 40 Under 40"; NASPA Region I Mid-Level Professional Award; NASPA APIKC VIP Award; Asian Women for Health's Peer Leader Award; Promise in Action Mentoring Nominee; Network for Equity, Excellence in Education Award; the REAPA (AERA) Dissertation of the Year Award; the Harriet Buescher Lawrence Prize from Connecticut College; and a number of institutional grants: Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology and Child Development from Connecticut College, Masters of Arts in Higher Education Administration from New York University, Ph.D. in Higher Education from University of Massachusetts Boston, Certificate in Human Resources, Stonehill College, PCC Coaching Credentials, ICF Certified Coach, Institute for Professional Excellence in Coaching Liza's cumulative research interests include the experiences of historically underrepresented and excluded populations; Asian American and Pacific Islander issues; socialization to graduate programs; navigating academic parenthood; cross-racial solidarity movements; recognizing and reducing unconscious bias; and the impact of federal financial aid policies. Liza's dissertation, "The Formation of Scholars: Critical Narratives of Asian American and Pacific Islander Doctoral Students in Higher Education" is available on ProQuest. Her new book “The Identity Conscious Educator: Building habits and skills for more inclusive schools” is published by Solution Tree Press and available at all bookstores. Liza's Top 5 StrengthsQuest Themes are Achiever, Maximizer, Discipline, Activator, and Connectedness. She is someone who is driven, results-oriented, effective and organized, engages others to reach their potential, and practices the principles of community and human connection. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/identitytalk4educators/support

NeuroDiverse Christian Couples
Childhood Collections and Passions, Now a Career

NeuroDiverse Christian Couples

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2022 36:46


What the DSM calls "restrictive interests" can actually be passions and foundations for future career possibilities. Join Dr. Holmes as she interviews Autism Advocate and Aspie, Sydney Homes, on her finding her future career and pairing her passions for her future career. Dr. Grandin recommends helping those on the spectrum find their passion and interests and build friendships or careers around their interests. (Tune in to the previous podcast where Sydney interviewed Dr. Grandin).Sydney has spoken at various autism conferences as the voice of someone on the spectrum from personal experience and is eager to educate others. She has been published in Autism Parent Magazine, Autism/Asperger's Digest, and the new magazine Exceptional Needs Today. Sydney has also been published academically as a student for a peer-reviewed journal.A recent article can be found at:Exceptional Needs Today, Issue 2.A past article:https://www.autismparentingmagazine.com/aspie-life-college-life/Her thesis project is available on ProQuest.Sydney resides in Georgia. She is passionate about ending human sex trafficking and makes handmade soaps to raise money for Project Rescue. If you live near Carrollton, GA her soaps are available at a local store, Re-Thread Thrift Store by Simple Suds by Syd.Sydney is a proud Aspie and advocate for Autism acceptance. Having navigated through homeschool, Christian school, public school, and college as a person on the Autism Spectrum, she loves to educate the educators on how to best include students on the autism spectrum in both education and the church setting.She is a recent graduate with her Master's in her passion, Public History with Museum Certification. Sydney is available to speak to colleges, churches, and public school educators about autism acceptance and action for best inclusion practices sharing her personal experiences of those who mentored and empowered her and practices by well-intentioned professionals that were harmful and left a negative impact. She co-speaks with Dr. Holmes and serves on panels upon request.www.HolmesASR.comYouTube Channel: Dr. Stephanie C. HolmesOther topics include girls on the spectrumSydney shares tips for teachersSydney shares advice for other AspiesThe article we mentioned in the podcast:https://www.theartnewspaper.com/2021/03/03/autism-made-me-an-art-historian-but-museums-must-do-more-to-welcome-disabled-and-neurodiverse-communitiesPicture citation: Sydney doing a tour at Belmont Mansion in TN for her thesis project and internship 2021

Reiki from the Farm™
Holy Fire® Reiki, Spirit Release and Mental Health with Jennifer Taylor

Reiki from the Farm™

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2022 71:11 Transcription Available


Jennifer and I discuss the entities and spirits that sometimes attach, and can lead to challenges with mental health. Then Jennifer leads us in a beautiful sound healing meditation to clear any attachments or entities not part of the Divine Plan in your life!Pam's ICRT Classes: https://www.reiki.org/users/pamela-allen-leblanc#classesNewsletter: http://eepurl.com/dFm-19Reiki session:   https://squareup.com/appointments/book/7dvtqlfp939e8g/LPSC51C92BN20/servicesMonthly Reiki share:  http://eepurl.com/hWruP5Instagram:  https://www.instagram.com/reikifromthefarm/Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/hiddenbrookfarmReikiHorsesOilsYoutube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCW5ScR7ObSiPIpgnDkWkiQAemail: pam@reikifromthefarm.comJennifer Taylor, Holy Fire Karuna Reiki Master/Teacher, Animal Reiki Master/Teacher, and Sound Healer Website:  www.willowridgereiki.com Facebook: facebook.com/WillowRidgeReikiInstagram:  www.instagram.com/willowridgereikiRecording of Spirit Release sound healing meditation:  https://www.willowridgereiki.com/recordings Subscribe: Reiki News MagazineThe Reiki Business Book is available from tens of thousands of Retailers, Libraries, Schools, E-commerce companies, book retailers and wholesalers across North America including:  Amazon,Barnes & Noble, Independent bookstores, Walmart.com, Target.com, Chapters / Indigo (Canada)  United Kingdom & Europe from:  Adlibris, Agapea, Amazon.co.uk, Aphrohead, Blackwell, Book Depository Ltd, Books Express, Coutts Information Services Ltd, Designarta Books, Eden Interactive Ltd, Foyles, Gardners, Trust Media Distribution, Mallory International, Paperback Shop Ltd, Superbookdeals, The Book Community Ltd, Waterstones, Wrap Distribution. Australia & New Zealand:  Amazon AU, Booktopia, Fishpond, The Nile, James Bennett, ALS, Peter Pal. Ebook versions available: 24Symbols, Ainosco, Amazon*, Apple**, Barnes & Noble Nook, Bibliotheca, BibliU, Bolinda, Bookmate, Chegg, De Marque, eBooks.com, EBSCO, fable, Follett/B&T, Gardners, Glose, hoopla, Hummingbird, iGroup, ITSI, Kobo Plus, Kortex, Libreka, Libri.de, LitRes, Mackin, Odilo, OverDrive, Perlego, Perusall, ProQuest, Publica.la, RedShelf, Scribd, SpoonRead, Storytel, VitalSource, WF Howes, Wheelers, Wook, YouScribethank you to Music from Pixabay for the intro musicPam Allen-LeBlanc is a scientist, a businesswoman, and a Licensed Reiki Master Teacher with the International Center for Reiki Training.  She is the author of "The Reiki Business Book" and a co-author of ICRT Animal Reiki training.  Pam teaches Reiki, Animal Reiki, and Animal Communication online and in-person in Canada, the US, Australia, and the United Kingdom.

The Revelation Project
Episode 123: Pat Duckworth - The Revelation of Menopause

The Revelation Project

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2022 56:20


Chemistry is important to me, as are relationships. I usually conduct what I call “chemistry calls” before I agree to interview a guest on the podcast. Pat and I had some chemistry. I immediately fell in love with her accent, authenticity, and humor. So much that 90 minutes later, we were still gabbing away. I loved our conversation. Pat is both wise and hysterical! She's taken menopause into a whole new realm making it much more adventurous and accessible for women ready to experience this rite of passage through another lens. Pat approaches this subject differently, revealing to women what an honor it is and a positive rite of passage vs. the signaling of negative things to come. How Pat chose the title of her first book: Hot Women Rock. We discuss where menopause fits in the archetypical journey from maiden to mother to crone How cycles mark the passing of time for women and how women can learn to adjust to the cycles even when no longer menstruating. Why we often dismiss our wise women instead of honoring them How physical changes play a role in how we feel Why menopause is more than hot flashes and ending cycles- so much more! Pat Duckworth is a best-selling author, an international speaker, and a specialist in the area of wellness at menopause. She enjoyed a 30-year career in the British Civil Service, becoming a Director in a major Department. She has written five books on women's health in midlife. In 2021 her book, Menopause: Mind the Gap, was given a 9/10 rating by getAbstract.Pat is a naturally-gifted public speaker, bringing humor and authenticity to her fact-filled presentations. Pat has worked with organizations in the Public and Private Sectors, including HMRC, ONS, Thomson Reuters, ProQuest, Galliard Homes, Cheshire Fire Service, Kameo Recruitment,& Cambridge University Press. Pat received the ‘Heart and SpiritAward'from the Evolutionary BusinessCouncilin 2022

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast
Arsenal Pass Ep49 - 5 Habits

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2022 78:55


Arsenal Pass Ep49 - 5 Habits With the ProQuest season all wrapped up - we take a moment to discuss the 5 habits of highly effective players. Knowing how to handle and grow from losses, predict and adapt to metagames, and tuning and adjusting your game plan can lead to a lot of growth as a player. You can also help us grow our podcast and have your words featured by leaving us a review in the link below. Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ArsenalPass Review Us: https://ratethispodcast.com/arsenalpass Email: arsenalpassfab@gmail.com Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClhUUppHaVDBUOJHXL-a0EQ Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6H2Y8uTHZaVgxpjhnTBn6n?si=R6Uya7paT_e2HOr4n2KC-w ChannelFireball Affiliate Code: ARSENALPASS Twitter: @BrendanAPG (Brendan) & @Fyen_Dale (Hayden) Hosts: Brendan Patrick and Hayden Dale

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast
Arsenal Pass Ep47 - Deck Selection and Metagaming

Arsenal Pass - Flesh and Blood Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2022 63:12


Arsenal Pass Ep47 - Deck Selection and Metagaming We are covering the continuous evolution of the metagame in this ProQuest season - but we also discuss metagaming in general. How do we come to our metagame reads in a world environment? How do we decide when to play which deck based on the metagame read? We also detail how we believe the metagame will evolve in the coming weeks as well. What's really going to bake your noodle later is this: if we are right, is it because we influenced it in a popular podcast or was it destined to be that way no matter what? Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ArsenalPass Email: arsenalpassfab@gmail.com Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClhUUppHaVDBUOJHXL-a0EQ Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6H2Y8uTHZaVgxpjhnTBn6n?si=R6Uya7paT_e2HOr4n2KC-w ChannelFireball Affiliate Code: ARSENALPASS Twitter: @BrendanAPG (Brendan) & @Fyen_Dale (Hayden) Hosts: Brendan Patrick and Hayden Dale