Podcasts about racialisation

  • 21PODCASTS
  • 28EPISODES
  • 35mAVG DURATION
  • 1MONTHLY NEW EPISODE
  • Dec 8, 2024LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about racialisation

Latest podcast episodes about racialisation

Future Learning Design Podcast
Time to Question the Science? A Conversation with Subhadra Das

Future Learning Design Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2024 41:33


One of the things that I enjoy doing on the podcast is problematising various 'school subjects'. In previous episodes, with various guests we've questioned maths, languages, economics, history, physical education. But we haven't yet taken a critical look at science itself, which is not only a set of disciplines, but also an approach and methodology that underpins a lot of the logic of how many like to imagine that we direct education, through evidence-based practice and the sciences of learning. Apparently it tells us ‘what works' in inverted commas… doesn't it? This week, it's a massive pleasure to be chatting with the delightful and funny Subhadra Das a historian, writer, broadcaster, comedian, curator, researcher and storyteller who looks at the relationship between science and society. She specialises in the history and philosophy of science, particularly the history of scientific racism and eugenics, and for nine years, was Curator of the Science Collections at University College London. She was also Researcher in Critical Eugenics at the Sarah Parker Remond Centre for the Study of Racism and Racialisation. Subhadra has also appeared on radio and TV as a stand-up comedian. In this conversation we talk about her fantastic   recent book, Uncivilised: Ten Lies that Made the West. Subhadra Das (https://www.subhadradas.com/) is a historian, writer, broadcaster, comedian, curator, researcher and storyteller who looks at the relationship between science and society.  She specialises in the history and philosophy of science, particularly the history of scientific racism and eugenics, and what those histories mean for our lives today. For nine years, Subhadra was Curator of the Science Collections at University College London, where she was also Researcher in Critical Eugenics at the Sarah Parker Remond Centre for the Study of Racism and Racialisation.  She's also a prolific writer, broadcaster on radio and TV and stand-up comedian. In this conversation we talk about her recent book, Uncivilised: Ten Lies that Made the West In which she brings the lens of the history of science to bear on Western tropes such as ‘knowledge is power', ‘time is money' and 'justice is blind'.

Across the Margin: The Podcast
Episode 198: UNCIVILISED with Subhadra Das

Across the Margin: The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2024 40:14


This episode of Across The Margin : The Podcast features an interview with Subhadra Das who specializes in the history and philosophy of science, particularly the history of scientific racism and eugenics, and what those histories mean for our lives today. For nine years, she was Curator of the Science Collections at University College London where she was also Researcher in Critical Eugenics at the Sarah Parker Remond Centre for the Study of Racism and Racialisation. Her debut novel, UNCIVILISED : Ten Lies That Made The West, is the focus of this episode. Western civilisation is a powerful brand, and full of accepted wisdoms that we rarely question. Taking cues from Greek philosophy and honed in the Enlightenment, certain notions about humanity and society grew into the tenets many of us still live by today. But if we take a closer look at these ideas, it seems they are not all they're cracked up to be. In fact, some of them are outright lies — and we can start to ask who really benefits from them. What is the value of a scientific worldview that conjured up ‘race'? Are the Western concepts of ‘saving' and ‘wasting' time really the best ways to live? Who are our laws actually designed to serve? And the real question: is the West as civilized as it likes to think it is? In an age of division and entrenched inequality, UNCIVILISED is a timely, provocative and entertaining counter to the ideas and assumptions that have shaped the West, exposing the fatal flaws at its core. In this episode host Michael Shields and Subhadra Das discuss Subhadra's work with museum collections, as well as her background growing up in Abu Dhabi, which have both informed her worldview and the stories told throughout UNCIVILISED. They dig into a few of the lies that embolden the West such as ‘Knowledge is Power', ‘Justice is Blind', and ‘Time is Money” while also celebrating cultures (Blackfoot Nation / First Australians) that Westerners could learn a great deal from, and so much more.Grab a copy of UNCIVILISED : Ten Lies That Made The West here! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

We'd Like A Word
24. History & lies (part 3) with Subhadra Das, author of Uncivilised: Ten Lies That Made The West

We'd Like A Word

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2024 23:01


24. History & lies (part 3): We'd Like A Word hosts Paul Waters & Stevyn Colgan chat & laugh with Subhadra Das, writer, historian, broadcaster, comedian & curator, about her book, Uncivilised: Ten Lies That Made The West. Subhadra looks at the relationship between science & society. She specialises in the history & philosophy of science, particularly the history of scientific racism & eugenics, & what those histories mean for our lives today. For nine years, she was Curator of the Science Collections at University College London where she was also Researcher in Critical Eugenics at the Sarah Parker Remond Centre for the Study of Racism & Racialisation. She's written & presented podcasts, curated museum exhibitions, done stand-up comedy & been on radio & tv. In this 3-part episode we talk about racist Gandhi, mispronouncing Bangla names, white supremacy baked into our idea of western civilisation, science not being neutral, comforting lies, Francis Galton, eugenics, the inventor of the questionnaire, spoiling things for white people, why female comics like Victoria Wood Dawn French & Jennifer Saunders avoided the QI TV show, the Defiance TV show on Channel 4, Hamza Yousef, Paul McCartney's song Blackbird & reply guy, "empty places" v "emptied" places, the presence of writing as a measure of civilisation, rich eejit Erich von Däniken, fake Tibetan monk Lobsang Rampa aka Cyril Henry Hoskin, cuddly Columbo, Golden Age detective fiction as "the mental equivalent of pottering", Magna Carta & Forest Charter, swan upping, US federal government & the Iroquois nation's Haudenosaunee, Abraham Maslow & his hierarchy of needs, which he learned from the Blackfoot Nation, Ryan Heavyhead, the UK citizenship test, & editor Harriet Poland. We'd Like A Word is a podcast & radio show from authors Paul Waters & Stevyn Colgan. (And sometimes Jonathan Kennedy.) We talk with writers, readers, editors, agents, celebrities, talkers, poets, publishers, booksellers, & audiobook creators about books - fiction & non-fiction. We go out on various radio & podcast platforms. Our website is http://www.wedlikeaword.com for information on Paul, Steve & our guests. We're on Twitter @wedlikeaword & Facebook @wedlikeaword & our email is wedlikeaword@gmail.com Yes, we're embarrassed by the missing apostrophes. We like to hear from you - questions, thoughts, ideas, guest or book suggestions. Perhaps you'd like to come on We'd Like A Word to chat, review or read out passages from books. Paul is writing a new cosy mystery series set in contemporary Delhi - more on that anon. And if you're still stuck for something to read now, may we recommend Blackwatertown, the thriller by Paul Waters or Cockerings, the comic classic by Stevyn Colgan.

We'd Like A Word
25. History & lies (part 2) with Subhadra Das, author of Uncivilised: Ten Lies That Made The West

We'd Like A Word

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2024 22:59


25. History & lies (part 2): We'd Like A Word hosts Paul Waters & Stevyn Colgan chat & laugh with Subhadra Das, writer, historian, broadcaster, comedian & curator, about her book, Uncivilised: Ten Lies That Made The West. Subhadra looks at the relationship between science & society. She specialises in the history & philosophy of science, particularly the history of scientific racism & eugenics, & what those histories mean for our lives today. For nine years, she was Curator of the Science Collections at University College London where she was also Researcher in Critical Eugenics at the Sarah Parker Remond Centre for the Study of Racism & Racialisation. She's written & presented podcasts, curated museum exhibitions, done stand-up comedy & been on radio & tv. In this 3-part episode we talk about racist Gandhi, mispronouncing Bangla names, white supremacy baked into our idea of western civilisation, science not being neutral, comforting lies, Francis Galton, eugenics, the inventor of the questionnaire, spoiling things for white people, why female comics like Victoria Wood Dawn French & Jennifer Saunders avoided the QI TV show, the Defiance TV show on Channel 4, Hamza Yousef, Paul McCartney's song Blackbird & reply guy, "empty places" v "emptied" places, the presence of writing as a measure of civilisation, rich eejit Erich von Däniken, fake Tibetan monk Lobsang Rampa aka Cyril Henry Hoskin, cuddly Columbo, Golden Age detective fiction as "the mental equivalent of pottering", Magna Carta & Forest Charter, swan upping, US federal government & the Iroquois nation's Haudenosaunee, Abraham Maslow & his hierarchy of needs, which he learned from the Blackfoot Nation, Ryan Heavyhead, the UK citizenship test, & editor Harriet Poland. We'd Like A Word is a podcast & radio show from authors Paul Waters & Stevyn Colgan. (And sometimes Jonathan Kennedy.) We talk with writers, readers, editors, agents, celebrities, talkers, poets, publishers, booksellers, & audiobook creators about books - fiction & non-fiction. We go out on various radio & podcast platforms. Our website is http://www.wedlikeaword.com for information on Paul, Steve & our guests. We're on Twitter @wedlikeaword & Facebook @wedlikeaword & our email is wedlikeaword@gmail.com Yes, we're embarrassed by the missing apostrophes. We like to hear from you - questions, thoughts, ideas, guest or book suggestions. Perhaps you'd like to come on We'd Like A Word to chat, review or read out passages from books. Paul is writing a new cosy mystery series set in contemporary Delhi - more on that anon. And if you're still stuck for something to read now, may we recommend Blackwatertown, the thriller by Paul Waters or Cockerings, the comic classic by Stevyn Colgan.

We'd Like A Word
26. History & lies (part 1) with Subhadra Das, author of Uncivilised: Ten Lies That Made The West

We'd Like A Word

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2024 19:37


26. History & lies (part 1): We'd Like A Word hosts Paul Waters & Stevyn Colgan chat & laugh with Subhadra Das, writer, historian, broadcaster, comedian & curator, about her book, Uncivilised: Ten Lies That Made The West. Subhadra looks at the relationship between science & society. She specialises in the history & philosophy of science, particularly the history of scientific racism & eugenics, & what those histories mean for our lives today. For nine years, she was Curator of the Science Collections at University College London where she was also Researcher in Critical Eugenics at the Sarah Parker Remond Centre for the Study of Racism & Racialisation. She's written & presented podcasts, curated museum exhibitions, done stand-up comedy & been on radio & tv. In this 3-part episode we talk about racist Gandhi, mispronouncing Bangla names, white supremacy baked into our idea of western civilisation, science not being neutral, comforting lies, Francis Galton, eugenics, the inventor of the questionnaire, spoiling things for white people, why female comics like Victoria Wood Dawn French & Jennifer Saunders avoided the QI TV show, the Defiance TV show on Channel 4, Hamza Yousef, Paul McCartney's song Blackbird & reply guy, "empty places" v "emptied" places, the presence of writing as a measure of civilisation, rich eejit Erich von Däniken, fake Tibetan monk Lobsang Rampa aka Cyril Henry Hoskin, cuddly Columbo, Golden Age detective fiction as "the mental equivalent of pottering", Magna Carta & Forest Charter, swan upping, US federal government & the Iroquois nation's Haudenosaunee, Abraham Maslow & his hierarchy of needs, which he learned from the Blackfoot Nation, Ryan Heavyhead, the UK citizenship test, & editor Harriet Poland. We'd Like A Word is a podcast & radio show from authors Paul Waters & Stevyn Colgan. (And sometimes Jonathan Kennedy.) We talk with writers, readers, editors, agents, celebrities, talkers, poets, publishers, booksellers, & audiobook creators about books - fiction & non-fiction. We go out on various radio & podcast platforms. Our website is http://www.wedlikeaword.com for information on Paul, Steve & our guests. We're on Twitter @wedlikeaword & Facebook @wedlikeaword & our email is wedlikeaword@gmail.com Yes, we're embarrassed by the missing apostrophes. We like to hear from you - questions, thoughts, ideas, guest or book suggestions. Perhaps you'd like to come on We'd Like A Word to chat, review or read out passages from books. Paul is writing a new cosy mystery series set in contemporary Delhi - more on that anon. And if you're still stuck for something to read now, may we recommend Blackwatertown, the thriller by Paul Waters or Cockerings, the comic classic by Stevyn Colgan.

EMPIRE LINES
The Black Atlantic, Paul Gilroy (1993-Now) (EMPIRE LINES Live, with Radical Ecology)

EMPIRE LINES

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 29, 2024 48:47


Decolonial thinker Professor Paul Gilroy joins EMPIRE LINES live in Plymouth, to chart thirty years since the publication of The Black Atlantic, his influential book about race, nationalism, and the formation of a transoceanic, diasporic culture, of African, American, British, and Caribbean heritages. Published in 1993, Paul Gilroy's The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness explores the interconnectedness of Black diasporas and communities across Western/Europe. He argues that the experience of slavery and colonisation, racism and global migration has shaped a unique Black cultural identity that transcends national borders. By examining the cultural contributions of Black individuals in music, literature, and art, Paul suggests that the Black Atlantic remains a site of resistance and creativity. Highlighting the plural and complex experiences of Black people throughout history and today, he challenges the notion of a singular, essential Black identity. We consider some of the transdisciplinary artist-activist-academics referenced in his texts, including W.E.B. Du Bois, Stuart Hall, and James Baldwin, to more contemporary figures, like Nadia Cattouse, bell hooks, and June Jordan, and Angeline Morrison. Plus, Paul talks about his early interests in music journalism, research into Black jazz and blues music, as well as British folk and country songs - and even Eminem. We consider Paul's engagements with Critical Race Theory (CRT), and Cultural Studies in Birmingham in the Midlands, and how his practice challenges ideas of Black nationalism, Afro-centrism, and political Blackness. We discuss too his ideas about afro-pessimism and planetary humanism, and how capitalism, militarism, and the environment has changed over the last thirty years. A self-described ‘child of Rachel Carson', he details his support for Extinction Rebellion, and the obligation of older generations to find hope in an era of climate and ecological crises. Finally, Paul describes his ‘Creole upbringing' in north London, connecting with his Guyanese heritage in the multicultural, cosmopolitan city, and how his mixed parentage shaped his relationship with rural landscapes, including the south-west of England, from where we speak. This episode was recorded live at the Black Atlantic Symposium in Plymouth - a series of talks and live performances, celebrating the 30th anniversary of Paul Gilroy's formative text - in November 2023: eventbrite.co.uk/e/black-atlantic-tickets-750903260867?aff=oddtdtcreator For more, listen to Ashish Ghadiali on the exhibition Against Apartheid (2023): pod.link/1533637675/episode/146d4463adf0990219f1bf0480b816d3 For more about Life Between Islands: Caribbean-British Art 1950s – Now (2021-2022) at Tate Britain in London, read my article for Artmag: artmag.co.uk/the-caribbean-condensed-life-between-islands-at-the-tate-britain/ For more about Ingrid Pollard, hear the artist on Carbon Slowly Turning (2022) at the Turner Contemporary in Margate: pod.link/1533637675/episode/e00996c8caff991ad6da78b4d73da7e4 For more about the Quiltmakers of Gee's Bend, listen to Raina Lampkins-Felder, curator at the Souls Grown Deep Foundation and Royal Academy in London: https://pod.link/1533637675/episode/2cab2757a707f76d6b5e85dbe1b62993 WITH: Professor Paul Gilroy, sociologist, Founding Director of the Sarah Parker Remond Centre for the Study of Racism & Racialisation at University College London (UCL), and Co-Chair of the Black Atlantic Innovation Network (BAIN). He won the Holberg Prize in 2019. ART: ‘'The Black Atlantic, Paul Gilroy (1993-Now) (EMPIRE LINES Live in Plymouth, with Radical Ecology)' PRODUCER: Jelena Sofronijevic. Follow EMPIRE LINES on Instagram: instagram.com/empirelinespodcast And Twitter: twitter.com/jelsofron/status/1306563558063271936 Support EMPIRE LINES on Patreon: patreon.com/empirelines

Better Known
Subhadra Das

Better Known

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2022 29:01


Subhadra Das discusses with Ivan six things which should be better known. Subhadra Das is a researcher and storyteller who looks at the relationship between science and society. She specialises in the history and philosophy of science, particularly the history of scientific racism and eugenics, and what those histories mean for our lives today. For nine years, she was Curator of the Science Collections at University College London, and also Researcher in Critical Eugenics at the Sarah Parker Remond Centre for the Study of Racism and Racialisation. She has written and presented podcasts, curated museum exhibitions, done stand-up comedy and regularly appears on radio and TV. Her first book, (Un)Civilised: 10 Lies That Made The West comes out in May 2023. For more information, go to https://www.waterstones.com/book/un-civilised/subhadra-das/9781399704359%C2%A0 Francis Galton https://blogs.ucl.ac.uk/museums/2015/10/22/francis-galton-and-the-history-of-eugenics-at-ucl/ Alok Vaid Menon https://www.instagram.com/alokvmenon Alabama 3 https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2001/apr/04/artsfeatures.popandrock Gaudy Night https://www.newyorker.com/books/under-review/an-overlooked-novel-from-1935-by-the-godmother-of-feminist-detective-fiction Pocket https://getpocket.com/ The Muppet Movie https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/the-muppet-movie-1979 This podcast is powered by ZenCast.fm

Les Cours du Collège de France
Le passé imposé par Henry Laurens 10/11 : Minorités, mémoires coloniales et racialisation

Les Cours du Collège de France

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2022 58:45


durée : 00:58:45 - Les Cours du Collège de France - par : Merryl Moneghetti - De quand date la question des minorités ? Comment la notion de blancheur, whiteness, en anglais, est-elle apparu dans l'américanisation des migrants ? La question musulmane est-elle un héritage colonial ? S'interroge l'historien Henry Laurens. - invités : Henry Laurens Professeur au Collège de France, titulaire de la chaire d'Histoire contemporaine du monde arabe.

Intelligence Squared
Reflections on Black Consciousness: Lewis Gordon and Paul Gilroy in conversation

Intelligence Squared

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2022 50:27


Professor Lewis Gordon is a leading philosopher and Department Head at the University of Connecticut who believes that intellectual thought matters as much as political activism in the struggle to achieve racial justice. His recent book Fear of Black Consciousness is an exploration that combines academic theory and also his ideas on pop culture to create a broad and thought-provoking study, Gordon is joined in conversation by Professor Paul Gilroy, author, one of the world's foremost theorists of race and racism, and Founding Director of the Sarah Parker Remond Centre for the Study of Racism & Racialisation at University College London. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Surviving Society
E146 Ben Gidley: British Jews, racialisation & multiculture

Surviving Society

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2022 43:43


Ben joined us to discuss his intellectual project so far which has centred urban contexts (London), Jewish diasporic formations, racisms, migration and multiculture. AD: Fed up with the mainstream media? Support radical, challenging, independent media instead! Start your subscription to Red Pepper – the magazine at the heart of the movement – today. https://www.redpepper.org.uk/subscribe/ Links: https://www.bbk.ac.uk/our-staff/profile/8746457/ben-gidley#research

jewish red pepper british jews gidley multiculture racialisation
GeogPod
Episode #40: Dr Amber Murrey - Geographies of race and racialisation and designing an anti-racist curriculum

GeogPod

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2021 69:21


This week John was joined by Dr Amber Murrey. Amber is an Associate Professor in Human Geography, Fellow and Tutor at Mansfield College, Oxford University.  John and Amber touched on many issues in their chat, including confronting the silence on racism in school geography, what an anti-racist curriculum could look like, the Chad-Cameroon oil pipeline and witchcraft! Series 7 of GeogPod is kindly sponsored by Britannica.  Take Britannica's LaunchPacks GCSE for a spin with history and geography lessons, built with Shireland Academy educators and mapped to UK curriculum needs. Within each KS3-4 topical pack, find a learning route, learning journey instructions, printable activities, and corresponding Britannica LaunchPacks articles and multimedia resources. 10% off for GeogPod listeners!  Links from the pod Amber's article in Geography with Steve Puttick Amber's article with Nicholas Jackson on 'Localwashing' Amber's Twitter

Les Grandes Gueules
Macron inquiet de la "racialisation de la société", a-t-il raison ? - 01/07

Les Grandes Gueules

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2021 29:05


Avec : Gilles-William Goldnadel, avocat. Thomas Porcher, professeur d'économie. Et Louis Boyard, étudiant. - Alain Marschall et Olivier Truchot présentent un show de 3 heures avec leurs invités, où actualité rime avec liberté de ton, sur RMC la radio d'opinion. « Les Grandes Gueules » animées par Alain Marschall et Olivier Truchot sont de retour pour une 17e saison ! Agriculteur, fromager, avocat, enseignante… les 14 GG, issues de la société civile, n'ont jamais peur de défendre leurs idées. Entre débats animés, accrochages et éclats de rires, ces 3 heures de talk-show sont le reflet des vraies préoccupations des Français. En simultané sur RMC Story. Chaque matin dès 6h, écoutez un show radio/télé unique en France. Pendant trois heures, l'équipe de RMC s'applique à partager l'actualité au plus près du quotidien des Français. Un rendez-vous exceptionnel mêlant infos en direct, débats autour de l'actualité, réactions et intervention d'experts. En simultané de 6h à 8h30 sur RMC Découverte. RMC est une radio généraliste, essentiellement axée sur l'actualité et sur l'interactivité avec les auditeurs, dans un format 100% parlé, inédit en France. La grille des programmes de RMC s'articule autour de rendez-vous phares comme Apolline Matin (6h-9h), les Grandes Gueules (9h-12h), Neumann/Lechypre (12h-14h).

france radio talkshow pendant macron gg raison la soci rmc agriculteur inquiet grandes gueules rmc d rmc story apolline matin racialisation les grandes gueules olivier truchot neumann lechypre et louis boyard lesgg
Les vraies voix
Le premier débat : Le Pen : Le RN doit-il se viriliser ? Le deuxième débat : Delta, restrictions : Faut-il craindre une division entre vaccinés et non-vaccinés ? Le grand débat : Racialisation de la société, Macron a-t-il raison ?

Les vraies voix

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2021


Le premier débat : Le Pen : Le RN doit-il se viriliser ? Le deuxième débat : Delta, restrictions : Faut-il craindre une division entre vaccinés et non-vaccinés ? Le grand débat : Racialisation de la société, Macron a-t-il raison ?

Inverted Podcast
Coco Gauff And The Racialisation Of Wimbledon - BLM Subverting Tennis

Inverted Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2021 11:55


This is an audio podcast episode of a video release. For more information on this podcast visit https://www.stuartoswald.com/p/podcast.html. » Find me everywhere https://linktr.ee/stuartoswald » VPN to watch Wimbledon https://www.stuartoswald.com/p/my-recommended-vpn.html

Disrupt: A Revolutionary Critical Podcast
Climate Change: Queer, Feminist, and Critical Race Theories

Disrupt: A Revolutionary Critical Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2021 23:16


In this episode, we look at how Feminism, Queer Theory, and Critical Race Theory are used to unpack climate change and environmental degradation in international relations. Links to resources on critical theories and climate change are listed below! Feminism: Kimberlé Crenshaw and Intersectionality Feminist Perspectives on the Environment | Oxford Research Encyclopedia of International Studies Queer: Nicola J. Smith, “Capitalism's Sexual History”  Critical Race: Beth Gardiner, “Unequal Impact: The Deep Links Between Inequality and Climate Change”  Natalie Ambrosio, Racial Justice and Climate Change: Exposure. Andrew Baldwin, Racialisation and the figure of the climate-change migrant.

N'Autre Histoire
#20 La férocité blanche (3/3): Reprendre la parole aux experts

N'Autre Histoire

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2021 46:11


#20 Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe: penser la férocité blanche, 3e partie: Reprendre la parole aux expertsLa férocité blanche, ce sont 500 ans de crimes et d'injustice produits par la violence coloniale. Troisième et dernière partie de notre entretien avec Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe, autrice de La férocité blanche, des non-blancs aux non-aryens, génocides occultés de 1492 à nos jours. Dans épisode, Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe s'interroge sur le regard soi-disant neutre de ceux qui se proclament experts et appelle chacunE d'entre nous à se défaire des prisons mentales qui nous emprisonnent en questionnant les vérités officielles.Née en Colombie, Rosa-Amelia Plumelle-Uribe est descendante à la fois des populations autochtones d'Abya Yala et des AfricainEs qui y ont été déportéEs par les colonisateurs Européens.Références:Générique : Atch, Freedom, 2020.Maria Bethânia (ft. Caetano Veloso & Gilberto Gil), Saudade dela, 2009.Les ouvrages de Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe: Du lynchage des noirs dans les rues au lynchage judiciaire des noirs, Éd. Anibwé, 2020; 3 Novembre 2015 Victimes innocentes des guerres, Éd. Anibwé, 2016; Victimes des esclavagistes musulmans, chrétiens et juifs. Racialisation et banalisation d'un crime contre l'humanité, Éd. Anibwé, 2012; Kongo, les mains coupées, Éd. Anibwé, 2010; Traite des blancs, traites des noirs : aspects méconnus et conséquences actuelles, L'Harmattan, 2008; La férocité blanche : des non-Blancs aux non-Aryens, génocides occultés de 1492 à nos jours, A. Michel, 2001. Les conseils de lecture de Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe: En los años 70 : Tambores del destino por Peter Bourne ; Discurso sobre el colonialismo de Aimé Césaire ; Los condenados de la tierra; Piel negra máscaras blancas por Franz Fanon ; Autobiografía de Malcom X por Alex Haley ; El apartheid en la práctica, Compendio de la legislación sud-africana ; En los años 80 : Français et Africains. Les Noirs dans le regard des Blancs por William Cohen ; La politique nazie d'extermination, François Bédarida ; La destruction des Juifs d'Europe par Raul Hilberg ; Des Juifs dans la collaboration par Maurice Rajsfus ; Hitler voulait l'Afrique par Alexandre Kuma N'Dumbé III ; Science nazie, science de mort par Benno Muller-Hill ; La conquête de l'Amérique et la question de l'autre par Tzvetan Todorov ; Israël et les peuples noirs L'alliance raciste israélo arabe par Abdelkader Benabdallah ; Mémoires d'un esclave américain par Frederick Douglas ; Le code noir ou le calvaire de Canaan par Louis Sala-Molins ; En los años 90 : L'Afrique aux Amériques par Louis Sala-Molins ; Les fantômes du roi Léopold II un holocauste oublié par Adam Hochschild ; L'assassinat de Lumumba par Ludo de Witte ;L'or et le fer, Bismarck et son banquier Bleichröder par Fritz Stern ; Le septième million, par Tom Segev ; Eichmann à Jérusalem par Hannah Arendt ; Civilisation ou barbarie par Cheikh Anta Diop; Desde los años 2 000 : Le mythe de la bonne guerre par Jacques R. Pauwels ; 1914-1918 La grande guerre des classes par Jacques R. Pauwels ; La conquête continue par Noam Chomsky ; « Nous le peuple des Etats Unis » par Howard Zinn ; Une histoire populaire des Etats-Unis par Howard Zinn ; L'Holocauste dans la vie américaine par Peter Novick ; Aux origines des théories raciales par André Pichot ; Si je suis encore en vie… par Ken Saro-Wiwa ; Comment Hitler a acheté les Allemands par Götz Aly ; Les architectes de l'extermination par Götz Aly ; Silenciando el pasado por Michel-Rolph Trouillot ; Esclavage Réparation Les Lumières des Capucins et Les lueurs des pharisiens par Louis Sala-Molins.Pour aller plus loin:L'entretien de Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe avec Cases Rebelles en 2014L'entretien de Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe avec Thotep: partie 1 et partie 2Lettre a Yann Moix, qui traitait "d'anachronisme" l'utilisation du terme "crime contre l'humanité" concernant l'esclavage ou les crimes commis sous NapoléonExtrait de Kongo, les mains coupées sur le site de Cases RebellesExtrait de Victimes des esclavagistes musulmans, chrétiens et juifs sur le site Etat d'exceptionAdaptation radiophonique de La Férocité blanche par Le gang des gazières Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.

N'Autre Histoire
#19 La férocité blanche (2/3): Appeler un génocide un génocide

N'Autre Histoire

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2021 41:10


#19 La férocité blanche (2/3): Trouver les mot: appeler un génocide un génocideLa « férocité blanche », ce sont les crimes produits par 500 ans de colonialisme, dont Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe rapporte l'extrême violence et cruauté à travers un travail gigantesque de documentation accumulée et minutieusement analysée pendant deux décennies. Deuxième partie de notre entretien avec l'autrice de La férocité blanche, des non-blancs aux non-aryens, génocides occultés de 1492 à nos jours. Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe nous présente sa réflexion, riche et fine, sur la notion de génocide, et comment elle a contribué à la redéfinir à partir de ses recherches.Née en Colombie, Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe est descendante à la fois des peuples originaires d'Abya Yala (Amériques) et des populations noires qui y ont été déportées pendant la traite d'esclaves européenne. Publié en 2001, La férocité blanche est le fruit de 20 ans de réflexion, qui reste toujours pertinente.Musique:Los hijos del sol, El tamalito, 1989.Générique : Atch, Freedom, 2020.Les ouvrages de Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe: Du lynchage des noirs dans les rues au lynchage judiciaire des noirs, Éd. Anibwé, 2020; 3 Novembre 2015 Victimes innocentes des guerres, Éd. Anibwé, 2016; Victimes des esclavagistes musulmans, chrétiens et juifs. Racialisation et banalisation d'un crime contre l'humanité, Éd. Anibwé, 2012; Kongo, les mains coupées, Éd. Anibwé, 2010; Traite des blancs, traites des noirs : aspects méconnus et conséquences actuelles, L'Harmattan, 2008; La férocité blanche : des non-Blancs aux non-Aryens, génocides occultés de 1492 à nos jours, A. Michel, 2001.Les conseils de lecture de Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe: En los años 70 : Tambores del destino por Peter Bourne ; Discurso sobre el colonialismo de Aimé Césaire ; Los condenados de la tierra; Piel negra máscaras blancas por Franz Fanon ; Autobiografía de Malcom X por Alex Haley ; El apartheid en la práctica, Compendio de la legislación sud-africana ; En los años 80 : Français et Africains. Les Noirs dans le regard des Blancs por William Cohen ; La politique nazie d'extermination, François Bédarida ; La destruction des Juifs d'Europe par Raul Hilberg ; Des Juifs dans la collaboration par Maurice Rajsfus ; Hitler voulait l'Afrique par Alexandre Kuma N'Dumbé III ; Science nazie, science de mort par Benno Muller-Hill ; La conquête de l'Amérique et la question de l'autre par Tzvetan Todorov ; Israël et les peuples noirs L'alliance raciste israélo arabe par Abdelkader Benabdallah ; Mémoires d'un esclave américain par Frederick Douglas ; Le code noir ou le calvaire de Canaan par Louis Sala-Molins ; En los años 90 : L'Afrique aux Amériques par Louis Sala-Molins ; Les fantômes du roi Léopold II un holocauste oublié par Adam Hochschild ; L'assassinat de Lumumba par Ludo de Witte ;L'or et le fer, Bismarck et son banquier Bleichröder par Fritz Stern ; Le septième million, par Tom Segev ; Eichmann à Jérusalem par Hannah Arendt ; Civilisation ou barbarie par Cheikh Anta Diop; Desde los años 2 000 : Le mythe de la bonne guerre par Jacques R. Pauwels ; 1914-1918 La grande guerre des classes par Jacques R. Pauwels ; La conquête continue par Noam Chomsky ; « Nous le peuple des Etats Unis » par Howard Zinn ; Une histoire populaire des Etats-Unis par Howard Zinn ; L'Holocauste dans la vie américaine par Peter Novick ; Aux origines des théories raciales par André Pichot ; Si je suis encore en vie… par Ken Saro-Wiwa ; Comment Hitler a acheté les Allemands par Götz Aly ; Les architectes de l'extermination par Götz Aly ; Silenciando el pasado por Michel-Rolph Trouillot ; Esclavage Réparation Les Lumières des Capucins et Les lueurs des pharisiens par Louis Sala-Molins.Pour aller plus loin:L'entretien de Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe avec Cases Rebelles en 2014L'entretien de Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe avec Thotep: partie 1 et partie 2Lettre a Yann Moix, qui traitait "d'anachronisme" l'utilisation du terme "crime contre l'humanité" concernant l'esclavage ou les crimes commis sous NapoléonExtrait de Kongo, les mains coupées sur le site de Cases RebellesExtrait de Victimes des esclavagistes musulmans, chrétiens et juifs sur le site Etat d'exceptionAdaptation radiophonique de La Férocité blanche par Le gang des gazières Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.

Ideas Matter: the boi podcast
Ideas Matter: Historical racism and the new language of racialisation

Ideas Matter: the boi podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2021 24:33


Second podcast in our series on Race and Racism, the theme of BoI charity’s event The Academy, held online in late 2020. In this episode, we feature the lecture ‘Historical racism and the new language of racialisation’. At a time when questions related to race have very much come to the forefront of political discussion, this talk examines what the new antiracism stands for - and argues that it represents a break from the anti-racism of the recent past, and that the time has come to instead adopt a universalist, humanist perspective.Lecturer: Dr Alka Sehgal Cuthbert, founding signatory, Don’t Divide Us; educator, researcher and writer; author, ‘What should schools teach? Disciplines, subjects and the pursuit of truth’.THE ACADEMY ONLINE II: RACE AND RACISMThe Academy II was a half day online event via zoom that took place in November 2020.  To view the full programme and some suggested background reading to the talks, please visit  https://theboi.co.uk/the-academy-online-ii-race-and-racism   For this introductory lecture, we you may wish to read:- • 'Nationalism' by Rabindranath Tagore (1917).  Purchase this Penguin Classics book http://amzn.to/2LPfpFw • 'Learning to Read and Write' by Frederick Douglass (1845) (pdf). https://bit.ly/39ViHin   THE ACADEMYIn the context of today’s instrumental approaches to knowledge, The Academy summer school is a modest attempt to demonstrate the value of scholarship, and of the worth of the university as a place of free enquiry dedicated to the pursuit of truth.DONATING TO THE BOI CHARITYThe BOI charity is committed to continuing to host discussion and debates throughout this period when society is restricted by measures to tackle coronavirus. In order to realise events such as the Academy Online, none of our staff are furloughed and instead remain working. If you can, then please consider a donation, small or large. Visit: https://theboi.co.uk/donate  IDEAS MATTER PODCASTIdeas Matter is a podcast that takes the most important issues of our times and explores the ideas and intellectual trends that have shaped where we are today.You can subscribe and listen to Ideas Matter on iTunes, Podbean, Spotify or SoundCloud. For full details of all episodes, visit the podcast page on our websiteKeep up-to-date with Ideas Matter and all the initiatives organised by the Battle of Ideas charity by following us on Twitter (@theboi_uk) and on Facebook (battleofideas).

N'Autre Histoire
#18 La férocité blanche (1/3): Prendre conscience du « démon du racisme »

N'Autre Histoire

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2021 41:10


#18 Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe. Penser la férocité blanche (1/3)Pour cet épisode, nous avons rencontré Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe, autrice de La férocité blanche, des non-blancs aux non-aryens, génocides occultés de 1492 à nos jours.Aujourd'hui âgée de 68 ans, elle a accepté de nous recevoir chez elle, en banlieue parisienne. Née en Colombie, Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe est descendante à la fois des peuples originaires d'Abya Yala (Amériques) et des populations noires qui y ont été déportées pendant la traite d'esclaves Européenne. Ce que Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe appelle la « férocité blanche », ce sont les crimes produits par 500 ans de colonialisme, dont elle rapporte l'extrême violence et cruauté à travers un travail gigantesque de documentation accumulée et minutieusement analysée pendant deux décennies. Mais La férocité blanche est tout sauf un catalogue de l'horreur. Publié en 2001, ce livre est le fruit de 20 ans de réflexion, qui reste pertinente. Comme Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe le dit elle-même, c'est une compréhension des faits qu'elle propose avant tout. Musique:Julieta Venegas ft. Marisa Monte, Ilusión, 2011.Générique : Atch, Freedom, 2020.Les ouvrages de Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe: Du lynchage des noirs dans les rues au lynchage judiciaire des noirs, Éd. Anibwé, 2020; 3 Novembre 2015 Victimes innocentes des guerres, Éd. Anibwé, 2016; Victimes des esclavagistes musulmans, chrétiens et juifs. Racialisation et banalisation d'un crime contre l'humanité, Éd. Anibwé, 2012; Kongo, les mains coupées, Éd. Anibwé, 2010; Traite des blancs, traites des noirs : aspects méconnus et conséquences actuelles, L'Harmattan, 2008; La férocité blanche : des non-Blancs aux non-Aryens, génocides occultés de 1492 à nos jours, A. Michel, 2001.Les conseils de lecture de Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe: En los años 70 : Tambores del destino por Peter Bourne ; Discurso sobre el colonialismo de Aimé Césaire ; Los condenados de la tierra; Piel negra máscaras blancas por Franz Fanon ; Autobiografía de Malcom X por Alex Haley ; El apartheid en la práctica, Compendio de la legislación sud-africana ; En los años 80 : Français et Africains. Les Noirs dans le regard des Blancs por William Cohen ; La politique nazie d'extermination, François Bédarida ; La destruction des Juifs d'Europe par Raul Hilberg ; Des Juifs dans la collaboration par Maurice Rajsfus ; Hitler voulait l'Afrique par Alexandre Kuma N'Dumbé III ; Science nazie, science de mort par Benno Muller-Hill ; La conquête de l'Amérique et la question de l'autre par Tzvetan Todorov ; Israël et les peuples noirs L'alliance raciste israélo arabe par Abdelkader Benabdallah ; Mémoires d'un esclave américain par Frederick Douglas ; Le code noir ou le calvaire de Canaan par Louis Sala-Molins ; En los años 90 : L'Afrique aux Amériques par Louis Sala-Molins ; Les fantômes du roi Léopold II un holocauste oublié par Adam Hochschild ; L'assassinat de Lumumba par Ludo de Witte ;L'or et le fer, Bismarck et son banquier Bleichröder par Fritz Stern ; Le septième million, par Tom Segev ; Eichmann à Jérusalem par Hannah Arendt ; Civilisation ou barbarie par Cheikh Anta Diop; Desde los años 2 000 : Le mythe de la bonne guerre par Jacques R. Pauwels ; 1914-1918 La grande guerre des classes par Jacques R. Pauwels ; La conquête continue par Noam Chomsky ; « Nous le peuple des Etats Unis » par Howard Zinn ; Une histoire populaire des Etats-Unis par Howard Zinn ; L'Holocauste dans la vie américaine par Peter Novick ; Aux origines des théories raciales par André Pichot ; Si je suis encore en vie… par Ken Saro-Wiwa ; Comment Hitler a acheté les Allemands par Götz Aly ; Les architectes de l'extermination par Götz Aly ; Silenciando el pasado por Michel-Rolph Trouillot ; Esclavage Réparation Les Lumières des Capucins et Les lueurs des pharisiens par Louis Sala-Molins.Pour aller plus loin:L'entretien de Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe avec Cases Rebelles en 2014L'entretien de Rosa Amelia Plumelle-Uribe avec Thotep: partie 1 et partie 2Lettre a Yann Moix, qui traitait "d'anachronisme" l'utilisation du terme "crime contre l'humanité" concernant l'esclavage ou les crimes commis sous NapoléonExtrait de Kongo, les mains coupées sur le site de Cases RebellesExtrait de Victimes des esclavagistes musulmans, chrétiens et juifs sur le site Etat d'exceptionAdaptation radiophonique de La Férocité blanche par Le gang des gazières Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.

The Fire These Times
37/The Racialisation of Migrant Labor Under the Kafala System in Lebanon (with Daryn Howland)

The Fire These Times

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2020 47:36


This is a conversation with Daryn Howland. She's a Beirut-based researcher who recently finished her MA thesis entitled "racist capital: the racialization of migrant labor under the kafala system in Beirut", the subject of our discussion. You can read the thesis in its current format here. Daryn argues that the racialisation and dehumanisation of migrant domestic workers under the Kafala system in Lebanon contains four components: Commodification Inferiorization Criminalization Sexualization These four components are crucial to the reproduction of the Kafala system's structural racism which, ultimately, confines migrant domestic workers, the overwhelming majority of whom are women, to their labor. We unpack each of them so that, hopefully, you'll get a good sense of how the Kafala system functions on a structural level. We also spoke about how the components of the Kafala system also end up affecting any person of color, particularly of African and Asian heritage, in Lebanon. This is the fourth episode on the Kafala system. To see the previous three, click here. Additional links: What it means to be black and African in Lebanon by Claudette Igiraneza The Fire These Times' Anti-Kafala Action resources Exhibit Highlights Struggle of Lebanese of African and Asian heritage You can follow the podcast on Twitter @FireTheseTimes. If you like what I do, please consider supporting this project with only 1$ a month on Patreon or on BuyMeACoffee.com. You can also do so directly on PayPal if you prefer. Patreon is for monthly, PayPal is for one-offs and BuyMeACoffee has both options. If you cannot donate you can still help by reviewing this podcast on Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. The Fire These Times is available on Apple Podcasts, Anchor, Breaker, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, Radio Public, Spotify, Pocket Casts, Castro and RSS. If it is not available wherever you get your podcasts, please drop me a message! Music by Tarabeat. The photo is a modified version of the Anti-Kafala Action logo designed by Rawane Issa. You can find the original one at the Anti-Kafala Action resources page.

Les idées mènent le monde
À propos du concept de privilège blanc. Entretien avec Stéphane Kelly

Les idées mènent le monde

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2020 33:33


La mort de George Floyd à Minneapolis, au Minnesota, aux États-Unis, a suscité un débat dépassant largement les frontières américaines, comme on le voit au Québec et ailleurs ces jours-ci. À travers cela, une série de concepts qui jusqu’ici, étaient contenus dans les marges de l’espace publique sont en voie de normalisation accélérée. Il semble aujourd’hui obligatoire de reconnaître la validité de concepts comme racisme systémique, discrimination systémique ou encore, privilège blanc. Que comprendre de ces concepts? Ne risquent-ils pas d’entrainer une racialisation des rapports sociaux? Que nous disent-ils sur l’évolution des sciences sociales et des représentations sociales?

Surviving Society
E069 Aurelien Mondon & Aaron Winter: Racism and the Populist Far Right

Surviving Society

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2019 60:31


This week were joined by Aurelien and Aaron to discuss the themes in their forthcoming book (2020) - Reactionary Democracy: How Racism and the Populist Far Right Became Mainstream. Useful links - Aurelien Mondon and Aaron Winter. 2018. ‘Whiteness, Populism and the Racialisation of the Working Class in the United Kingdom and the United States', Identities, Global Studies in Culture and Power, 26:5: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/1070289X.2018.1552440?journalCode=gide20 Aurelien Mondon and Aaron Winter. 2017. ‘Articulations of Islamophobia: from the extreme to the mainstream?', Ethnic and Racial Studies, 40:13: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/01419870.2017.1312008?journalCode=rers20 Katy Brown, Aurelien Mondon and Aaron Winter. 2019. 'Populist' can be a weasel word for 'racist', Open Democracy, 16 October: https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/opendemocracyuk/populist-can-be-a-weasel-word-for-racist-and-thats-dangerous/ Aurelien Mondon and Aaron Winter. 2018. ‘Understanding the mainstreaming of the far right', Open Democracy, 26 August: https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/can-europe-make-it/understanding-mainstreaming-of-far-right/

Surviving Society
E069 Aurelien Mondon & Aaron Winter: Racism and the Populist Far Right

Surviving Society

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2019 60:31


This week were joined by Aurelien and Aaron to discuss the themes in their forthcoming book (2020) - Reactionary Democracy: How Racism and the Populist Far Right Became Mainstream. Useful links - Aurelien Mondon and Aaron Winter. 2018. ‘Whiteness, Populism and the Racialisation of the Working Class in the United Kingdom and the United States’, Identities, Global Studies in Culture and Power, 26:5: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/1070289X.2018.1552440?journalCode=gide20 Aurelien Mondon and Aaron Winter. 2017. ‘Articulations of Islamophobia: from the extreme to the mainstream?’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 40:13: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/01419870.2017.1312008?journalCode=rers20 Katy Brown, Aurelien Mondon and Aaron Winter. 2019. 'Populist' can be a weasel word for 'racist', Open Democracy, 16 October: https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/opendemocracyuk/populist-can-be-a-weasel-word-for-racist-and-thats-dangerous/ Aurelien Mondon and Aaron Winter. 2018. ‘Understanding the mainstreaming of the far right’, Open Democracy, 26 August: https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/can-europe-make-it/understanding-mainstreaming-of-far-right/

Conversation express
Podcast : La racialisation de la question sociale

Conversation express

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2017 8:37


Manifestation en 2010 à Orléans. Wikimedia, CC BY-NCNedjib Sidi Moussa, docteur en sciences politiques, auteur de La fabrique du musulman (éditions Libertalia, février 2017) revient sur la façon dont les débats sociaux en France sont aujourd’hui minés par les questions raciales, et comment les différentes sensibilités politiques, de l’extrême droite à l’extrême gauche se sont emparées de cette thématique. Interview Clea Chakraverty / Montage Antoine Faure. Nedjib Sidi Moussa ne travaille pas, ne conseille pas, ne possède pas de parts, ne reçoit pas de fonds d'une organisation qui pourrait tirer profit de cet article, et n'a déclaré aucune autre affiliation que son poste universitaire.

Critical Social Psychology - for iPod/iPhone
Transcript -- Interview dynamics

Critical Social Psychology - for iPod/iPhone

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2009


Transcript -- Professor Ann Phoenix discusses her study on masculinities in 11 to 14 year old boys, looking at interview dynamics.

Critical Social Psychology - for iPad/Mac/PC
Transcript -- Interview dynamics

Critical Social Psychology - for iPad/Mac/PC

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2009


Transcript -- Professor Ann Phoenix discusses her study on masculinities in 11 to 14 year old boys, looking at interview dynamics.

Critical Social Psychology - for iPad/Mac/PC

Professor Ann Phoenix discusses her study on masculinities in 11 to 14 year old boys, looking at interview dynamics.

Critical Social Psychology - for iPod/iPhone

Professor Ann Phoenix discusses her study on masculinities in 11 to 14 year old boys, looking at interview dynamics.