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Sara Baartman i Alice Kyteler van ser unes v
Sara Baartman i Alice Kyteler van ser unes v
Programa 5x29, amb Roger Escapa. Hist
Programa 5x29, amb Roger Escapa. Hist
In this episode, Kelsie interviews Dr. Pamela Scully, a professor of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies and Professor of African Studies at Emory University, Atlanta about Sara Baartman, the Hottentot Venus. Scully is the author of "Sara Baartman and the Hottentot Venus: A Ghost Story and a Biography" from Princeton. She is Chair of the Committee on Gender Equity of the American Historical Association. Sara Baartman was displayed on the stages of Europe in the early nineteenth century. She was born in the Cape Colony. Her life was entwined with British colonialism and violence, the rise of freak shows, the rise of racial science and the legacies of racism for Black women around the globe. Her life also exemplified her complex navigation of oppression. Her life is a way into understanding the rise of particular ways of thinking about race and their entanglement with science as well as an example of colonialism and cosmopolitanism in places students might not expect. She was buried on South African's Women's Day and the return of her remains is also a story about the coming of democracy to South Africa after Apartheid. The court case she was involved in in London was used in one of the key trials in Guantanamo Bay in the 2000s. Find Scully's co-authored book here https://www.amazon.com/Sara-Baartman-Hottentot-Venus-Biography/dp/0691147965 Dozens of FREE inquiry-based lesson plans for teachers at www.remedialherstory.com Get bonus episodes and behind the scenes at www.patreon.com/remedialherstory SHOP gear at www.remedialherstory.com --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/remedialherstory/support
Sara or Saartjie Baartman spent her whole life under the rule of people who exploited her at every turn. Trafficked from South Africa her captors originally wanted her to be put on display as a living exhibit at the British Museum but when they refused, she was forced to dance on stage, night after night. As her popularity dwindled, she was forced by her "keepers" into the world of selling her body and from there, things became much worse. Today on Macabre London, we'll be uncovering the story of Sara Baartman "The Hottentot Venus"Podcast: https://podfollow.com/1180202350 Thanks so much for listening / watching! If you are new here, you may not know that Macabre London is a fortnightly podcast and YouTube show that delves into Londons haunted and gruesome history alongside discovering Macabre mini Mysteries from all over the world! In between fortnights we post travel vlogs & other fun content. If you like it here, then come and join our ghoul gang, hit that subscribe button and come to the dark side, it's fun here, we have stories! ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------PATREON——————————-If you like the podcast and YouTube shows and would like them to continue then please support us on Patreon. You can donate for as little as a price of a cup of coffee and you'll get even more Macabre London. www.patreon.com/macabrelondon Thank you to our executive producer patrons - Amy, Barry, Bex, Christina, Kate, Kevin, Mary, Sam, Sarah and VeronicaAnd to all of our wonderful $5 tier patrons...AlexisAndrewChristineDavidDeniseHelenJenniferJoKathrynKristieRy FrSSabrinaShannonWendyAnd thanks to all other patrons too! ONE OFF DONATIONS————————————————You can make a one off donation to support the show via the PayPal link here: paypal.me/macabrelondonAMAZON WISHLIST——————————————————If you'd like to purchase something that will help the production of the show or help with research then please visit my Amazon wish list. http://amzn.eu/dJxEf1VSOCIAL MEDIA---------------------------------------------Insta: @macabrelondonpodcastTwitter: @macabrelondonFacebook: @macabrelondon Email: macabrelondon@hotmail.com Website: www.macabrelondon.com Sources-------------https://youtu.be/8k5oOXurFHMhttps://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0001286/18101202/016/0007 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarah_Baartmanhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steatopygiahttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PnSxMdRQPsshttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantic_slave_tradehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_zoohttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lazarus_and_Joannes_Baptista_Colloredo https://mansellupham.wordpress.com/2019/08/13/from-the-venus-sickness-to-the-hottentot-venus-saartje-baartman-the-3-men-in-her-life-alexander-dunlop-hendrik-caesar-jean-riaux/ Get bonus content on PatreonSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/macabrelondon. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
"Saartjie (Sara) Baartman was one of the first black women known to be subjugated to human sexual trafficking. She was derisively named the “Hottentot Venus” by Europeans as her body would be publicly examined and exposed inhumanly throughout the duration of her young life. Moreover. her experience reinforced the already existing and extremely negative sexual fascination with African women bodies by the people of Europe. Sara Baartman was born in 1789 at the Gamtoos River, now known as the Eastern Cape in South Africa. Baartman and her family were members of the Gonaquasub group of the Khoikhoi. Baartman grew up on a colonial farm where she and her family most likely worked as servants. Her mother died when she was aged two and her father, who was a cattle driver, died when she was still a young girl. By her teenage years Baartman married a Khoikhoi man who was a drummer. They had a child together who died shortly after birth. When Baartman was sixteen, her husband was murdered by Dutch colonists. Soon after, she was sold into slavery to a trader named Pieter Willem Cezar, who took her to Cape Town where she became a domestic slave to his brother, Hendrik. On October 29, 1810, although she could not read, 21-year-old Baartman supposedly signed a contract with William Dunlop, a physician, who was a friend of the Cezar brothers. This contract required her to travel with the Cezar brothers and Dunlop to England and Ireland where she would work as a domestic servant since technically slavery had been abolished in Great Britain. Additionally, she would be exhibited for entertainment purposes. Baartman would receive a portion of earnings from her exhibitions and would be allowed to return to South Africa after five years. However, the contract was false on all details and her enslavement continued for the remainder of her life." --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/antonio-myers4/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/antonio-myers4/support
We discuss the historic legacy of Black Exotica. Displaying black bodies as entertainment and or scientific/medical racism. We reference Authors Pamela Newkirk(Spectacle), Keven Young(Bunk), Harriet A. Washington(Medical Apartheid) and Neely Fuller Jr. We play a clip of Dave Chappelle Rick James skit to add additional context.
This episode is also available as a blog post: http://fabulousmeujwara.com/2021/10/16/sara-baartman-lives-and-breathes-in-2021-the-era-of-just-for-sex-girls/
Society has erased any and all historical events from our existence. Today I want to bring one of those figures to the for front and lets not forget the tragic circumstances in which this young African Queen endured. Sara Baartman will and should always be remembered as the first black woman to be Sex Trafficked. #sarabaartman #sextraficking #slavery #blackqueen --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
In this episode, Mildred talks about the life of Sara (Saartjie) Baartman, a South African Khoikhoi woman who was brought to Europe in the 18th century to be displayed to the public in the 18th century for study. visit our instagram @historyformisanthropes if you have questions, comments, please email us at historylessonsformisanthropes@gmail.com music by V►LH►LL vlhll.bandcamp.com
What's wrong with 'em? It's a simple question that's hard to answer. Jill, Laiya, and Aja try to get to the bottom of some of the questionable things people do, like being unable to have conversations with nuance or wear a mask properly. On the subject of white people with locs: Jill presents pros, and Aja comes back with some strong cons. Of course, these are all observations, not judgments. The question is also: What’s wrong with us? Resource mentioned in this episode: More on Sara Baartman
E aquí un smolcast un episodio pequeñito espero y les guste
Episode Notes Wherein our fearless cohosts discuss the controversy surrounding the 1932 film "Freaks," and the sad lives of Sara Baartman and Julia Pastrana. (CONTENT WARNING: Due to the subject matter of both stories, it was impossible to avoid some ableist language.) This podcast is powered by Pinecast.
It looks like you can definitely make money off your assets! Learn more about Sara Baartman. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ladybillieday/support
Cosa sarebbe accaduto se Sara Baartman e Marie Taglioni si fossero conosciute? Avrebbero parlato di danza? Avrebbero danzato insieme? Forse. Eppure non è accaduto e lo stesso mondo che ha relegato l'una a freak, ha celebrato l'altra come star.
This week's episode is an ode to health! There are many dimensions to discuss, so the sisters Riri and Starchild get deep down in the business of being born, living as colonized people, black bodies as products, and how we take care of people as a society. Special shout out to Sara Baartman and Henrietta Lacks for their contributions to science and medicine! This one is a ride, so hang on folks!
In S2 Ep.2 of Real Talk On Godtalk, your favorite co-hosts sit down with Sarah K - writer, community engagement coordinator, and self proclaimed “fat woman”. Her work joins the field of ‘fat studies’ and social ethics with theologies of the body. She helps us answer the Real Talk question of the week, “How do our feelings about fat people clue us into our beliefs about God?”. Next, in Keeping Time and the Moon Reading, YaYa shows us how to take advantage of the back to back meteor showers that end in a full moon on October 13th. And finally, we have a new segment called “Quality of Life Hack”, where this week, TRUTH introduces us to a more spiritually grounded approach to the activity everyone loves to hate: networking. N.B At about 38:56 YaYa mistakenly refers Sara Baartman as Venus Hottentot. Let’s use the platforms we have to self-correct and #sayhername : Sara Baartman (1770s – 29 December 1815) was the best known of at least two South African Khoikhoi women who, due to their large buttocks, were exhibited in racist freak show attractions in 19th-century Europe under the name Hottentot Venus—"Hottentot", an offensive term, was the name for the Khoi people. Upon her death in 1815, Baartman’s body was dissected and displayed in the western scientific community for “medical research”.
The Bible says that the people of Israel would be taken to a land they didn’t know, their children would be taken from them, their wives would be raped, their bodies left for the birds to eat. Sound like the Trans-Atlantic slave trade and American slavery? (The person/name I was trying to think of in the episode is Sara Baartman/the Hottentot Venus.) Transcript/Show Notes: www.psalmstogod.com/blackisrael2 Instagram: www.instagram.com/shiree.hughes
Join me, your host Amy Walker, as I delve into stories from across history with a guest who has no idea what the topic is going to be. This week I'm joined by Han Burch to talk about Sara Baartman, the young woman who traveled from South Africa to England to make money in the … Continue reading Episode 29 – Sara Baartman →
Due to a busy holiday travel schedule, Matt and I were unable to record a new podcast for early December. Instead, we are offering bonus content! In October I presented at the Great Lakes History Conference in Allendale, MI on five African topics for world history instructors. These topics were designed to link with the Michigan social studies curriculum which divides world history into several main time periods. Elementary social studies instructors deal with the pre-1500 period, and I suggest the Indian Ocean coast as an ideal topic. At the high school level, I use the trans-Atlantic slave trade to explore the First Global Age, the life of Sara Baartman to examine the dark side of Global Revolutions (1700-1914), and the Cold War in the Congo as well as soccer in Africa to explore 20th Century and Contemporary Global Issues. This presentation is also available in its entirety on Youtube courtesy of the Michigan Council for History Education, where you can watch the other presenters on my panel (Dr. Michael Huner and Dr. David Zwart, both from Grand Valley State University) as well as the questions from the audience. While there is no specific recommendation section to this episode, each of the following books explores one of my topics in depth – Mugane, The Story of Swahili; Walvin, The Zong; Crais and Scully, Sara Baartman and the Hottentot Venus; Nzongola-Ntalaja, Patrice Lumumba; Alegi, African Soccerscapes