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In a very special episode, Jon got in touch with the director of this docu-film, Shannon Walsh, to discuss that this isn't a musical but should be a musical. It's truly a movie about love, and Shannon gives some behind the scenes stories about the process of making this film.And we got SLee on the pod!Shannon's Links: https://linktr.ee/shannondawnwalsh?utm_source=linktree_profile_share<sid=e36123ac-6a46-4cdf-a25e-f9a1aee6532aSLee's Instagram: @justcallmesleeAdrianne & the Castle Links: https://linktr.ee/AdrianneAndtheCastle?utm_source=linktree_profile_share<sid=d2332228-0d79-4fbd-a542-0c37eb539a6ePodcast Socials -Email: butasongpod@gmail.comFacebook: @butasongpodInstagram: @butasongpodThreads: @butasongoidTikTok: @butasongpodTwitter: @butasongpodNext episode: An American Tail: Fievel Goes West!
Abby returns to discuss Adrianne and the Castle, a new fantasy romance musical hybrid documentary about a couple who built a castle of love in rural Illinois. She is joined by director Shannon Walsh and lead actress SLee to discuss what the film means for fat representation and honoring Adrianne's memory. See a screening in NYC or LA! Website: https://adrianneandthecastle.com/ Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9UUnjIo2sXA Shannon's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/shannondwalsh/ SLee's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/justcallmeslee/
When we ask a question, we aim to explore the essence of who we are and where we fit in the world. Questions evoke introspection and self-discovery, urging us to confront our fears, challenge our assumptions, and embrace uncertainty with courage. Through questions, we venture beyond the surface, unearthing the truths that shape our beliefs, values, and relationships. Embracing the power of questions allows us to dive into the sea of human consciousness, where profound insights and revelations await those who dare to explore its depths. But it's best not to overthink it. On this weeks episode Scott enlists the help of Shannon Walsh of EZBZ and Premier Home Services to provide answers to questions submitted to the Podcast on its Facebook page. Are you struggling to make the profits you want in your landscaping business? Check out the ProfitsUp Estimating for Landscaping https://www.milliondollarlandscaper.com/profitsuplive QUESTION —Do you have a question you would like us to answer? Let us know on our Facebook Page.
Shannon Walsh joins us to discuss maybe more Funny Girl previews(!?), Will making horrible life decisions, and a Sue Sylvester love affair. We also got, you guessed it, OPENING NIGHT, 2014 sex dungeon gay clubs, Ian bragging about his first uber experience, and so much more!@shannonmareewalsh@gleeaggressive@epicadventureof@ibroskigleeaggressive@gmail.comBuy our merch!Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/gleeagressive. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Are you still relying on pen and paper for your work orders, like an animal? Is your desk an ominous swamp of random papers? And if you do use modern technology to organize your business, is your process efficient, or are you juggling multiple programs and apps, with documents scattered between random drives and devices? What if there was one app to rule them all? Todays show is a conversation between Scott and Shannon Walsh, president of EZBZ, a work order app that is so much more than just a work order app. Learn how EZBZ can help you get more organized at https://easybeezy.app/mdl/ QUESTION —What technology are you using for your work orders? Let us know on our Facebook Page.
In our most recent OH Inspiration Podcast, Ogilvy Health Public Relations President, Shannon Walsh, sat with host Bryan Minogue to share what it was like to grow up in Woodside, Queens and how she is enjoys finding inspiration in unexpected places, including her family, local music and sidewalk art.
Carol and Rumneek speak with Shannon Walsh, an associate professor in the Department of Film and Theater at UBC, and also a filmmaker. Her fifth and latest film is The Gig is Up. Hear about the ways the global gig economy is impacting not only the future of work, but society as a whole.
Today we are joined by Dr. Shannon Walsh, Associate Professor of Theatre History, and author of Eugenics and Physical Culture Performance in the Progressive Era: Watch Whiteness Workout (Palgrave MacMillan, 2020). In our conversation, we discussed the origins of women's physical culture in the United States, the role that physical culture reformers played in producing femininity and whiteness, and the possibilities for anti-racist and anti-sexist sport to reconceptualize the white supremist roots of American athleticism. In Eugenics and Physical Culture Performance in the Progressive Era, Walsh traces the beginnings of reform era physical culture, paying special attention to the way that physical culturists attempted to shape women's bodies. She argues that their efforts hinged on using exercise to produce femininity and whiteness and that they prefigured the larger eugenic movements aimed at perpetuating the white race later in the 20th century. In each chapter she looks at different physical culturists or physical cultural movement. Her second chapter looks at Steele MacKaye and Americanised Delsarte, a physical cultural practice that combined acting, dance and exercise. Her third chapter focuses on Dudley Allen Sargent and mimetic workouts that introduced working class motions – for example wood chopping - to middle and upper-middle class men and women at Ivy League colleges. The fourth and fifth chapter work together to unpack the complicated position of women's physical culture, femininity and motherhood. In chapter four, Walsh shows how Abby Shaw Mayhew and the YWCA articulated a genre of motherhood, which Walsh calls “social motherhood,” that reframed women's exercise as domestic and maternal rather than grotesque and masculine. In the fifth chapter, Walsh examines Bernarr MacFadden – the Barnum of physical culture – to showcases the places where advertising, motherhood, and women's exercise came into explicit contact. Relying on a close reading of physical culture through critical theory, these main chapters trace the intersections between exercise, femininity, motherhood, race and social class, to illustrate how debates over these issues helped to produce whiteness. Whether they were in elite educational institutions in the Northeast, Midwestern metropolises like Minneapolis, or travelling around the country these experts helped to code physical culture as specifically as womanly, middle class, white, and ultimately as unremarkable. He final body chapter, chapter six, looks at physical culture for indigenous women in three sites: the Odanah Mission School, the Model Indian School at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis, and the Standing Rock Indian Reservation. Unlike their white counterparts, indigenous women were not offered significant opportunities for physical exercise and if they were it was only for the purpose of assimilation. Unsurprisingly, many indigenous girls and women challenged those expectations and were successful athletes. Keith Rathbone is a Senior Lecturer at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. He researches twentieth-century French social and cultural history. His book, entitled Sport and physical culture in Occupied France: Authoritarianism, agency, and everyday life, (Manchester University Press, 2022) examines physical education and sports in order to better understand civic life under the dual authoritarian systems of the German Occupation and the Vichy Regime. If you have a title to suggest for this podcast, please contact him at keith.rathbone@mq.edu.au and follow him at @keithrathbone on twitter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Today we are joined by Dr. Shannon Walsh, Associate Professor of Theatre History, and author of Eugenics and Physical Culture Performance in the Progressive Era: Watch Whiteness Workout (Palgrave MacMillan, 2020). In our conversation, we discussed the origins of women's physical culture in the United States, the role that physical culture reformers played in producing femininity and whiteness, and the possibilities for anti-racist and anti-sexist sport to reconceptualize the white supremist roots of American athleticism. In Eugenics and Physical Culture Performance in the Progressive Era, Walsh traces the beginnings of reform era physical culture, paying special attention to the way that physical culturists attempted to shape women's bodies. She argues that their efforts hinged on using exercise to produce femininity and whiteness and that they prefigured the larger eugenic movements aimed at perpetuating the white race later in the 20th century. In each chapter she looks at different physical culturists or physical cultural movement. Her second chapter looks at Steele MacKaye and Americanised Delsarte, a physical cultural practice that combined acting, dance and exercise. Her third chapter focuses on Dudley Allen Sargent and mimetic workouts that introduced working class motions – for example wood chopping - to middle and upper-middle class men and women at Ivy League colleges. The fourth and fifth chapter work together to unpack the complicated position of women's physical culture, femininity and motherhood. In chapter four, Walsh shows how Abby Shaw Mayhew and the YWCA articulated a genre of motherhood, which Walsh calls “social motherhood,” that reframed women's exercise as domestic and maternal rather than grotesque and masculine. In the fifth chapter, Walsh examines Bernarr MacFadden – the Barnum of physical culture – to showcases the places where advertising, motherhood, and women's exercise came into explicit contact. Relying on a close reading of physical culture through critical theory, these main chapters trace the intersections between exercise, femininity, motherhood, race and social class, to illustrate how debates over these issues helped to produce whiteness. Whether they were in elite educational institutions in the Northeast, Midwestern metropolises like Minneapolis, or travelling around the country these experts helped to code physical culture as specifically as womanly, middle class, white, and ultimately as unremarkable. He final body chapter, chapter six, looks at physical culture for indigenous women in three sites: the Odanah Mission School, the Model Indian School at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis, and the Standing Rock Indian Reservation. Unlike their white counterparts, indigenous women were not offered significant opportunities for physical exercise and if they were it was only for the purpose of assimilation. Unsurprisingly, many indigenous girls and women challenged those expectations and were successful athletes. Keith Rathbone is a Senior Lecturer at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. He researches twentieth-century French social and cultural history. His book, entitled Sport and physical culture in Occupied France: Authoritarianism, agency, and everyday life, (Manchester University Press, 2022) examines physical education and sports in order to better understand civic life under the dual authoritarian systems of the German Occupation and the Vichy Regime. If you have a title to suggest for this podcast, please contact him at keith.rathbone@mq.edu.au and follow him at @keithrathbone on twitter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history
Today we are joined by Dr. Shannon Walsh, Associate Professor of Theatre History, and author of Eugenics and Physical Culture Performance in the Progressive Era: Watch Whiteness Workout (Palgrave MacMillan, 2020). In our conversation, we discussed the origins of women's physical culture in the United States, the role that physical culture reformers played in producing femininity and whiteness, and the possibilities for anti-racist and anti-sexist sport to reconceptualize the white supremist roots of American athleticism. In Eugenics and Physical Culture Performance in the Progressive Era, Walsh traces the beginnings of reform era physical culture, paying special attention to the way that physical culturists attempted to shape women's bodies. She argues that their efforts hinged on using exercise to produce femininity and whiteness and that they prefigured the larger eugenic movements aimed at perpetuating the white race later in the 20th century. In each chapter she looks at different physical culturists or physical cultural movement. Her second chapter looks at Steele MacKaye and Americanised Delsarte, a physical cultural practice that combined acting, dance and exercise. Her third chapter focuses on Dudley Allen Sargent and mimetic workouts that introduced working class motions – for example wood chopping - to middle and upper-middle class men and women at Ivy League colleges. The fourth and fifth chapter work together to unpack the complicated position of women's physical culture, femininity and motherhood. In chapter four, Walsh shows how Abby Shaw Mayhew and the YWCA articulated a genre of motherhood, which Walsh calls “social motherhood,” that reframed women's exercise as domestic and maternal rather than grotesque and masculine. In the fifth chapter, Walsh examines Bernarr MacFadden – the Barnum of physical culture – to showcases the places where advertising, motherhood, and women's exercise came into explicit contact. Relying on a close reading of physical culture through critical theory, these main chapters trace the intersections between exercise, femininity, motherhood, race and social class, to illustrate how debates over these issues helped to produce whiteness. Whether they were in elite educational institutions in the Northeast, Midwestern metropolises like Minneapolis, or travelling around the country these experts helped to code physical culture as specifically as womanly, middle class, white, and ultimately as unremarkable. He final body chapter, chapter six, looks at physical culture for indigenous women in three sites: the Odanah Mission School, the Model Indian School at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis, and the Standing Rock Indian Reservation. Unlike their white counterparts, indigenous women were not offered significant opportunities for physical exercise and if they were it was only for the purpose of assimilation. Unsurprisingly, many indigenous girls and women challenged those expectations and were successful athletes. Keith Rathbone is a Senior Lecturer at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. He researches twentieth-century French social and cultural history. His book, entitled Sport and physical culture in Occupied France: Authoritarianism, agency, and everyday life, (Manchester University Press, 2022) examines physical education and sports in order to better understand civic life under the dual authoritarian systems of the German Occupation and the Vichy Regime. If you have a title to suggest for this podcast, please contact him at keith.rathbone@mq.edu.au and follow him at @keithrathbone on twitter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/gender-studies
Today we are joined by Dr. Shannon Walsh, Associate Professor of Theatre History, and author of Eugenics and Physical Culture Performance in the Progressive Era: Watch Whiteness Workout (Palgrave MacMillan, 2020). In our conversation, we discussed the origins of women's physical culture in the United States, the role that physical culture reformers played in producing femininity and whiteness, and the possibilities for anti-racist and anti-sexist sport to reconceptualize the white supremist roots of American athleticism. In Eugenics and Physical Culture Performance in the Progressive Era, Walsh traces the beginnings of reform era physical culture, paying special attention to the way that physical culturists attempted to shape women's bodies. She argues that their efforts hinged on using exercise to produce femininity and whiteness and that they prefigured the larger eugenic movements aimed at perpetuating the white race later in the 20th century. In each chapter she looks at different physical culturists or physical cultural movement. Her second chapter looks at Steele MacKaye and Americanised Delsarte, a physical cultural practice that combined acting, dance and exercise. Her third chapter focuses on Dudley Allen Sargent and mimetic workouts that introduced working class motions – for example wood chopping - to middle and upper-middle class men and women at Ivy League colleges. The fourth and fifth chapter work together to unpack the complicated position of women's physical culture, femininity and motherhood. In chapter four, Walsh shows how Abby Shaw Mayhew and the YWCA articulated a genre of motherhood, which Walsh calls “social motherhood,” that reframed women's exercise as domestic and maternal rather than grotesque and masculine. In the fifth chapter, Walsh examines Bernarr MacFadden – the Barnum of physical culture – to showcases the places where advertising, motherhood, and women's exercise came into explicit contact. Relying on a close reading of physical culture through critical theory, these main chapters trace the intersections between exercise, femininity, motherhood, race and social class, to illustrate how debates over these issues helped to produce whiteness. Whether they were in elite educational institutions in the Northeast, Midwestern metropolises like Minneapolis, or travelling around the country these experts helped to code physical culture as specifically as womanly, middle class, white, and ultimately as unremarkable. He final body chapter, chapter six, looks at physical culture for indigenous women in three sites: the Odanah Mission School, the Model Indian School at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis, and the Standing Rock Indian Reservation. Unlike their white counterparts, indigenous women were not offered significant opportunities for physical exercise and if they were it was only for the purpose of assimilation. Unsurprisingly, many indigenous girls and women challenged those expectations and were successful athletes. Keith Rathbone is a Senior Lecturer at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. He researches twentieth-century French social and cultural history. His book, entitled Sport and physical culture in Occupied France: Authoritarianism, agency, and everyday life, (Manchester University Press, 2022) examines physical education and sports in order to better understand civic life under the dual authoritarian systems of the German Occupation and the Vichy Regime. If you have a title to suggest for this podcast, please contact him at keith.rathbone@mq.edu.au and follow him at @keithrathbone on twitter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/sports
Today we are joined by Dr. Shannon Walsh, Associate Professor of Theatre History, and author of Eugenics and Physical Culture Performance in the Progressive Era: Watch Whiteness Workout (Palgrave MacMillan, 2020). In our conversation, we discussed the origins of women's physical culture in the United States, the role that physical culture reformers played in producing femininity and whiteness, and the possibilities for anti-racist and anti-sexist sport to reconceptualize the white supremist roots of American athleticism. In Eugenics and Physical Culture Performance in the Progressive Era, Walsh traces the beginnings of reform era physical culture, paying special attention to the way that physical culturists attempted to shape women's bodies. She argues that their efforts hinged on using exercise to produce femininity and whiteness and that they prefigured the larger eugenic movements aimed at perpetuating the white race later in the 20th century. In each chapter she looks at different physical culturists or physical cultural movement. Her second chapter looks at Steele MacKaye and Americanised Delsarte, a physical cultural practice that combined acting, dance and exercise. Her third chapter focuses on Dudley Allen Sargent and mimetic workouts that introduced working class motions – for example wood chopping - to middle and upper-middle class men and women at Ivy League colleges. The fourth and fifth chapter work together to unpack the complicated position of women's physical culture, femininity and motherhood. In chapter four, Walsh shows how Abby Shaw Mayhew and the YWCA articulated a genre of motherhood, which Walsh calls “social motherhood,” that reframed women's exercise as domestic and maternal rather than grotesque and masculine. In the fifth chapter, Walsh examines Bernarr MacFadden – the Barnum of physical culture – to showcases the places where advertising, motherhood, and women's exercise came into explicit contact. Relying on a close reading of physical culture through critical theory, these main chapters trace the intersections between exercise, femininity, motherhood, race and social class, to illustrate how debates over these issues helped to produce whiteness. Whether they were in elite educational institutions in the Northeast, Midwestern metropolises like Minneapolis, or travelling around the country these experts helped to code physical culture as specifically as womanly, middle class, white, and ultimately as unremarkable. He final body chapter, chapter six, looks at physical culture for indigenous women in three sites: the Odanah Mission School, the Model Indian School at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis, and the Standing Rock Indian Reservation. Unlike their white counterparts, indigenous women were not offered significant opportunities for physical exercise and if they were it was only for the purpose of assimilation. Unsurprisingly, many indigenous girls and women challenged those expectations and were successful athletes. Keith Rathbone is a Senior Lecturer at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. He researches twentieth-century French social and cultural history. His book, entitled Sport and physical culture in Occupied France: Authoritarianism, agency, and everyday life, (Manchester University Press, 2022) examines physical education and sports in order to better understand civic life under the dual authoritarian systems of the German Occupation and the Vichy Regime. If you have a title to suggest for this podcast, please contact him at keith.rathbone@mq.edu.au and follow him at @keithrathbone on twitter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/american-studies
Today we are joined by Dr. Shannon Walsh, Associate Professor of Theatre History, and author of Eugenics and Physical Culture Performance in the Progressive Era: Watch Whiteness Workout (Palgrave MacMillan, 2020). In our conversation, we discussed the origins of women's physical culture in the United States, the role that physical culture reformers played in producing femininity and whiteness, and the possibilities for anti-racist and anti-sexist sport to reconceptualize the white supremist roots of American athleticism. In Eugenics and Physical Culture Performance in the Progressive Era, Walsh traces the beginnings of reform era physical culture, paying special attention to the way that physical culturists attempted to shape women's bodies. She argues that their efforts hinged on using exercise to produce femininity and whiteness and that they prefigured the larger eugenic movements aimed at perpetuating the white race later in the 20th century. In each chapter she looks at different physical culturists or physical cultural movement. Her second chapter looks at Steele MacKaye and Americanised Delsarte, a physical cultural practice that combined acting, dance and exercise. Her third chapter focuses on Dudley Allen Sargent and mimetic workouts that introduced working class motions – for example wood chopping - to middle and upper-middle class men and women at Ivy League colleges. The fourth and fifth chapter work together to unpack the complicated position of women's physical culture, femininity and motherhood. In chapter four, Walsh shows how Abby Shaw Mayhew and the YWCA articulated a genre of motherhood, which Walsh calls “social motherhood,” that reframed women's exercise as domestic and maternal rather than grotesque and masculine. In the fifth chapter, Walsh examines Bernarr MacFadden – the Barnum of physical culture – to showcases the places where advertising, motherhood, and women's exercise came into explicit contact. Relying on a close reading of physical culture through critical theory, these main chapters trace the intersections between exercise, femininity, motherhood, race and social class, to illustrate how debates over these issues helped to produce whiteness. Whether they were in elite educational institutions in the Northeast, Midwestern metropolises like Minneapolis, or travelling around the country these experts helped to code physical culture as specifically as womanly, middle class, white, and ultimately as unremarkable. He final body chapter, chapter six, looks at physical culture for indigenous women in three sites: the Odanah Mission School, the Model Indian School at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis, and the Standing Rock Indian Reservation. Unlike their white counterparts, indigenous women were not offered significant opportunities for physical exercise and if they were it was only for the purpose of assimilation. Unsurprisingly, many indigenous girls and women challenged those expectations and were successful athletes. Keith Rathbone is a Senior Lecturer at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. He researches twentieth-century French social and cultural history. His book, entitled Sport and physical culture in Occupied France: Authoritarianism, agency, and everyday life, (Manchester University Press, 2022) examines physical education and sports in order to better understand civic life under the dual authoritarian systems of the German Occupation and the Vichy Regime. If you have a title to suggest for this podcast, please contact him at keith.rathbone@mq.edu.au and follow him at @keithrathbone on twitter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Today we are joined by Dr. Shannon Walsh, Associate Professor of Theatre History, and author of Eugenics and Physical Culture Performance in the Progressive Era: Watch Whiteness Workout (Palgrave MacMillan, 2020). In our conversation, we discussed the origins of women's physical culture in the United States, the role that physical culture reformers played in producing femininity and whiteness, and the possibilities for anti-racist and anti-sexist sport to reconceptualize the white supremist roots of American athleticism. In Eugenics and Physical Culture Performance in the Progressive Era, Walsh traces the beginnings of reform era physical culture, paying special attention to the way that physical culturists attempted to shape women's bodies. She argues that their efforts hinged on using exercise to produce femininity and whiteness and that they prefigured the larger eugenic movements aimed at perpetuating the white race later in the 20th century. In each chapter she looks at different physical culturists or physical cultural movement. Her second chapter looks at Steele MacKaye and Americanised Delsarte, a physical cultural practice that combined acting, dance and exercise. Her third chapter focuses on Dudley Allen Sargent and mimetic workouts that introduced working class motions – for example wood chopping - to middle and upper-middle class men and women at Ivy League colleges. The fourth and fifth chapter work together to unpack the complicated position of women's physical culture, femininity and motherhood. In chapter four, Walsh shows how Abby Shaw Mayhew and the YWCA articulated a genre of motherhood, which Walsh calls “social motherhood,” that reframed women's exercise as domestic and maternal rather than grotesque and masculine. In the fifth chapter, Walsh examines Bernarr MacFadden – the Barnum of physical culture – to showcases the places where advertising, motherhood, and women's exercise came into explicit contact. Relying on a close reading of physical culture through critical theory, these main chapters trace the intersections between exercise, femininity, motherhood, race and social class, to illustrate how debates over these issues helped to produce whiteness. Whether they were in elite educational institutions in the Northeast, Midwestern metropolises like Minneapolis, or travelling around the country these experts helped to code physical culture as specifically as womanly, middle class, white, and ultimately as unremarkable. He final body chapter, chapter six, looks at physical culture for indigenous women in three sites: the Odanah Mission School, the Model Indian School at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis, and the Standing Rock Indian Reservation. Unlike their white counterparts, indigenous women were not offered significant opportunities for physical exercise and if they were it was only for the purpose of assimilation. Unsurprisingly, many indigenous girls and women challenged those expectations and were successful athletes. Keith Rathbone is a Senior Lecturer at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. He researches twentieth-century French social and cultural history. His book, entitled Sport and physical culture in Occupied France: Authoritarianism, agency, and everyday life, (Manchester University Press, 2022) examines physical education and sports in order to better understand civic life under the dual authoritarian systems of the German Occupation and the Vichy Regime. If you have a title to suggest for this podcast, please contact him at keith.rathbone@mq.edu.au and follow him at @keithrathbone on twitter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Today we are joined by Dr. Shannon Walsh, Associate Professor of Theatre History, and author of Eugenics and Physical Culture Performance in the Progressive Era: Watch Whiteness Workout (Palgrave MacMillan, 2020). In our conversation, we discussed the origins of women's physical culture in the United States, the role that physical culture reformers played in producing femininity and whiteness, and the possibilities for anti-racist and anti-sexist sport to reconceptualize the white supremist roots of American athleticism. In Eugenics and Physical Culture Performance in the Progressive Era, Walsh traces the beginnings of reform era physical culture, paying special attention to the way that physical culturists attempted to shape women's bodies. She argues that their efforts hinged on using exercise to produce femininity and whiteness and that they prefigured the larger eugenic movements aimed at perpetuating the white race later in the 20th century. In each chapter she looks at different physical culturists or physical cultural movement. Her second chapter looks at Steele MacKaye and Americanised Delsarte, a physical cultural practice that combined acting, dance and exercise. Her third chapter focuses on Dudley Allen Sargent and mimetic workouts that introduced working class motions – for example wood chopping - to middle and upper-middle class men and women at Ivy League colleges. The fourth and fifth chapter work together to unpack the complicated position of women's physical culture, femininity and motherhood. In chapter four, Walsh shows how Abby Shaw Mayhew and the YWCA articulated a genre of motherhood, which Walsh calls “social motherhood,” that reframed women's exercise as domestic and maternal rather than grotesque and masculine. In the fifth chapter, Walsh examines Bernarr MacFadden – the Barnum of physical culture – to showcases the places where advertising, motherhood, and women's exercise came into explicit contact. Relying on a close reading of physical culture through critical theory, these main chapters trace the intersections between exercise, femininity, motherhood, race and social class, to illustrate how debates over these issues helped to produce whiteness. Whether they were in elite educational institutions in the Northeast, Midwestern metropolises like Minneapolis, or travelling around the country these experts helped to code physical culture as specifically as womanly, middle class, white, and ultimately as unremarkable. He final body chapter, chapter six, looks at physical culture for indigenous women in three sites: the Odanah Mission School, the Model Indian School at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis, and the Standing Rock Indian Reservation. Unlike their white counterparts, indigenous women were not offered significant opportunities for physical exercise and if they were it was only for the purpose of assimilation. Unsurprisingly, many indigenous girls and women challenged those expectations and were successful athletes. Keith Rathbone is a Senior Lecturer at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. He researches twentieth-century French social and cultural history. His book, entitled Sport and physical culture in Occupied France: Authoritarianism, agency, and everyday life, (Manchester University Press, 2022) examines physical education and sports in order to better understand civic life under the dual authoritarian systems of the German Occupation and the Vichy Regime. If you have a title to suggest for this podcast, please contact him at keith.rathbone@mq.edu.au and follow him at @keithrathbone on twitter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/science-technology-and-society
In a rare moment of candor, the then-Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan gave us an insight into what he feels are optimum conditions for workers. The so-called “healthy” economy that he presided over owed its success to what he called “growing worker insecurity.” Workers with precarious existences are not going to make demands, and this compromised position, coupled with diminishing wages, is the cornerstone to the global gig economy. This week Ross Ashcroft is joined by documentary filmmaker Shannon Walsh to discuss her new film – The Gig Is Up.
Shannon Walsh joins the show today to share her story of her son Toby who goes for respite care at Crescent Cove. Toby has a rare genetic disease, and the pressure of everyday life melts away when they visit Crescent Cove.
CHECK OUT THE EASYBEEZY APP: http://www.ezbz.app Shannon Walsh of Premier Home Services and the EasyBeezy app stops by the podcast to talk about running a business with her husband, how communication is key for customers, and her app Easybeezy! Schedule a call with us today! https://contractorgrowthnetwork.com/contact-us/?utm_campaign=Conversions%20from%20podcast&utm_source=Podcast Welcome to Contractor Growth Network. CGN is your #1 source for marketing and sales tips, marketing advice, and sales tactics for contractors. We understand that running a contractor business is tough, Contractor Growth Network is here to help you grow your business in 2021. Hit that like button down below if you enjoyed this video and smash that subscribe button so you never miss an episode! LINKS: Website - contractorgrowthnetwork.com Join our Facebook group - https://www.facebook.com/groups/commonsensecontracting Instagram - instagram.com/contractorgrowthnetwork1 Apple Podcasts - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/contractor-growth-network/id1422064411 Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/5cnu4nNhT2DcaMepbwJxGQ
Papa Bruin welcomes good friend Shannon Walsh from Slapshot Sweethearts to the show. We discuss the Bruins off-season thus far including free agency, the draft, Tuukka Rask and David Krejci's departure. And of course we answer questions from Big Bad Bruins Nation during Ask Papa Bruin & Whatcha drinkin'. It's good to talk puck once again! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Many small businesses are family businesses, which means that our co-workers might also be our mother, father, sister, or brother. Combining work and family like this can be tricky. But what if the person you are working with is your spouse? Is it a good thing, or a recipe for disaster? In today's episode, Scott and Kati talk with James and Shannon Walsh, another married couple who also work together. They discuss the trials and tribulations of mixing business and marriage.
Welcome to the newest episode of Here In Puckberg, the place for daring-do bad and good PuckTales, a part of the Belly Up Sports Podcast Network. Today we wrap up Slapshot Sweethearts week with the one and only Shannon Walsh. We talk about finding her fandom with the Bruins, how being a hockey fan can be in different sports markets, and the origins of the fellow Belly Up Sports Podcast .....Slapshot Sweethearts. Follow the show on Twitter at @Hpuckberg and on Instagram @Here_In_Puckberg and send us a message to get your story on Pucktales!
Full Circle is back! Shannon Walsh, from the Slapshot Sweethearts Podcast, joins Jack and Steve to talk some Boston Bruins hockey! Our longtime rivals may be heading back to their division next year, but they were one of the first teams to expose the Flyers many flaws. Is this team's window just opening? What does the future hold? --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/hwradio/message
Papa Bruin of the Big Bad Bruins Bantah Podcast welcomes good friend Shannon Walsh from Slapshot Sweethearts to the show. We chat about the Bruins playoffs demise, where does the team go from here and what lies ahead this off-season. And we answer questions from Big Bad Bruins Nation during Ask Papa Bruin & of course Whatcha drinkin'. WARNING: There will be a lot of disappointment, infinite sadness and venom!
The boys are back to discuss the latest in the Islanders series against the Bruins. Shannon Walsh of The Slapshot Sweethearts podcast joins the show to give her take on the Scheifele hit, the failure of Toronto, and who she believes will win the Vezina. All this and more on episode 37.
Papa Bruin of Big Bad Bruins Nation welcomes Shannon Walsh of the Slapshot Sweethearts Podcast to the Big Bad Bruins Bantah. We break down the Bruins first round series playoff victory over the Washington Capitals, Tuukka Rask silencing the critics, Pasta finding his mojo, Charlie McAvoy's pure studness & more. Plus Ask Papa Bruin & Whatcha Drinkin'! Join us for some Wicked Pissah Hockey Bantah Kid! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Talking Stanley Cup Playoffs with Shannon Walsh from the Slapshot Sweethearts and Zach Martin from Bless 'Em Browns Podcast joins me to talk NFL and the Cleveland Browns.Shannon's SocialsShannon Twitter: https://twitter.com/swalshy63Slapshot Sweethearts Twitter: https://twitter.com/SSweetheartsPodSlapshot Sweethearts Podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/show/slapshot-sweetheartsSlapshot Sweethearts YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTfeaQzEizSXl_kwMfa_jEwZach's SocialsZach Twitter: https://twitter.com/CLEZachBless 'Em Browns Twitter: https://twitter.com/BlessEmBrownsBless 'Em Browns Podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/show/bless-em-browns-podcastCannons & Tomahawks Twitter: https://twitter.com/CannonHawksPodCannons & Tomahawks YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjjUdeK3oVHGGulsaGlHFSAMusicMarty Zylstra – “Rattle the Glass”https://spoti.fi/3cuxx1QPuck & Pigskin Socials https://linktr.ee/pucknpigskinpodcast
In the first playoff Quick Shift of the season, Shannon Walsh, from the Slapshot Sweethearts podcast, joins Tyler to breakdown the Washington vs. Boston series (2:40). Then, Tyler looks over the Pittsburgh vs. Islanders series (36:50), along with the two in the Central (43:00) Music: "Mondays" by Onlap MERCH: teespring.com/stores/the-kuehl-show
Have you ever thought to yourself, I should create my own piece of software to help my landscaping company? That is exactly what our guest did today. Today we chat with Shannon Walsh of EZBZ.app. Shannon and her husband own Premier Home Services and they were always looking for a piece of software that would help them with work orders, and a simple way to communicate with their team out in the field. Today Shannon shares their story and they are also offering a special lifetime payment deal to the listeners of the podcast that sign up using this link https://uma.rfrl.co/6ew29.
From the Belly Up Sports Network and Slapshot Sweethearts Show Podcast, Megan Rachel and Shannon Walsh join us in Hour 2!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Shannon Walsh is an Associate Professor of Theatre History at LSU where she also serves as Co-Head of the PhD in Theatre. She received her MA from Florida State, and her PhD from the University of Minnesota. As a theatre practitioner she has worked as a dramaturg and a development manager. She has published in Theatre Annual and Theatre Journal and has recently published two books - Eugenics and Physical Culture Performance in the Progressive Era and the edited works Sporting Performance: Politics in Play
Thank you for checking out The Bottom Line Podcast! In this episode, Neil and I are joined by the newest members of the podcast family... Megan Rachel, and Shannon Walsh! AKA: The Slapshot Sweethearts! Together, we discuss the origins of the podcast, get into a little debate about NHL mascots, and give a little preview of the upcoming NHL season! Please go subscribe to these girls, and follow them on social media! They are going places! Be sure to leave any questions or opinions you have on Twitter and Instagram, @BottomLineWMCX, and also on Twitter, @thenvpshow! Be sure to use #bottomline! You can also leave a voice message on the Anchor app, or at Anchor.FM! ALSO, please leave a like and a comment on our YouTube version of this episode (link below), and please make sure to subscribe!! Don't forget to also subscribe on Apple, Google, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts, and include my first name, Jimmy, when searching for this podcast (including on YouTube)! Watch this episode on YouTube!: The Bottom Line Podcast And The Slapshot Sweethearts Collide! - YouTube Subscribe to The Slapshot Sweethearts: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTfeaQzEizSXl_kwMfa_jEw Please support, follow, and subscribe to, our great friends in First To Eleven! YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCcE10s4MFy4eed7q7QkonZg Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/firsttoeleven/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/firsttoeleven Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FirsttoEleven/ Website: https://www.firsttoeleven.com Subscribe to Audra's YouTube Channel!: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCBkaKmr5Q3k0nseY4grIhkQ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/bottomlinewmcx/message
Interview with Shannon Walsh (CSCS, CES, future Physician Assistant). We talk about a variety of topics, including what drove Shannon to become a PA, the link between fitness and health, where the fitness industry is lacking, as well as the medical industry. We also talk about where Shannon struggles personally with health and fitness, how health and fitness professionals can show up better for their patients/clients, and much much more. ------------ Follow me on Instagram Join "The Healthy Happy Human Academy" free private Facebook community Subscribe to the free "Healthy, Happy Newsletter" Buy Me A Coffee & Support the show! Connect on Linkedin
Interview with Shannon Walsh (CSCS, CES, future Physician Assistant). We talk about a variety of topics, including what drove Shannon to become a PA, the link between fitness and health, where the fitness industry is lacking, as well as the medical industry. We also talk about where Shannon struggles personally with health and fitness, how health and fitness professionals can show up better for their patients/clients, and much much more. ------------ Follow me on Instagram Join "The Healthy Happy Human Academy" free private Facebook community Subscribe to the free "Healthy, Happy Newsletter" Buy Me A Coffee & Support the show! Connect on Linkedin
Shannon Walsh from Deer Park tells us why the band's second album took seven years to complete.