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Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #061 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/061
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #060 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/060
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #059 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/059
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #058 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/058
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #057 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/057
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #056 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/056
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #055 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/055
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #054 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/054
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #053 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/053
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #052 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/052
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #051 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/051
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #050 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/050
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #049 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/049
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #048 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/048
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #047 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/047
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #046 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/046
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #045 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/045
Kate Parker Horigan is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Folk Studies and Anthropology at Western Kentucky University, and a co-editor of the Journal of American Folklore. In Consuming Katrina: Public Disaster and Personal Narrative (University of Mississippi Press, 2018), she explores some of the numerous narratives generated by Hurricane Katrina’s devastating effects on residents of New Orleans in 2005. Her investigation includes personal narratives of those directly affected by the hurricane and which were recorded as part of the “Surviving Katrina and Rita in Houston” project (SKRH). In SKRH – which was set up by folklorists Carl Lindahl and Pat Jasper – survivors were given the training and other resources to interview one another about their experience of the events (see this site for more information). Horigan notes that many of the narratives collected by SKRH counter widespread and pernicious claims which circulated via the media and through other channels during and after the disaster, including allegations that victims threatened those involved in the rescue effort. Horigan also interrogates survivor narratives as they are re-presented within more mainstream works inspired by the event, including Dave Egger’s Zeitoun; A.D.: New Orleans after the Deluge, a graphic novel by Josh Neufeld; and the documentary film, Trouble the Water. She argues that such re-presentations: “propagate dangerously limited and stereotypical representations, which in turn inform responses to disasters such as Katrina. They also allow audiences to feel sympathy for survivors, without feeling complicit in their conditions of suffering or compelled to act” (5). Horigan suggests that an alternative and more ethical route in re-presenting narratives is to do so in such a way that the original narrators are able to negotiate the ways in which their stories are reproduced. In other words: When trauma becomes public, as the insatiable appetite for disaster stories demands that it must, the texts that most ethically adapt personal narratives are those that include the survivors’ own crucial engagement with the processes of narrative production” (5). Ultimately, Horigan argues that a “better grasp on the processes of narration and memory is critical for improved disaster response because stories that are widely shared about disaster determine how communities recover” (5). Rachel Hopkin is a UK born, US based folklorist and radio producer and is currently a PhD candidate at the Ohio State University. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Kate Parker Horigan is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Folk Studies and Anthropology at Western Kentucky University, and a co-editor of the Journal of American Folklore. In Consuming Katrina: Public Disaster and Personal Narrative (University of Mississippi Press, 2018), she explores some of the numerous narratives generated by Hurricane Katrina’s devastating effects on residents of New Orleans in 2005. Her investigation includes personal narratives of those directly affected by the hurricane and which were recorded as part of the “Surviving Katrina and Rita in Houston” project (SKRH). In SKRH – which was set up by folklorists Carl Lindahl and Pat Jasper – survivors were given the training and other resources to interview one another about their experience of the events (see this site for more information). Horigan notes that many of the narratives collected by SKRH counter widespread and pernicious claims which circulated via the media and through other channels during and after the disaster, including allegations that victims threatened those involved in the rescue effort. Horigan also interrogates survivor narratives as they are re-presented within more mainstream works inspired by the event, including Dave Egger’s Zeitoun; A.D.: New Orleans after the Deluge, a graphic novel by Josh Neufeld; and the documentary film, Trouble the Water. She argues that such re-presentations: “propagate dangerously limited and stereotypical representations, which in turn inform responses to disasters such as Katrina. They also allow audiences to feel sympathy for survivors, without feeling complicit in their conditions of suffering or compelled to act” (5). Horigan suggests that an alternative and more ethical route in re-presenting narratives is to do so in such a way that the original narrators are able to negotiate the ways in which their stories are reproduced. In other words: When trauma becomes public, as the insatiable appetite for disaster stories demands that it must, the texts that most ethically adapt personal narratives are those that include the survivors’ own crucial engagement with the processes of narrative production” (5). Ultimately, Horigan argues that a “better grasp on the processes of narration and memory is critical for improved disaster response because stories that are widely shared about disaster determine how communities recover” (5). Rachel Hopkin is a UK born, US based folklorist and radio producer and is currently a PhD candidate at the Ohio State University. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Kate Parker Horigan is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Folk Studies and Anthropology at Western Kentucky University, and a co-editor of the Journal of American Folklore. In Consuming Katrina: Public Disaster and Personal Narrative (University of Mississippi Press, 2018), she explores some of the numerous narratives generated by Hurricane Katrina’s devastating effects on residents of New Orleans in 2005. Her investigation includes personal narratives of those directly affected by the hurricane and which were recorded as part of the “Surviving Katrina and Rita in Houston” project (SKRH). In SKRH – which was set up by folklorists Carl Lindahl and Pat Jasper – survivors were given the training and other resources to interview one another about their experience of the events (see this site for more information). Horigan notes that many of the narratives collected by SKRH counter widespread and pernicious claims which circulated via the media and through other channels during and after the disaster, including allegations that victims threatened those involved in the rescue effort. Horigan also interrogates survivor narratives as they are re-presented within more mainstream works inspired by the event, including Dave Egger’s Zeitoun; A.D.: New Orleans after the Deluge, a graphic novel by Josh Neufeld; and the documentary film, Trouble the Water. She argues that such re-presentations: “propagate dangerously limited and stereotypical representations, which in turn inform responses to disasters such as Katrina. They also allow audiences to feel sympathy for survivors, without feeling complicit in their conditions of suffering or compelled to act” (5). Horigan suggests that an alternative and more ethical route in re-presenting narratives is to do so in such a way that the original narrators are able to negotiate the ways in which their stories are reproduced. In other words: When trauma becomes public, as the insatiable appetite for disaster stories demands that it must, the texts that most ethically adapt personal narratives are those that include the survivors’ own crucial engagement with the processes of narrative production” (5). Ultimately, Horigan argues that a “better grasp on the processes of narration and memory is critical for improved disaster response because stories that are widely shared about disaster determine how communities recover” (5). Rachel Hopkin is a UK born, US based folklorist and radio producer and is currently a PhD candidate at the Ohio State University. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Kate Parker Horigan is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Folk Studies and Anthropology at Western Kentucky University, and a co-editor of the Journal of American Folklore. In Consuming Katrina: Public Disaster and Personal Narrative (University of Mississippi Press, 2018), she explores some of the numerous narratives generated by Hurricane Katrina’s devastating effects on residents of New Orleans in 2005. Her investigation includes personal narratives of those directly affected by the hurricane and which were recorded as part of the “Surviving Katrina and Rita in Houston” project (SKRH). In SKRH – which was set up by folklorists Carl Lindahl and Pat Jasper – survivors were given the training and other resources to interview one another about their experience of the events (see this site for more information). Horigan notes that many of the narratives collected by SKRH counter widespread and pernicious claims which circulated via the media and through other channels during and after the disaster, including allegations that victims threatened those involved in the rescue effort. Horigan also interrogates survivor narratives as they are re-presented within more mainstream works inspired by the event, including Dave Egger’s Zeitoun; A.D.: New Orleans after the Deluge, a graphic novel by Josh Neufeld; and the documentary film, Trouble the Water. She argues that such re-presentations: “propagate dangerously limited and stereotypical representations, which in turn inform responses to disasters such as Katrina. They also allow audiences to feel sympathy for survivors, without feeling complicit in their conditions of suffering or compelled to act” (5). Horigan suggests that an alternative and more ethical route in re-presenting narratives is to do so in such a way that the original narrators are able to negotiate the ways in which their stories are reproduced. In other words: When trauma becomes public, as the insatiable appetite for disaster stories demands that it must, the texts that most ethically adapt personal narratives are those that include the survivors’ own crucial engagement with the processes of narrative production” (5). Ultimately, Horigan argues that a “better grasp on the processes of narration and memory is critical for improved disaster response because stories that are widely shared about disaster determine how communities recover” (5). Rachel Hopkin is a UK born, US based folklorist and radio producer and is currently a PhD candidate at the Ohio State University. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Kate Parker Horigan is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Folk Studies and Anthropology at Western Kentucky University, and a co-editor of the Journal of American Folklore. In Consuming Katrina: Public Disaster and Personal Narrative (University of Mississippi Press, 2018), she explores some of the numerous narratives generated by Hurricane Katrina’s devastating effects on residents of New Orleans in 2005. Her investigation includes personal narratives of those directly affected by the hurricane and which were recorded as part of the “Surviving Katrina and Rita in Houston” project (SKRH). In SKRH – which was set up by folklorists Carl Lindahl and Pat Jasper – survivors were given the training and other resources to interview one another about their experience of the events (see this site for more information). Horigan notes that many of the narratives collected by SKRH counter widespread and pernicious claims which circulated via the media and through other channels during and after the disaster, including allegations that victims threatened those involved in the rescue effort. Horigan also interrogates survivor narratives as they are re-presented within more mainstream works inspired by the event, including Dave Egger’s Zeitoun; A.D.: New Orleans after the Deluge, a graphic novel by Josh Neufeld; and the documentary film, Trouble the Water. She argues that such re-presentations: “propagate dangerously limited and stereotypical representations, which in turn inform responses to disasters such as Katrina. They also allow audiences to feel sympathy for survivors, without feeling complicit in their conditions of suffering or compelled to act” (5). Horigan suggests that an alternative and more ethical route in re-presenting narratives is to do so in such a way that the original narrators are able to negotiate the ways in which their stories are reproduced. In other words: When trauma becomes public, as the insatiable appetite for disaster stories demands that it must, the texts that most ethically adapt personal narratives are those that include the survivors’ own crucial engagement with the processes of narrative production” (5). Ultimately, Horigan argues that a “better grasp on the processes of narration and memory is critical for improved disaster response because stories that are widely shared about disaster determine how communities recover” (5). Rachel Hopkin is a UK born, US based folklorist and radio producer and is currently a PhD candidate at the Ohio State University. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Kate Parker Horigan is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Folk Studies and Anthropology at Western Kentucky University, and a co-editor of the Journal of American Folklore. In Consuming Katrina: Public Disaster and Personal Narrative (University of Mississippi Press, 2018), she explores some of the numerous narratives generated by Hurricane Katrina’s devastating effects on residents of New Orleans in 2005. Her investigation includes personal narratives of those directly affected by the hurricane and which were recorded as part of the “Surviving Katrina and Rita in Houston” project (SKRH). In SKRH – which was set up by folklorists Carl Lindahl and Pat Jasper – survivors were given the training and other resources to interview one another about their experience of the events (see this site for more information). Horigan notes that many of the narratives collected by SKRH counter widespread and pernicious claims which circulated via the media and through other channels during and after the disaster, including allegations that victims threatened those involved in the rescue effort. Horigan also interrogates survivor narratives as they are re-presented within more mainstream works inspired by the event, including Dave Egger’s Zeitoun; A.D.: New Orleans after the Deluge, a graphic novel by Josh Neufeld; and the documentary film, Trouble the Water. She argues that such re-presentations: “propagate dangerously limited and stereotypical representations, which in turn inform responses to disasters such as Katrina. They also allow audiences to feel sympathy for survivors, without feeling complicit in their conditions of suffering or compelled to act” (5). Horigan suggests that an alternative and more ethical route in re-presenting narratives is to do so in such a way that the original narrators are able to negotiate the ways in which their stories are reproduced. In other words: When trauma becomes public, as the insatiable appetite for disaster stories demands that it must, the texts that most ethically adapt personal narratives are those that include the survivors’ own crucial engagement with the processes of narrative production” (5). Ultimately, Horigan argues that a “better grasp on the processes of narration and memory is critical for improved disaster response because stories that are widely shared about disaster determine how communities recover” (5). Rachel Hopkin is a UK born, US based folklorist and radio producer and is currently a PhD candidate at the Ohio State University. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #044 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/044
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #043 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/043 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #042 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/042 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #041 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/041 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #040 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/040 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #039 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/039 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #038 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/038 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #037 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/037 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #036 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/036 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #035 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/035 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #034 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/034 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #033 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/033 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #032 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/032 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #031 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/031 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #030 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/030 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #029 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/029 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #028 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/028 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #027 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/027 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #026 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/026 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #025 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/025 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #024 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/024 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #023 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/023 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #022 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/022 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #021 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/021 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #020 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/020 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #019 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/019 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #018 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/018 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #017 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo with exclusive interview with Kid Fonque & D-Malice Playlist at sefkombo.com/017 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #016 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo with exclusive interview with Culoe de Song Playlist at sefkombo.com/016 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #015 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/015 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #014 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/014 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #013 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/013 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #012 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/012 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/DJSefKombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #011 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/011 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #010 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/010 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #009 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/009 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #008 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/008 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #007 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/007 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #006 Radio show mixed and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/006 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #005 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/005 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #004 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/004 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #003 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/003 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #002 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/002 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show #001 Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Playlist at sefkombo.com/001 If you like the show please leave a comment and like my facebook page www.facebook.com/djsefkombo
Sef Kombo Radio Hour Show Radio show produced and presented by Sef Kombo Afro, Deep, Soulful House from around the globe every single Wednesday Tell a friend to tell a friend that Good Music in ON! Use #SKRH to get in contact and let us know how you feeling If [...]