Surviving Society

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 306:58:47
  • Mas informaciones

Informações:

Sinopsis

A political podcast from a sociological perspective. Three students fed up with the conversations that are happening in the mainstream media talk about the things that have made them angry. With Chantelle, Tissot and Saskia.Edited by Heather CartwrightTheme music by Joey PenaliggonDesign by Evelyn Miller

Episodios

  • Episode 4: The New JEWEL Movement with Tessa Barry

    21/05/2024 Duración: 01h14min

    In this episode, Tessa introduces and discusses her personal connection to Grenada’s New JEWEL Movement. The conversation focuses on the revolutionary government’s programme of women’s empowerment, agricultural self-sufficiency, and political education.   Link: https://www.facebook.com/tessa.barry.581?mibextid=hu50Ix   These episodes feature activists and scholars who are on the frontlines of grassroots struggles for dignity, justice, and self-determination in the Caribbean. Rooted in a convivial spirit of creative resistance and collective healing, each guest shares insights into the region’s lasting legacies of colonialism as a means of confronting and ultimately ending the enduring aftermaths of empire.Guest co-producers, Levi Gahman, Johannah-Rae Reyes, Adaeze Greenidge

  • Episode 3: Indigenous Future-making with Filiberto Penados

    14/05/2024 Duración: 01h07min

    In this episode, Filiberto discusses the inextricable links between colonial power and modernity, as well as race, dispossession, and capitalism, whilst providing insight into the realities of Indigenous people.   Link: https://bristoluniversitypress.co.uk/a-beginners-guide-to-building-better-worlds   These episodes feature activists and scholars who are on the frontlines of grassroots struggles for dignity, justice, and self-determination in the Caribbean. Rooted in a convivial spirit of creative resistance and collective healing, each guest shares insights into the region’s lasting legacies of colonialism as a means of confronting and ultimately ending the enduring aftermaths of empire. Guest co-producers, Levi Gahman, Johannah-Rae Reyes, Adaeze Greenidge

  • Episode 2: Decolonisation and Modernity with Deanne Bell

    07/05/2024 Duración: 01h04min

    In this episode, Deanne addresses social suffering, indifference, and decolonisation through the poignant question of: “How can we, as humans, become emancipated from colonial constructions of race and class?”   Link: https://www.ntu.ac.uk/research/researchers-revealed/deanne-bell   These episodes feature activists and scholars who are on the frontlines of grassroots struggles for dignity, justice, and self-determination in the Caribbean. Rooted in a convivial spirit of creative resistance and collective healing, each guest shares insights into the region’s lasting legacies of colonialism as a means of confronting and ultimately ending the enduring aftermaths of empire.Guest co-producers, Levi Gahman, Johannah-Rae Reyes, Adaeze Greenidge

  • Episode 1: The Crucible of Modernity with Johannah-Rae Reyes

    30/04/2024 Duración: 55min

    In this episode, Johannah, as co-producer and co-host, introduces the series and provides a general overview of the complexities, challenges, and diverse forms of resistance that define the Caribbean.   Links: https://caisott.org/mapping-injustice/ and https://caisott.org/sign-together-project/   Summary These episodes feature activists and scholars who are on the frontlines of grassroots struggles for dignity, justice, and self-determination in the Caribbean. Rooted in a convivial spirit of creative resistance and collective healing, each guest shares insights into the region’s lasting legacies of colonialism as a means of confronting and ultimately ending the enduring aftermaths of empire. Guest co-producers, Levi Gahman, Johannah-Rae Reyes, Adaeze Greenidge

  • The Crucible Of Modernity

    25/04/2024 Duración: 43s

    These episodes feature activists and scholars who are on the frontlines of grassroots struggles for dignity, justice, and self-determination in the Caribbean. Rooted in a convivial spirit of creative resistance and collective healing, each guest shares insights into the region’s lasting legacies of colonialism as a means of confronting and ultimately ending the enduring aftermaths of empire.

  • S1/ E6 Can the Museum be a Site of (Anti-Colonial) Resistance?

    22/04/2024 Duración: 24min

    Chantelle and Kelechi interview Lennon Mhishi about  the ‘Re-connecting "Objects’ project at the Pitt Rivers Mueseum (University of Oxford). We explore the functioning of museums as ‘containers’, consisting of colonial collections as products of violence, extraction and dispossession.  https://www.prm.ox.ac.uk/reconnecting-objects  Summary:In this series we introduce the work of researchers from the Black Health and the Humanities Network. Each episode uncovers the different ways that racist environments impact the health of Black African and Caribbean people.  Expect conversation centred around resistance creativity and imaginative futures.   The Black Health and the Humanities network emerged in part from the crisis caused by 2020’s global Covid-19 pandemic, the transnational Black Lives Matter movement, and the intersections between racism and health inequalities that, although not new, these events highlighted.

  • S1/E5 Medical Colonial Photography in Malawi & Sudan

    16/04/2024 Duración: 21min

    Chantelle and Kelechi interview Chimwemwe Phiri about her PhD research based on the colonial histories and ethical dimensions of medical photography, questions of ownership, and the afterlives of archival material. https://www.blackhealthandhumanities.org  Summary:In this series we introduce the work of researchers from the Black Health and the Humanities Network. Each episode uncovers the different ways that racist environments impact the health of Black African and Caribbean people.  Expect conversation centred around resistance creativity and imaginative futures.   The Black Health and the Humanities network emerged in part from the crisis caused by 2020’s global Covid-19 pandemic, the transnational Black Lives Matter movement, and the intersections between racism and health inequalities that, although not new, these events highlighted. https://wellcome.org/grant-funding/people-and-projects/grants-awarded/comparative-investigation-visual-representations 

  • S1/E4 Black Joy As Resistance 

    09/04/2024 Duración: 37min

    Tanisha Spratt and Arya Thampuran discuss the importance of Black joy, sprituality and care as crucial to Black health and healing.  Links  https://www.durham.ac.uk/staff/a-s-thampuran/  https://www.kcl.ac.uk/people/tanisha-spratt  Summary: In this series we introduce the work of researchers from the Black Health and the Humanities Network. Each episode uncovers the different ways that racist environments impact the health of Black African and Caribbean people.  Expect conversation centred around resistance creativity and imaginative futures.   The Black Health and the Humanities network emerged in part from the crisis caused by 2020’s global Covid-19 pandemic, the transnational Black Lives Matter movement, and the intersections between racism and health inequalities that, although not new, these events highlighted. https://www.blackhealthandhumanities.org 

  • S1/E3 End-of-Life Care & Waiting Times 

    02/04/2024 Duración: 35min

    Kelechi Anucha discuses the relationship between time and care in contemporary end of life narratives,. This work is part of the Wellcome Trust-funded research project Waiting Times.  Links: https://wcceh.org/meet-the-team/phd-students/kelechi-anucha/ https://waitingtimes.exeter.ac.uk/ Summary: In this series we introduce the work of researchers from the Black Health and the Humanities Network. Each episode uncovers the different ways that racist environments impact the health of Black African and Caribbean people.  Expect conversation centred around resistance creativity and imaginative futures.   The Black Health and the Humanities network emerged in part from the crisis caused by 2020’s global Covid-19 pandemic, the transnational Black Lives Matter movement, and the intersections between racism and health inequalities that, although not new, these events highlighted. https://www.blackhealthandhumanities.org 

  • Pluto Press 50% discount using code "SURVIVING50"

    29/03/2024 Duración: 36s

    Visit plutobooks.com to grab 50% off your favorite books by using the code SURVIVING50

  • S1/E2 Black Sexual and Reproductive Health

    26/03/2024 Duración: 26min

    Rianna Raymond-Williams discusses how it is essential for access to sexual and reproductive health and support to be initiated through anti-racist policies and frameworks. @BHHproject Links  https://www.shinealoud.co.uk/about-us/founders-story  Summary: In this series we introduce the work of researchers from the Black Health and the Humanities Network. Each episode uncovers the different ways that racist environments impact the health of Black African and Caribbean people.  Expect conversation centred around resistance creativity and imaginative futures.   The Black Health and the Humanities network emerged in part from the crisis caused by 2020’s global Covid-19 pandemic, the transnational Black Lives Matter movement, and the intersections between racism and health inequalities that, although not new, these events highlighted. https://www.blackhealthandhumanities.org 

  •  S1/E1 Black Health is an Urgent Social and Political Issue 

    19/03/2024 Duración: 19min

    In this introductory episode, we hear from Arya Thampuran and Kelechi Anucha on why the health of Black African and Caribbean populations in Britain remains an urgent topic of enquiry. @BHHproject Links: https://www.durham.ac.uk/staff/a-s-thampuran/  https://wcceh.org/meet-the-team/phd-students/kelechi-anucha/  Summary: In this series we introduce the work of researchers from the Black Health and the Humanities Network. Each episode uncovers the different ways that racist environments impact the health of Black African and Caribbean people.  Expect conversation centred around resistance creativity and imaginative futures.   The Black Health and the Humanities network emerged in part from the crisis caused by 2020’s global Covid-19 pandemic, the transnational Black Lives Matter movement, and the intersections between racism and health inequalities that, although not new, these events highlighted.

  • Black Health & Humanities

    18/03/2024 Duración: 17s

    Surviving Society presents... the BBH This series focus on the politics of black health in modern society

  • S1/E3 Francesca Sobande: Consuming Crisis: Commodifying Care and COVID-19

    12/03/2024 Duración: 37min

    In this episode, we take a deep dive into the marketisation and capitalist exploitation of care during the COVID-19 pandemic. We return to the inequitable ways the pandemic impacted people and how we continue to live through a care crisis both locally and globally.  Links: https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/consuming-crisis/book280021 https://www.francescasobande.com Summary  In this collaborative podcast series with Sage Publishing we take a closer look at the books currently being published in the Social Science for Social Justice book series. This book series is an interdisciplinary and international contribution to the long history of Black, Asian and minority ethnic voices producing radical and rigorous scholarship within and beyond the university and academy.  https://group.sagepub.com/social-science-for-social-justice 

  • S1/E2 Tarek Younis: The Muslim, State and Mind: Psychology in Times of Islamophobia

    05/03/2024 Duración: 46min

    In this episode we hear from Tarek Younis on his own experiences of challenging islamophobia in the discipline of psychology. We explore the ongoing consequences of the connection between racism, islamophobia and mental health for Muslims in contemporary society.  Links: https://uk.sagepub.com/en-gb/eur/the-muslim-state-and-mind/book279425 Summary  In this collaborative podcast series with Sage Publishing we take a closer look at the books currently being published in the Social Science for Social Justice book series. This book series is an interdisciplinary and international contribution to the long history of Black, Asian and minority ethnic voices producing radical and rigorous scholarship within and beyond the university and academy.  https://group.sagepub.com/social-science-for-social-justice 

  • S1/E1 Delayna Spencer, Meredith Clark & Jason Arday: Social Science for Social Justice?

    27/02/2024 Duración: 36min

    In this introductory episode, we speak to the editors of Sage’s Social Science for Social Justice book series about the long history of social scientists contributing to community work and organising.  Links: https://www.meredithdclark.com https://www.educ.cam.ac.uk/people/staff/arday https://group.sagepub.com/social-science-for-social-justice Summary  In this collaborative podcast series with Sage Publishing we take a closer look at the books currently being published in the Social Science for Social Justice book series. This book series is an interdisciplinary and international contribution to the long history of Black, Asian and minority ethnic voices producing radical and rigorous scholarship within and beyond the university and academy.  https://group.sagepub.com/social-science-for-social-justice

  • E190: Skinfolk, but not kinfolk? Ethnic minority conservative political elite actors

    20/02/2024 Duración: 49min

    The recent increase in ethnic minority representation in right-wing, conservative parties has been of note. In this episode, Neema Begum, Michael Bankole, Dan Godshaw and Rima Saini discuss how this substantive representation for ethnic minorities is challenged by ethnic minority politicians on the political right pushing for anti-immigration policies while denouncing anti-racism. This episode is based on findings from a forthcoming article: Skinfolk, but not kinfolk? Paradoxical representation among ethnic minority conservative political elites in the UK The recent increase in ethnic minority representation in right-wing, conservative parties has been of note. Cross-party diversity especially in high office is increasingly the norm. However, whether this signifies substantive representation for ethnic minorities is challenged by ethnic minority politicians on the political right pushing for anti-immigration policies while denouncing anti-racism. The increasing presence of ethnic minorities is no guarante

  • Joe Appiah, Kim Johnson MP & Gloria Morrison: Joint Enterprise

    13/02/2024 Duración: 38min

    The episode begins with Joe Appiah describing the events that led to him becoming a victim of a miscarriage of justice through the Joint Enterprise Doctrine. Kim Johnson MP and Gloria Morrison (Jengba campaigner) later provided us with some updates on the campaign to end guilty by association. https://jengba.co.uk

  • S1/E5 Andy Young: Royal Mail

    06/02/2024 Duración: 53min

    Royal Mail remains a key institutions within the UK delivery services. In this episode Andy explains exactly what is at stake for the organisation and its workers as they continue to navigate the pressures of privatisation. Summary In this Red Pepper and Surviving Society collaboration we platform workers and academics to explore the history of trade unions and industrial action in Britain. Executively produced by Liam Kennedy. Many of us within society feel disconnected from the politics of the workplace. Whilst action is at its highest level in decades, there remains very little substantive analysis of the backgrounds and longer histories that has led to specific strikes. The series places industrial action into wider debates about public ownership, capitalism and the economy.

  • S1/E4 Mel Mullins and Sherelle Cadogan: Railway Workers

    30/01/2024 Duración: 01h12min

    Mel and Sherelle explain their personal histories of working on the railways and the history of Black and anti-racist organising amongst workers. https://www.redpepper.org.uk Summary In this Red Pepper and Surviving Society collaboration we platform workers and academics to explore the history of trade unions and industrial action in Britain. Executively produced by Liam Kennedy. Many of us within society feel disconnected from the politics of the workplace. Whilst action is at its highest level in decades, there remains very little substantive analysis of the backgrounds and longer histories that has led to specific strikes. The series places industrial action into wider debates about public ownership, capitalism and the economy.

página 5 de 22