Knowledge Gumbo

Alicia Thomas

"Empowering Black women through untold stories, inspiring quotes, and actionable insights from history. Join us weekly as we rediscover Black women’s contributions, engage in critical thinking, share a laugh, and inspire community.” *Knowledge Gumbo* is a soulful blend of wisdom, history, and culture, filtered through the lens of Black women, for Black women, and about Black women. Hosted by Alicia Thomas, a former mechanical engineer turned seeker of untold stories, this podcast dives into powerful quotes, proverbs, and book excerpts—primarily from Black women from maids to renowned thought leaders—and unpacks their meaning with humor, insight, and a touch of reflection. From thought-provoking sayings to timeless words of wisdom, every episode brings history to life—not through dates and places, but through voices, stories, and the lessons they leave us. Perfect for Black women from Generation X and more, *Knowledge Gumbo* is a space for learning, laughing, and passing down knowledge to future generations. Pull up a seat, stir the pot, and let’s share a bowl from the rich mixture of voices and stories of the past to inspire the present. **New episodes available weekly. Jump in, listen, and share the gumbo with a few friends!**

  1. 2 DAYS AGO

    The Truth She Refused to Bury | Ida B. Wells

    Ida B. Wells knew that truth sitting in a drawer does nothing. In this episode of Knowledge Gumbo Podcast, we sit with her challenge to all of us: are you willing to turn the light on, even when it costs you? Wells was a journalist, editor, and anti-lynching activist working in the South at the end of the 19th century. While the mainstream press ignored or justified racial violence, she documented it. She gathered names, dates, and locations. She published what others refused to print in the Free Speech, the newspaper she co-owned, because owning the press meant no one could stop her from telling the truth. Her investigative pamphlet, Southern Horrors, documented over 700 lynchings and demolished the lie that lynching existed to protect white women. The data proved that most victims were killed for economic competition, for refusing to accept social order, or for daring to be successful. This is not just history. This is a roadmap. Key Takeaways Ida B. Wells understood that speaking truth is not the same as exposing it. The word "turn" in her famous quote is deliberate — like repositioning a lamp, she actively pointed the light of truth at injustice until it could no longer be ignored. Black women's history is full of this kind of intentional, strategic courage. Wells built a factual record rather than writing opinion pieces. She documented over 700 lynchings in Southern Horrors, showing with names and dates that most victims were killed for economic competition or for daring to succeed — dismantling a narrative the white press had used to justify violence. Owning your platform is not incidental — it is strategic. Wells co-owned the Free Speech because borrowed platforms can be silenced. When they burned her press, she moved and kept writing. Narrative control and economic independence, for Wells, were the same fight. The cost of turning on the light is real. This episode explores what it costs to speak truth publicly: comfort, approval, sometimes community. Ida B. Wells paid every one of those costs and did not stop. Her story asks us what we are keeping in the dark and what it is actually costing us to stay silent. In This Episode [00:00] Welcome and introduction [00:26] Today's quote: Ida B. Wells [00:36] Historical context: Wells as journalist and anti-lynching activist [01:00] She documented the violence — names, dates, locations [01:18] Reflection: What Alicia means by "turning the light" [02:12] Photography and the power of light as a metaphor [02:48] The Free Speech newspaper and owning the press [03:02] They burned her press — and she kept writing [03:34] The personal cost of speaking truth [04:22] Wells used data, not opinion: the difference that mattered [05:11] Southern Horrors and the 700 lynchings documented [05:48] Narrative control: whoever tells the story shapes belief [06:13] Owning your platform versus borrowing one [06:44] Closing reflection question [06:59] Outro and sign-off

    8 min
  2. 30 MAR

    Claiming the Power to See on Our Own Terms

    Black women's visibility is not a simple gift — it's a question. Who benefits when we are seen, and who benefits when we are not? In this episode of the Knowledge Gumbo Podcast, host Alicia Thomas opens with a striking quote from writer, critic, and cultural thinker Margo Jefferson: "The eye is always caught by light, but shadows have more to say." Jefferson's insight becomes the lens for an honest, personal reflection on images — the ones we absorb, the ones we create, the ones we share, and the ones quietly discarded. Alicia explores what it means to be a curator in a visual age, and why the question of who holds the camera matters more than we realize. This episode will stay with you. It's the kind of quiet episode that catches something true. Key Takeaways Margo Jefferson's work challenges us to pay attention not just to what is centered and lit, but to what lives in the margins and shadows — because meaning is often held there. Engaging with Black women's stories and images requires reading what's just outside the frame. Being seen and being understood are not the same thing. Visibility for Black women can be empowering in one context and diminishing in another, and recognizing that difference is a form of wisdom worth practicing. Every image we post, share, like, or scroll past makes us participants in a visual economy that shapes how communities and individuals will be remembered. That is not a neutral act — it carries obligation. Family photo albums and digital feeds are both acts of curation. Decisions about what to preserve and what to discard quietly shape memory, identity, and what future generations will know about us. In This Episode [00:00] Welcome to Knowledge Gumbo [00:32] The Quote: "The eye is always caught by light, but shadows have more to say." — Margo Jefferson [00:58] Context: Who is Margo Jefferson and why her work on attention matters [01:30] Reflection: Shadows as information, not absence [02:11] What images have been teaching us about worth and complexity [03:06] The tension between being seen and being understood [04:10] Family photo albums as curated memory — and what got thrown away [04:16] We are all curators now: every post, every share, every like [04:47] The obligation we carry with the images we share [06:07] Closing question: When you close your eyes, what image comes to mind — and who's holding the camera? 📱 CONNECT: YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@aliciatsays Newsletter: https://tremendous-painter-642.kit.com/305737ceb5 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aliciatsays/ Merch: https://aliciatsays.shop/

    7 min
  3. 23 MAR

    Creating Images That Reflect Us Fully

    Black women's representation in visual culture has never been just an art world conversation. It has always been a matter of power. In this episode of Knowledge Gumbo, we center a quote from Carrie Mae Weems, the photographer and video artist who spent decades insisting that images of Black women carry complexity, nuance, and power on our own terms. Host Alicia Thomas connects Weems' groundbreaking work to the ongoing struggle for authentic representation in a digital age where algorithms still decide what gets seen and whose image gets monetized without consent. This episode is an invitation to examine every image you create or share, and to choose fullness, even when it's inconvenient. Carrie Mae Weems is best known for her Kitchen Table series from the 1990s, which became iconic for capturing Black domesticity, intimacy, and power in a single frame. Her work refuses simple answers and uses photography, text, and installation to explore identity, history, and representation in ways that still resonate today. Key Takeaways Reclaiming representation is not just about visibility; it is about being seen accurately, with all our contradictions, tenderness, strength, and brilliance present at once. Carrie Mae Weems modeled this standard through decades of work in Black visual culture and cultural storytelling through art. The narrow tropes assigned to Black women, from the mammy to the Jezebel to the angry woman, are not relics of the past. They persist in the visual economy of the digital age, where platforms and algorithms continue to privilege certain bodies and narratives over others. Image-making with intentionality is an act of resistance. Creating and archiving images that reflect Black women fully, on our own terms, is a form of cultural preservation that outlasts the platforms we use to share them. The question Weems posed through her art remains urgent for every Black woman who creates, posts, or shares an image today: are you choosing to show the fullness, even when it is inconvenient? In This Episode [00:00] Welcome & show introduction [00:29] Quote from Carrie Mae Weems [00:40] Who is Carrie Mae Weems? [01:01] Her work: photography, text, and installation [01:25] The Kitchen Table Series [01:41] Reflection: what it means to see ourselves with complexity [02:26] Representation in the digital age [03:07] Reclaiming representation vs. simply being visible [03:44] Intentional image-making as resistance [04:44] Closing question to carry with you [05:00] Outro 📱 CONNECT: YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@aliciatsays Newsletter: https://tremendous-painter-642.kit.com/305737ceb5 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aliciatsays/ Merch: https://aliciatsays.shop/

    6 min
  4. 16 MAR

    When Spaces Reflect Who Matters: Norma Merrick Sklarek

    Norma Merrick Sklarek believed that architecture should reflect the dignity of the people it serves. In this episode of the Knowledge Gumbo Podcast, we explore the extraordinary legacy of Norma Merrick Sklarek, the first Black woman licensed as an architect in the United States and the first Black woman elected as a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects. She entered the profession in 1950, at a time when neither her race nor her gender was welcomed, and she used her power to insist that the spaces we build should honor the people who live, work, and move through them. This is a story about creative courage, intentional design, and what it means to claim your place in spaces that were not built with you in mind. Key Takeaways Norma Merrick Sklarek made history not once but twice, becoming the first Black woman licensed as an architect in the United States and the first Black woman elected as a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects, carving space in a profession that wasn't built to welcome her. Her philosophy of dignified design reminds us that the built environment is never neutral; spaces either hold us or dismiss us, and that distinction is always a choice made by the people with power to design. Because she entered architecture without mentors who looked like her, Norma made mentorship a cornerstone of her legacy, actively creating pathways for the Black women architects and designers who came after her. Her story is an invitation to ask ourselves what it means to build, create, or lead with intention, centering the dignity of the people our work is meant to serve. In This Episode [00:00] Welcome and show introduction [00:31] Today's quote from Norma Merrick Sklarek [00:57] Norma's historic role in American architecture [01:33] Reflection: What does it feel like to be welcomed or forgotten by a space? [02:26] Personal reflection on designing for belonging [02:43] Norma's philosophy: architecture should serve people, not the architect's ego [03:06] Mentorship and making a way for others [03:26] Architecture as power and what it means to reclaim it [04:09] Closing thought and question to carry with you 📱 CONNECT: YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@aliciatsays Newsletter: https://tremendous-painter-642.kit.com/305737ceb5 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aliciatsays/ Merch: https://aliciatsays.shop/

    5 min
  5. 9 MAR

    Documenting Because No One Else Would

    Doris Derby civil rights photographer picked up her camera in Mississippi in the 1960s — when witnessing what was happening to Black people was dangerous, and documenting it was even more so. As an activist and SNCC field secretary, Derby understood something essential: whoever controls the image controls the memory. She wasn't willing to let someone else decide how Black people would be remembered. This episode of the Knowledge Gumbo Podcast centers Derby's courage and conviction. She showed up with her camera even when it wasn't safe, even when the work wasn't celebrated, and even when her photographs sat in boxes for decades before the world caught up to them. Her story is an invitation to think about documentation as an act of love and resistance. Key Takeaways Doris Derby's work as a SNCC field secretary and civil rights photographer was rooted in a clear belief: the image could become evidence, memory, and testimony, and that responsibility was hers to carry. For far too long, someone else controlled the narrative of Black life — deciding which angle mattered, which expression would be printed, and which story would be told. Derby's decision to pick up the camera was a direct act of reclaiming that power. Photography, in Derby's hands, was never just about aesthetics. It was about creating a visual archive that didn't erase, didn't soften, and didn't skew the perspective of Black people living through the civil rights movement. The question this episode leaves us with is one worth carrying: when you look at a photograph, who is holding the camera, and what are they asking you to see? In This Episode [00:00] Welcome and show introduction [00:28] Episode quote from Doris Derby [00:44] Who was Doris Derby — activist, photographer, SNCC field secretary [01:10] The camera as evidence, memory, and testimony [01:37] Reflection: what it means to stand behind the lens [02:05] Who controlled the narrative before we picked up the camera [02:37] Documentation as an act of love and resistance [03:09] The question we assume someone else is answering [03:55] Photography as visual archive — what gets to be seen [04:28] The closing question you can carry with you [04:40] Outro and closing encouragement 📱 CONNECT: YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@aliciatsays Newsletter: https://tremendous-painter-642.kit.com/305737ceb5 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aliciatsays/ Merch: https://aliciatsays.shop/

    5 min
  6. 3 MAR

    Painting the Stories No One Else Would Tell

    Faith Ringgold believed art was not what you see, but what you make others see — and she spent a lifetime proving it. Born in Harlem in 1930, Ringgold became one of the most important visual storytellers in American history, weaving narrative quilts and paintings that held the full weight of Black life: grief and joy, resistance and beauty, memory and dream. In this episode of the Knowledge Gumbo Podcast, host Alicia Thomas unpacks that one fierce, clarifying quote and asks what it demands of us today. What does it mean to make others see? Not to beg for recognition, but to layer truth in color and thread until the world cannot look away. This is a short, rich episode built for reflection. It will stay with you. Key Takeaways Faith Ringgold used narrative quilts and paintings as archives, insisting that Black life in all its complexity belonged in the gallery and in the historical memory. Her work is a model of what it looks like to document a people on your own terms. Visual art is a form of literacy that Black women have practiced across generations. From Ringgold's canvases to the coded quilt patterns of our grandmothers, the knowledge was always there, held in color, form, and symbol. Many of us have been taught that our stories don't count unless they're told in sanctioned languages or housed in institutional spaces. Ringgold's life and work push back on that directly. The gallery can be a living room. The archive can be a quilt. The episode closes with a question to carry: What does it mean to use color and form to tell a truth that hasn't been heard or experienced yet? That question is an invitation to examine what you are making others see with your own life and work. In This Episode [00:00] Welcome and show introduction [00:32] Faith Ringgold quote: "Art is not what you see, but what you make others see" [00:43] Who was Faith Ringgold? Context and legacy [01:27] Reflection: What does it mean to make others see? [02:09] On whose stories deserve to be documented and archived [02:44] Visual art as a different kind of literacy [03:24] Faith Ringgold's women: power, defiance, and making space [03:46] Closing question for reflection [04:00] Outro and closing blessing Resources and Links [Faith Ringgold Official Website] — https://faithringgold.com/ [Faith Ringgold at the Smithsonian] — https://americanart.si.edu/artist/faith-ringgold-7236 [The Studio Museum in Harlem] — https://www.studiomuseum.org/artists/faith-ringgold 📱 CONNECT: YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@aliciatsays Newsletter: https://tremendous-painter-642.kit.com/305737ceb5 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aliciatsays/ Merch: https://aliciatsays.shop/

    5 min
  7. 23 FEB

    Diaspora Faith: How Black Women Shaped Theology Worldwide

    Black women across the diaspora shaped theology worldwide. In this episode, a June Jordan quote opens a reflection on spiritual inheritance, self-love, and the refusal to be severed from our roots. Episode 37 opens with a striking quote from poet, essayist, and activist June Jordan, born in Harlem to Jamaican immigrants. Her declaration that being both a feminist and a Black woman demands the same thing -- radical self-love and self-respect as though life depends on it -- anchors a meditation on how Black women across the African diaspora have shaped, challenged, and reimagined theology on a global scale. IN THIS EPISODE: - Explore how June Jordan connected Caribbean heritage, African American experience, and global liberation movements - Reflect on how spirituality travels across oceans and through the people who were stolen - Examine how Christian nationalism tried to sever Black communities from African spiritual roots - Discover how Black women created new theological frameworks that challenged Western Christianity's dominance - Carry a closing question about what spiritual practices have traveled with you across generations TIMESTAMPS: 00:00 - Introduction and Welcome 00:32 - June Jordan Quote on Feminism and Blackness 01:03 - About June Jordan 01:27 - Reflection: How Spirituality Travels 02:03 - Christian Nationalism and Severing from Roots 02:44 - How Black Women Shaped Diaspora Theology 03:48 - Closing Reflection Question 04:02 - Outro ABOUT JUNE JORDAN: June Jordan (1936-2002) was a poet, essayist, and activist born in Harlem to Jamaican immigrants. Her work explored Black identity, spirituality, and liberation across borders, weaving Caribbean heritage with African American experience and global solidarity movements.

    5 min
  8. 16 FEB

    The Spiritual Roots of Black Women's Activism

    Episode 36: The Spiritual Roots of Black Women's Activism - Fannie Lou Hamer on Faith & Justice Fannie Lou Hamer's powerful quote reminds us that faith and justice are inseparable forces in the fight for liberation. In this episode, we explore how spirituality fueled the civil rights movement and ask: How does your faith call you toward justice? IN THIS EPISODE: • Who Fannie Lou Hamer was and why her legacy matters today • How faith sustained activists when the work was dangerous and progress was slow • The spiritual foundations of the civil rights movement in Black churches • Hamer's challenge to the 1964 Democratic National Convention • The tradition of Black women activists who integrated faith and justice work • Why prayers became protests and hymns became battle cries TIMESTAMPS: 00:00 - Introduction and today's quote 00:34 - Who was Fannie Lou Hamer 01:03 - What sustains you when the work is dangerous 01:56 - Justice has a spiritual component 02:44 - The civil rights movement and Black churches 03:04 - Fannie Lou Hamer's political courage 03:34 - The tradition: Ella Baker, Septima Clark, Diane Nash 04:08 - Faith without works is dead 04:31 - Reflection question for listeners 04:42 - Closing thoughts ABOUT FANNIE LOU HAMER: Fannie Lou Hamer was a sharecropper in Mississippi who became one of the most powerful voices in the civil rights movement. She co-founded the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party and challenged the all-white delegation at the 1964 Democratic National Convention while quoting scripture and testifying about being beaten in a Winona jail. KEY QUOTE: "Nobody's free until everybody's free." - Fannie Lou Hamer REFLECTION QUESTION: How does your faith, however you define it, call you toward justice? ABOUT THE KNOWLEDGE GUMBO PODCAST: The Knowledge Gumbo Podcast shares the stories and wisdom of Black women who shaped the world and on whose shoulders we stand. Each week features one quote, a little context, an honest reflection, and a question you can carry with you. Hosted by Alicia Thomas.

    5 min

About

"Empowering Black women through untold stories, inspiring quotes, and actionable insights from history. Join us weekly as we rediscover Black women’s contributions, engage in critical thinking, share a laugh, and inspire community.” *Knowledge Gumbo* is a soulful blend of wisdom, history, and culture, filtered through the lens of Black women, for Black women, and about Black women. Hosted by Alicia Thomas, a former mechanical engineer turned seeker of untold stories, this podcast dives into powerful quotes, proverbs, and book excerpts—primarily from Black women from maids to renowned thought leaders—and unpacks their meaning with humor, insight, and a touch of reflection. From thought-provoking sayings to timeless words of wisdom, every episode brings history to life—not through dates and places, but through voices, stories, and the lessons they leave us. Perfect for Black women from Generation X and more, *Knowledge Gumbo* is a space for learning, laughing, and passing down knowledge to future generations. Pull up a seat, stir the pot, and let’s share a bowl from the rich mixture of voices and stories of the past to inspire the present. **New episodes available weekly. Jump in, listen, and share the gumbo with a few friends!**