8 episodios

Patchworks is a monthly podcast run by a group of resident members at Green College at the University of British Columbia on the unceded and occupied traditional territories of the Musqueam . The goal of the podcast is to amplify stories of IBPoC resistance, organizing, and dreaming by emerging and established Vancouver-based and international scholars, activists and community organizers.
The current hosts of the podcast are Patara McKeen, Rodney Stehr, Jane Willsie. Funding for Patchworks is provided by Green College. If you have any questions or inquiries please contact us via email: gc.academic1@gmail.com

Patchworks Rodney Stehr, Patara McKeen, Jane Willsie

    • Cultura y sociedad

Patchworks is a monthly podcast run by a group of resident members at Green College at the University of British Columbia on the unceded and occupied traditional territories of the Musqueam . The goal of the podcast is to amplify stories of IBPoC resistance, organizing, and dreaming by emerging and established Vancouver-based and international scholars, activists and community organizers.
The current hosts of the podcast are Patara McKeen, Rodney Stehr, Jane Willsie. Funding for Patchworks is provided by Green College. If you have any questions or inquiries please contact us via email: gc.academic1@gmail.com

    Getting Better at Conflict: Writer, performer, cultural worker and speaker Kai Cheng Thom discusses love, community, and harm

    Getting Better at Conflict: Writer, performer, cultural worker and speaker Kai Cheng Thom discusses love, community, and harm

    Kai Cheng Thom revisits the themes from her talk "When Things Fall Apart: Conflict, Crisis and Collective Healing in Activist Moments" in a conversation led by Lindsey Nkem and Patchworks podcast co-host Rodney Stehr live at Green College. She asks how can we do conflict in a better way - and how can we avoid the tempting rush towards solutions or punishment when facing a conflict where so much is at stake?

    • 1h
    Observe, Consider, and Record: Cree author and lawyer Michelle Good talks about her book Five Little Indians

    Observe, Consider, and Record: Cree author and lawyer Michelle Good talks about her book Five Little Indians

    Cree author and lawyer Michelle Good joins the podcast to talk about her book Five Little Indians which won of Canada Reads 2022, the Governor General's Literary Award for Fiction, and the Amazon First Novel Award - among many other accolades. She discusses braided narrative, her J.V. Clyne lectures titled "Indigenous Resurgence and Colonial Fingerprints in the 21st Century", and her journey through her many accomplishments that span across law and literature.

    • 40 min
    Rethinking Disaffection: Dr. Xine Yao talks about the potential for resistance and transgression in unfeeling and what that means for how we approach texts

    Rethinking Disaffection: Dr. Xine Yao talks about the potential for resistance and transgression in unfeeling and what that means for how we approach texts

    Join Green College residents Rodney Stehr and Serena Klumpenhouwer (PhD student) as they interview Dr. Xine Yao, a lecturer at University College London and co-host of the podcast "PHDivas", about their recently published book, "Disaffected: The Cultural Politics of Unfeeling in Nineteenth Century America". Drawing on the works of Melville, Sui Sin Far, and Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, Dr. Yao talks about disaffection as a form of affective disobedience, how exploring unfeeling can challenge norms around expressivity and whose emotions get acknowledged, and the task of asking ourselves whether we are playing the role of a Judas goat in institutional spaces.

    • 59 min
    A Lifetime Advocate: Patsy George discusses her childhood in Kerala, coming to Canada and becoming a lifelong community organizer

    A Lifetime Advocate: Patsy George discusses her childhood in Kerala, coming to Canada and becoming a lifelong community organizer

    Originally born during the Second World War in the Southern Indian state of Kerala, Patsy George has spent most of her life doing social work in Vancouver, but she is far more than just a social worker. At various times throughout her career, Patsy has represented Canada to the United Nations, was Director of Multiculturalism BC and BC's Immigrant Settlement Services, she was President of Vancouver's United Nations branch, Vice-President of the National Organization of Immigrant and Visible Minority Women, helped found the Steven Lewis Foundation, Vancouver's Society of Immigrant Women and Pacific Immigrant resources Society, was an honorary witness to the truth and reconciliation Commission, and served on the Federal Refugee Appeal Board. Patsy has received honorary doctorates from UBC and the University of the Fraser Valley, as well as the Order of British Columbia, the Order of Canada and several Queen's Jubilee medals among many other awards for her community work.
    In this episode, Patsy talks about her childhood in Kerala, her experiences of racism in the United States, and her career as a social work in in Canada, including what it means to her to do work not in the community, but with the community.

    • 47 min
    Through the Lens of Fashion: Fashion curator Jason Cyrus discusses curation, colonization, and cotton

    Through the Lens of Fashion: Fashion curator Jason Cyrus discusses curation, colonization, and cotton

    Fashion historian and curator Jason Cyrus joins the podcast to discuss his latest exhibition, History is Rarely Black or White, on view at the Agnes Etherington Art Centre. This exhibition traces connections between the cotton industry of the 1800s and the Transatlantic Slave Trade through archival research, conservation, and science. Cyrus also traces the trajectory of his professional career in the fashion industry and his academic and curatorial work. He begins with his visit to Alexander McQueen's "Savage Beauty" exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Cyrus then discusses his master's thesis on the writing of André Leon Talley and how marginalized identities rise above through style, clothing, and taking up space. Finally, he closes with an overview of History is Rarely Black or White.

    Photo credit: Jason Cyrus

    • 41 min
    Japanese Canadian Incarceration: Mary Kitagawa, Survivor and Social Justice Advocate, Discusses Canada’s Horrible Legacy

    Japanese Canadian Incarceration: Mary Kitagawa, Survivor and Social Justice Advocate, Discusses Canada’s Horrible Legacy

    Mary Kitagawa discusses the heinous events she experienced during Japanese Canadian incarceration and the fight for justice afterwards. This horrible event occurred between 1941-1949 and led to 22,000 Japanese Canadians being imprisoned, dispossessed, detained, and forced into low-wage labour by the Government of Canada. The trauma from this unspeakable event lives on in the survivors and their descendants. In this PCHC-MoM collaboration episode, Mary discusses her family’s experience of incarceration and the impact it had on her life and on the Japanese Canadian (JC) community, and the advocacy work she did with her husband Tosh Kitagawa. Together, they worked on every project to find justice for the JC community with the Japanese Canadian Citizens Association and Human Rights Committee (JCCAHRC). This work is visible in two important projects, the Landscapes of Injustice and Nikkei National Museum & Cultural Centre in Burnaby.

    • 39 min

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