Hanging Question Marks

Zoki

A conversation podcast in which the (non-celebrity) host and a (non-celebrity) guest talk about their lives, current events, politics, culture, art, music, philosophy, religion—wherever the conversation takes them. The premise of this podcast is that most non-famous people have interesting things to say about a whole host of topics. Although social media gives these people new platforms, those platforms (e.g., Twitter, Facebook) are built for "takes," not in-depth conversations. As a friend put it when describing this podcast: think Studs Terkel meets Joe Rogan ... kind of.

Episodes

  1. Ep. 5: Conversation with Jacob Torbeck

    24/08/2020

    Ep. 5: Conversation with Jacob Torbeck

    This episode is a conversation with Jacob Torbeck. Jacob is a PhD candidate at Loyola University in Chicago's Integrated Studies in Ethics and Theology program. Jacob and I have crossed paths many times over the past 20 or so years, but have never gotten to know each other well. In this conversation, we talk a bit about his background, then turn to a host of other topics: Jesuits and liberation theology, the unity and diversity within Catholicism, Jake's faith and his reasons for pursuing theology as an academic discipline, teaching theology and ethics to college students, faith, and the relationships between faith and science, faith and institutions, and faith and today's party politics. Enjoy. Things to Check Out (shared by Jacob): The Left Side of the Church (article published in Jacobin, available here: https://www.jacobinmag.com/2018/12/church-liberation-theology-latin-america-left) The Violence of Love: Quotations from Archbishop Romero (free book, available here: http://www.romerotrust.org.uk/homilies-and-writings/violence-love) Silence by Shusaku Endo (book, available here: https://www.abebooks.com/servlet/SearchResults?cm_sp=SearchF-_-topnav-_-Results&kn=Endo%20Silence&sts=t) Book debunking the "skills gap" myth: About halfway through our conversation, I got sidetracked talking about STEM and the myth of the "skills gap." If you're interested in that topic, check out the book Why Good People Can't Get Jobs: The Skills Gap and What Companies Can Do About It by Peter Cappelli (available here: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/why-good-people-cant-get-jobs-peter-cappelli/1110912284) Music for this episode: Good Night by Siobhan Dakay (c) copyright 2019 Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (3.0) license. http://dig.ccmixter.org/files/SiobhanD/60107 Ft: MyVanillaworld Episode art: Photograph by yours truly.

    2h 5m
  2. Ep. 3: Conversation with Cortney Ritsema

    09/08/2020

    Ep. 3: Conversation with Cortney Ritsema

    This episode is a conversation with Cortney Ritsema. (Twitter: @CRitsem) Cortney is my neighbor—and more importantly an activist, a mother, a clinical psychologist, and more. In this episode, we talk about political activism, Cortney's work over a decade ago as a counselor at a detention facility for "unaccompanied minors," and finally the reopening of Chicago Public Schools in the fall. If you want to jump around, here is a brief overview of our conversation with approximate begin times.  6:40 – Our conversation begins. We discuss how we met and Cortney's activism, including her work with the Bernie Sanders presidential campaigns.  17:00 – We begin discussing Cortney's previous work as a therapist at a detention facility for "unaccompanied minors"—immigrant children who are in the United States unlawfully.  57:40 – The conversation turns to how Chicago Public Schools is dealing with the COVID pandemic and CPS's plans for virtual instruction this fall.  1:22:00 – Mostly a rant about the economy  and politics (for people who are into that sort of thing). You get to hear me butcher the GINI index (I spell it "ginny" in the episode) and basically confuse it with the happiness index.  (See Wikipedia article on the Gini coefficient/index here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gini_coefficient; and info on the World and Happiness Report 2020: https://worldhappiness.report/ed/2020/) Things to Check Out (shared by Cortney): Raise your Hand Illinois (https://www.ilraiseyourhand.org/) is a coalition of parents, educator's, and community members that engages, informs and empowers parents to protect and strengthen public education for all children in Chicago and Illinois, eliminate inequities in public schools, and work at the grassroots for the public good that is public education. Here is the video that Cortney references in the episode. In the video, she talks about her experience working as a therapist at a detention facility for "unaccompanied minors": https://www.facebook.com/LaVillitaSolidaridad/videos/2600880970169863/?extid=vSFifFqJ7RJKmbDS&d=null&vh=e Becoming Better Beckys (https://www.facebook.com/groups/273580743477751/?ref=share) is a Facebook group that Cortney started 2 years ago. It's an online forum for white women who are ready to acknowledge their own aspects of "Beckyness" and begin to do the very difficult, but  necessary work of addressing issues of white privilege, racism, and  white supremacy.  Music for this episode: Good Night by Siobhan Dakay (c) copyright 2019 Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (3.0) license. http://dig.ccmixter.org/files/SiobhanD/60107 Ft: MyVanillaworld  Episode art: Photograph by yours truly.

    1h 34m
  3. Ep. 2: Conversation with Katie Gore

    04/08/2020

    Ep. 2: Conversation with Katie Gore

    This episode is a conversation with Katie Gore—a speech language pathologist, an entrepreneur, a communications educator, and a friend. The conversation begins with Katie's origin story as an American growing up in Canada. We then discuss various topics, including the intersection of class and stuttering (and other disabilities), as well as the challenges of discussing politics in a culture in which the words most often used in our political discourse lack shared or agreed-upon meanings. Links to things you should check out: Katie is the founder of speech IRL, a  Chicago-based company that provides speech therapy for persons who  stutter, as well as a variety of other speech- and  communications-related therapies, classes, and consultations. Check out speech IRL here: www.speechIRL.com @speechIRL (Facebook / Insta / Twitter) Katie is also the Community Outreach Chair of Shared Voices, a Chicago-based non-profit with the mission of creating a shared community for people  impacted by stuttering, through programming, resources, education, and  outreach. Check out Shared Voices here: www.sharedvoiceschicago.org @sharedvoiceschicago The National Stuttering Association (NSA) is the largest non-profit  organization in the world dedicated to bringing hope and empowerment to  children and adults who stutter, their families, and professionals,  through support, education, advocacy, and research. Check out the NSA here:  www.westutter.org Katie recently wrote a blog post "for  anyone who gets overwhelmed by headlines, Instagram stories, and tweets  that use all kinds of social terms you aren't familiar with. You want  to ask questions, but are afraid of saying something wrong in the  process." Check out that blog post here: https://www.speechirl.com/how-to-speak-2020 Music for this episode: Good Night by Siobhan Dakay (c) copyright 2019 Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (3.0) license. http://dig.ccmixter.org/files/SiobhanD/60107 Ft: MyVanillaworld Episode art: Photograph by yours truly.

    2h 15m
  4. Ep. 1: Conversation with Lara Scott

    27/07/2020

    Ep. 1: Conversation with Lara Scott

    This episode is a conversation with Lara Scott, a visual artist living in upstate New York. We begin by talking about Lara's background, with the conversation centering around her thoughts on growing up in a mixed family: the families of both her mother and father have been multi-ethnic/multi-racial going back many generations. The conversation then turns to current events. Among other things, we discuss whether the notion of whiteness needs to be retired (and what that means) and the Black Lives Matter movement. Our conversation was recorded on July 25,  2020. If you would like to provide feedback or let me know that you'd like to come on the podcast for a conversation, you can contact me at hangingquestionmarks@gmail.com. The image for this episode is a photo of the painting Orchid Study by Lara Scott. You can find out more about Lara and her art—and how to purchase her work—by visiting https://themetamerquarterly.blogspot.com/. Here is a list of people, readings, websites, and quotes that Lara selected as being relevant to our conversation: People: Jessica B. Davenport, Alicia Garza, Patrisse Cullors, Opal Tometi Readings: Our Kind of People: Inside America's Black Upper Class, by Lawrence Otis Graham; Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary Imagination, by Toni Morrison Websites: http://occupywallst.org/ — https://www.poorpeoplescampaign.org/ — https://blacklivesmatter.com/ Quotes: “The world found nothing sacred in the abstract nakedness of being human.”  Hannah Arendt, quoted by Lyndsey Stonebridge “Identity would seem to be the garment with which one covers the  nakedness of the self: in which case, it is best that the garment be  loose, a little like the robes of the desert, through which one's  nakedness can always be felt, and, sometimes, discerned. This trust in  one's nakedness is all that gives one the power to change one's robes.”  James Baldwin, from The Price of the Ticket: Collected Nonfiction, 1948-1985 "Oh, yes, they do. We have a fantastic time as we  try to figure out, 'And now, what are the new songs, and what are the  new words?' For instance, let me just mention one word that we’ve been  working with lately. I’ve been on a campaign encouraging people as we  think about the beloved community to stop using this word 'minority,'  that there is something negative about that terminology because it  always suggests that somebody else is the majority. The fact is, we are  all now creating a new majority. We are all part of this beloved  community. In community, the concept of minority simply doesn’t work.  You don’t have a minority in a family. So we have got to get new words,  new songs, new possibilities for ourselves." Vincent Harding, https://onbeing.org/programs/vincent-harding-is-america-possible/ Music for this episode: Good Night by Siobhan Dakay (c) copyright 2019 Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (3.0) license. http://dig.ccmixter.org/files/SiobhanD/60107 Ft: MyVanillaworld

    1h 56m

About

A conversation podcast in which the (non-celebrity) host and a (non-celebrity) guest talk about their lives, current events, politics, culture, art, music, philosophy, religion—wherever the conversation takes them. The premise of this podcast is that most non-famous people have interesting things to say about a whole host of topics. Although social media gives these people new platforms, those platforms (e.g., Twitter, Facebook) are built for "takes," not in-depth conversations. As a friend put it when describing this podcast: think Studs Terkel meets Joe Rogan ... kind of.