Healing in the Bayou Guilbeau Center
-
- Society & Culture
This podcast series looks at the history of health and healing in Louisiana. We examine many different types of health, from physical and mental well-being to social and economic insecurities. In our first season: each episode includes interviews with community members to learn about different experiences with mainstream medicine or alternative healing practices, including midwives, traiteurs, and traditional Indigenous healers. In season two, we look at the experiences of and responses to the COVID19 pandemic and the movement for Black lives in southwest Louisiana.
Created by Marissa Petrou
-
S3E4 Different Generations and Ethnicities share their take on this long year of Pandemics
By Clyde Mclaughlin
A first-year college student, a lawyer, and a Federal Agent give their two cents on 2020, COVID19, and the protests for Black lives. -
S3E3 Public Health Threat as Stress Test
By Michelle Lam
This episode of Healing in the Bayou will share the impacts of COVID-19 as a public health threat that served as a stress test at the individual and governmental levels. This has, in turn, demonstrated social and infrastructural weakness of society and its government. -
S3E2 The College Student Experience of Twin Crises: COVID19 and Systemic Racism
By Natalie Dauphinet
-
S3E1 The Movement for Black Lives and the Struggles of Social Distancing during COVID-19
By Jullian Bui
Season 3 continues our focus on Shared Histories: Documenting COVID19 and the Movement for Black Lives in Southwest Louisiana -
Season 2 Ep. 5 Armchair Anthropology - Social and Cultural Consciousness in 2020
By Zoe Huval, with contributions by Megan Ledet
Season 2 of Healing in the Bayou is part of Shared Histories: Documenting the experiences of and responses to COVID19 and the Movement for Black Lives in southwest Louisiana. -
Season 2 Ep. 4: Family and Sanity
By Theresa Slovacek-Herrera and Kerri Sullivan Leger
Season 2 of Healing in the Bayou is part of Shared Histories: Documenting the experiences of and responses to COVID19 and the Movement for Black Lives in southwest Louisiana.