Sweet Medicine

Studio Styles

How have Nigerians been taught to think about how to be in the world? Find out on Sweet Medicine, a public humanities project on social healing through a reclamation of the humanities in a post-SAP Nigeria. Website: sweetmedicine.me / studiostyles.org Newsletter: studiostyles.substack.com The podcast was funded through an Open Society Foundations Ideas Workshop Fellowship. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  1. "It's not if I can, it's how I can." - Mobolaji Otuyelu

    14/12/2024

    "It's not if I can, it's how I can." - Mobolaji Otuyelu

    Today’s conversation is with Mobolaji Otuyelu, the founder of two startups—a kitchenware company AGBO ILÉ and Ọjà Wellness Foods, a beverage company. As an entrepreneur focused on black innovation and social change, Mobolaji is also deeply involved with the Federation of Informal Workers’ Organisations of Nigeria (FIWON), where she collaborates on member-led initiatives to provide tangible support like health insurance, mortgage opportunities, and pension schemes for informal workers. In this conversation we discuss the ties between economic development and healing—the two need each other—, the gift of now and the power of the contemporary. 🍲 04:02 FIWON: A Model for Informal Workers 08:48 Resourcefulness in Nigerian Entrepreneurship 16:15 Healing Through Money and Economic Capital 25:34 The Gift of Now/Culture is Dynamic 🍲 Mentioned in the episode: https://www.mondragon-corporation.com/en/ 🍲 Website: sweetmedicine.me  Newsletter: studiostyles.substack.com. Instagram: @ss.studiostyles Support Sweet Medicine: https://flutterwave.com/donate/olt4tbjytsjr ⁕ Consider joining or supporting Kwanda From the founder of Kwanda, Jermaine Craig: "I'm focused on making the world a more generous place. I'm interested in the potential of the collective, not the individual. I want to get future philanthropists started earlier by gathering as 'Micro Philanthropists'. A blocker to generosity is a lack of transparency and trust, so I'm building Kwanda. This platform brings diasporans together to pool capital and fund local-led projects in Africa. The platform is financially transparent and allows members to decide how funds are spent." Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    29 min
  2. Chapter 5: Why Nigeria in the first place? (Guns and Spirits)

    05/12/2024

    Chapter 5: Why Nigeria in the first place? (Guns and Spirits)

    This episode is six years in the making. Many of us know the Berlin Conference of 1884, otherwise known as the scramble for Africa which was where European leaders decided how to share Africa like moi moi among themselves. But a lesser-known but equally important conference was the 1890 Brussels conference that King Leopold II organised as an anti-slavery conference. The agreements made at the conference were enshrined into an act titled: The Convention Relative to the Slave Trade and Importation into Africa of Firearms, Ammunition, and Spiritous Liquors. This episode is about firearms, ammunition and spirits–what these objects that were so central to the slave trade can tell us about why Nigeria was made. It follows the line from the Transatlantic slave trade to the Scramble for Africa, down to the Prohibition in the US, to the Iva Valley massacre in Enugu and general police brutality in colonial Nigeria. And it takes the ‘social life of things’ route to get from point A to point Z.  🍲 01:28 The lesser-known 1880s B* conference  03:39 ‘Firearms, Ammunition, and Spiritous Liquors‘ 08:50 Negotiating power and identity/Local Agency vs. Colonial Control 15:11 The Iva Valley Massacre 🍲 Website: sweetmedicine.me  Newsletter: studiostyles.substack.com. Instagram: @ss.studiostyles Support Sweet Medicine: https://flutterwave.com/donate/olt4tbjytsjr Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    22 min

About

How have Nigerians been taught to think about how to be in the world? Find out on Sweet Medicine, a public humanities project on social healing through a reclamation of the humanities in a post-SAP Nigeria. Website: sweetmedicine.me / studiostyles.org Newsletter: studiostyles.substack.com The podcast was funded through an Open Society Foundations Ideas Workshop Fellowship. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.