Surviving Society Productions Surviving Society
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Award winning, weekly political podcast exploring the local and global politics of race & class from a sociological perspective.
Out every Tuesday !!
Presenter: Dr Chantelle J Lewis
Executive Producer: Adders
Design: Evelyn Miller
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Episode 2: Decolonisation and Modernity with Deanne Bell
In this episode, Deanne addresses social suffering, indifference, and decolonisation through the poignant question of: “How can we, as humans, become emancipated from colonial constructions of race and class?”
Link:
https://www.ntu.ac.uk/research/researchers-revealed/deanne-bell
These episodes feature activists and scholars who are on the frontlines of grassroots struggles for dignity, justice, and self-determination in the Caribbean. Rooted in a convivial spirit of creative resistance and collective healing, each guest shares insights into the region’s lasting legacies of colonialism as a means of confronting and ultimately ending the enduring aftermaths of empire.Guest co-producers, Levi Gahman, Johannah-Rae Reyes, Adaeze Greenidge -
Episode 1: The Crucible of Modernity with Johannah-Rae Reyes
In this episode, Johannah, as co-producer and co-host, introduces the series and provides a general overview of the complexities, challenges, and diverse forms of resistance that define the Caribbean.
Links:
https://caisott.org/mapping-injustice/ and https://caisott.org/sign-together-project/
Summary
These episodes feature activists and scholars who are on the frontlines of grassroots struggles for dignity, justice, and self-determination in the Caribbean. Rooted in a convivial spirit of creative resistance and collective healing, each guest shares insights into the region’s lasting legacies of colonialism as a means of confronting and ultimately ending the enduring aftermaths of empire. Guest co-producers, Levi Gahman, Johannah-Rae Reyes, Adaeze Greenidge -
The Crucible Of Modernity
These episodes feature activists and scholars who are on the frontlines of grassroots struggles for
dignity, justice, and self-determination in the Caribbean. Rooted in a convivial spirit of creative
resistance and collective healing, each guest shares insights into the region’s lasting legacies of
colonialism as a means of confronting and ultimately ending the enduring aftermaths of empire. -
S1/ E6 Can the Museum be a Site of (Anti-Colonial) Resistance?
Chantelle and Kelechi interview Lennon Mhishi about the ‘Re-connecting "Objects’ project at the Pitt Rivers Mueseum (University of Oxford). We explore the functioning of museums as ‘containers’, consisting of colonial collections as products of violence, extraction and dispossession.
https://www.prm.ox.ac.uk/reconnecting-objects
Summary:In this series we introduce the work of researchers from the Black Health and the Humanities Network. Each episode uncovers the different ways that racist environments impact the health of Black African and Caribbean people. Expect conversation centred around resistance creativity and imaginative futures.
The Black Health and the Humanities network emerged in part from the crisis caused by 2020’s global Covid-19 pandemic, the transnational Black Lives Matter movement, and the intersections between racism and health inequalities that, although not new, these events highlighted. -
S1/E5 Medical Colonial Photography in Malawi & Sudan
Chantelle and Kelechi interview Chimwemwe Phiri about her PhD research based on the colonial histories and ethical dimensions of medical photography, questions of ownership, and the afterlives of archival material.
https://www.blackhealthandhumanities.org
Summary:In this series we introduce the work of researchers from the Black Health and the Humanities Network. Each episode uncovers the different ways that racist environments impact the health of Black African and Caribbean people. Expect conversation centred around resistance creativity and imaginative futures.
The Black Health and the Humanities network emerged in part from the crisis caused by 2020’s global Covid-19 pandemic, the transnational Black Lives Matter movement, and the intersections between racism and health inequalities that, although not new, these events highlighted.
https://wellcome.org/grant-funding/people-and-projects/grants-awarded/comparative-investigation-visual-representations -
S1/E4 Black Joy As Resistance
Tanisha Spratt and Arya Thampuran discuss the importance of Black joy, sprituality and care as crucial to Black health and healing.
Links
https://www.durham.ac.uk/staff/a-s-thampuran/
https://www.kcl.ac.uk/people/tanisha-spratt
Summary:
In this series we introduce the work of researchers from the Black Health and the Humanities Network. Each episode uncovers the different ways that racist environments impact the health of Black African and Caribbean people. Expect conversation centred around resistance creativity and imaginative futures.
The Black Health and the Humanities network emerged in part from the crisis caused by 2020’s global Covid-19 pandemic, the transnational Black Lives Matter movement, and the intersections between racism and health inequalities that, although not new, these events highlighted.
https://www.blackhealthandhumanities.org