![](/assets/artwork/1x1-42817eea7ade52607a760cbee00d1495.gif)
42 avsnitt
![](/assets/artwork/1x1-42817eea7ade52607a760cbee00d1495.gif)
Wósdéé Podcast Wosdee Podcast
-
- Nyheter
Welcome to Wósdéé podcast. My name is Majerle Lister. This podcast will be focused on discussions I believe are important to Diné people. I can say for certain that there will be a plethora of topics discussed ranging from politics to comic books.
My goal is to discuss and navigate the current topics on and off the Navajo Nation. The name of the podcast comes from the Navajo translation of “come in”. Growing up with my grandparents, I remember clearly the routine of visitors knocking on the door and my grandmother yelling “woshdee”. This initiated a discussion over cookies and coffee.
-
Episode 40: Shane [1953] Movie Review (w. Indians Watching Cowboys)
We review the movie Shane (1953). We talk about primitive accumulation, homesteading, agrarian capitalism, cattle industry, masculinity, and more. I've included time-stamps below and a link to 'Indian Watching Cowboys' podcast.
We show our appreciation for the script between discussions of themes and the plot.
CORRECTION:
@ 21:14 I say 'Five million' but it should be "500 Million".
(2:50)- Introduction
(6:11)- 'Make America Range Wars Again' and 'Chinese Weather Ballon' Tangents
(8:50)- How Racist was this movie?
(13:25)- Native Reservations, Cattle Industry, & Homestead Act
(20:00)- Homestead Act of 1862 & Its Consequences
(26:00)- Representation of Settler Camaraderie & Masculinity
(33:25)- The Confederate Figure and Western Movies
(38:35)- Guns and the Frontier
(43:25)- Settler-Colonial Class Interests/Clash
(46:15)- Representation of Masculinity and Femininity
(52:10)- The End of the Frontier Era(?)
(58:05)- Final Thoughts
Indians Watching Cowboys:
https://open.spotify.com/show/0YRoDtoyQWBgvYpw9ig06m -
Episode 39: Disability, Value Politics, & Indigenous Resistance (ft. Sandra Yellowhorse)
In this episode, I speak to Sandra Yellowhorse about her recent article, "Disability and Indigenous resistance: mapping value politics during the time of COVID-19" (2022). We discuss capitalist notions of productivity, value rubrics, and disability in a settler-colonial state. We think through these themes in the context of the pandemic in the Navajo Nation.
Opening theme: @PurpleCatsinSlacks
Alice Wong Podcast:
https://disabilityvisibilityproject.com/podcast/ -
Episode 38: A Cooperative Future (Ft. Bijiibah Ruth)
In this episode I talk to Bijiibah Ruth about the potential of cooperatives within the Navajo Nation. We briefly cover the cooperative history, social solidarity characteristic of cooperatives, and how they can exist in the Navajo Nation. We discuss the limits to cooperatives which are the same obstacles that small businesses have regarding bureaucracy.
-
Episode 37: Navajo land and Economic Development
In this episode, I spoke to Ezra Rosser, a law professor, on Federal Indian law & poverty. We talked about Navajo corruption, land use, property, and economic development. We talk about cover economic development literature(dominated by neo-classical theory) and limitations in the Navajo context.
Link to purchase book:
https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/nation-within/3BC620B583BFBB410D3E699151B34D6A -
Halloween Roundtable
Reposted from soundcloud but only a few people heard it. This episode is from last year where a bunch of friends of mine come together to tell scary stories. Thanks to those who joined us.
Background music: www.youtube.com/channel/UC_6hQy4elsyHhCOskZo0U5g -
Episode 36: Public Health & Ké in Navajo Nation
In this episode I talk to Dr. Teresa Montoya and Dr. Marc Emerson about their recent article, "Confronting Legacies of Structural Racism and Settler-colonialism to understand covid 19 impacts on the Navajo Nation". We discuss public health and critical expansion of the concept. Both articulate the limits of western epistemologies and the potential of including Navajo epistemologies.
(6:20) - What is Public Health?
(19:45) - Lessons from the 1918 Flu
(30:14) - Optimistic Stories and Conclusion
Thank you to Teresa and Marc.
Thumbnail photo of Mural by Ivan Lee