
3 episodes

Spinsters, Seers, & Succubi: Conversations on Feminism and Progressive Spirituality Dr. Kimberly B. George
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- Society & Culture
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5.0 • 8 Ratings
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* A show about women's power, progressive spirituality, and men learning feminism.* Dr. Kimberly B. George invites her guests to talk about how feminist practice could nourish every intersection of liberation. The show gives special focus to considering cis men's roles, taking up the inclusive vision of the great ancestor bell hooks, who called for "feminist seers" to imagine a world in which men are equal partners in feminist transformations. The spiritual conversations are intersectional, exploring in nuanced language how progressive spiritualities also have a role in shaping love-based social change.
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Womanist Theology, Sensual Faith, & Centering Black Women's Joy & Healing: A Conversation with Author Lyvonne Briggs
In this rich hour of discussion with Dr. George, Lyvonne Briggs will teach spiritual practices that center womanist theology and African cosmology. She teaches with power and wisdom on topics like showing up for both your grief and your pleasure; reparations for Black folks; and men needing healing from patriarchy, too. If you are new to what the rich tradition of womanism is, Lyvonne will walk you through its legacies and its possibilites in its "4th wave."
Lyvonne Briggs, MDiv, ThM, an Emmy Award winner, is a body- and sex-positive womanist preacher and speaker. She is the host of Sensual Faith Podcast and the author of Sensual Faith: The Art of Coming Home to Your Body (Convergent/Penguin Random House out March '23). She is the co-host of Sanctified, a faith-based, Spotify-exclusive podcast on Jemele Hill’s Unbothered Network. A spiritual life coach and TEDx speaker, she has been featured in Essence, Cosmopolitan, Rolling Stone, and The Washington Post, and Sojourners named her one of "11 Women Shaping the Church.” Briggs is a graduate of The Lawrenceville School, Seton Hall University, Yale Divinity School, and Columbia Theological Seminary. A New York City native, she is currently based in New Orleans, LA and you can follow her across platforms: @LyvonneBriggs -
Spiritual Activism + Depression and Perfectionism in Gloria Anzaldúa's Writing Process: An Interview With Dr. AnaLouise Keating
Gloria Anzaldúa is best known for creating two of the foundational texts of U.S. women-of-color feminisms: This Bridge Called My Back in 1981 (co-edited with Cherríe Moraga) and Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza in 1987.
But the scope of Anzaldua's body of work is much longer and larger than these two pivotal texts, too. In this interview, Dr. Kimberly George speaks with Dr. AnaLouise Keating, a professor of Multicultural Women's and Gender Studies and the premier scholar of Anzaldúa body of work and archives.
Dr. Keating talks about her friendship and collaborations with Gloria. She also discusses key themes in Anzaldúa's life and work including: her concept of spiritual activism; her understanding of the interconnection of all life; her challenge to identity categories; the effects of her diabetes; and her struggles with depression and perfectionism in her writing process.
Dr. Keating is herself prolific, with her most recent book being The Anzaldúan Theory Handbook, released by Duke University Press in October of 2022.
This episode is for you if:
You are interested in learning the histories of women-of-color feminism or Intrigued by the concept of spiritual activism or Want to consider the uses and limits of our contemporary identity politics categories or Want to hear reflections on how depression can be entangled with perfectionism
The show's host, Dr. Kimberly B. George, holds a PhD in Ethnic Studies, an MA in Religious History, and further graduate training in psychodynamic psychotherapy. She is a writer, a feminist writing teacher, a scholar, and a consultant to organizations seeking bespoke feminist professional education programs for their leaders. Contact her at www.KimberlyBGeorge.com.
The show's community supported Patreon can be found at: https://www.patreon.com/DrKimberlyGeorge/membership
COVER ART by Nancy Guerrera
CREATIVE CONSULTING by Andrew Medlin
MUSIC by Siobhán Shiels
*With special thanks to April Freeman, Susan Crampton Davis, and Nancy Guerrera, whose initial founding sponsorships made this show possible. -
Men Learning Feminism: A Conversation with Rev. Meghan Mullarkey and Luke Abernathy
What would the world look like if more men were involved in feminist learning and real transformation?
In this episode, Dr. George talks with a a married couple—Rev. Meghan Mullarkey and Luke Abernathy (a therapist)—about their journey bringing feminist learning and practice to their marriage.
We talk about women being afraid to feel their own anger around patriarchy and men who want to rationalize inequality instead of face it and change it. We discuss how couples can address invisible labor in the home and what these issues have to do with larger systemic realities across gender, race, and class systems.
Luke—as a therapist— reflects on his process of coming to realize the language of therapy often lacks the language of systemic analysis of gender, race, and class. And Meghan names the realities of how much work it is to pretend to be happy instead of dealing with how patriarchy actually effects intimacy, parenting, and partnership.
Books Referenced in the Episode:
Rage Becomes Her by Soraya Chemaly AND
Caliban and the Witch by Silvia Federici
Courses Referenced in the Episode:
Caliban and the Witch in an Time of COVID-19 AND
Men Learning Feminism at www.FeminismSchool.com
The show is hosted by Dr. Kimberly B. George, who brings a PhD in Ethnic Studies, an MA in Religious History, and further graduate training in psychodynamic psychotherapy. She is a writer, a scholar, and a consultant to organizations seeking bespoke feminist professional education programs. Contact her at www.KimberlyBGeorge.com.
The show's Patreon can be found at: https://www.patreon.com/DrKimberlyGeorge/membership
COVER ART by Nancy Guerrera
CREATIVE CONSULTING by Andrew Medlin
MUSIC by Siobhán Shiels
*With special thanks to April Freeman, Susan Crampton Davis, and Nancy Guerrera, whose initial founding sponsorships made this show possible.
Customer Reviews
Vital discussions
This first episode has so much to offer. I can’t wait to hear what comes next. Kimberly gives space for much needed discussion while highlighting important areas for future growth. These conversations are so rare and it’s heartening to see folks willing to undertake them with Kimberly’s deft guidance.
Emotional Labor made visible!
I am a huge fan of Dr. Kimberly George’s work and this podcast did not disappoint. She explains a lot of very familiar sources of stress (emotional labor, the mental load, the double day, the second shift) using the lenses of social theory and feminism. She unpacks complex theory in a way that is both relatable and understandable. She makes visible the invisible sources of stress that many women have internalized as “what is wrong with me” etc. and helps us realize we aren’t alone, it’s a systemic issue that’s way bigger than us!
Wow - just wow!
After listening to the first episode, I am hooked. Theoretical became recognizable and relatable. The way this conversation laid bare some of the everyday experiences in patriarchal systems was illuminating and deeply affirming. Dr. George has a gift for holding each guest in the conversation while staying true to the naming the harms and effects of patriarchal systems. This podcast also gave me a sensory experience of what is possible (while also not minimizing the difficulty). I can’t wait for more!