Log in

goodpods headphones icon

To access all our features

Open the Goodpods app
Close icon
The Black Studies Podcast - The Courage to Think– Part Two

The Courage to Think– Part Two

The Black Studies Podcast

01/06/23 • 71 min

plus icon
bookmark
Share icon

In this special, two-part episode of the Black Studies podcast, we are thrilled to be joined by David Austin and Bryan Mukandi! In the second part of their incredibly generous and generative conversation, David and Bryan discuss some of the music, books, ideas, conversations and friendships that stimulated and sustained them during the pandemic.


David Austin is the author of Dread Poetry and Freedom: Linton Kwesi Johnson and the Unfinished Revolution and editor of Moving Against the System: The 1968 Congress of Black Writers and the Making of Global Consciousness and You Don’t Play with Revolution: The Montreal Lectures of C.L.R. James. Fear of a Black Nation: Race, Sex, and Security in Sixties Montreal is the 2014 winner of the Casa de las Americas Prize. His writing engages the work of C.L.R. James, Frantz Fanon, Sylvia Wynter, Hannah Arendt, Walter Rodney, and Linton Kwesi Johnson in relation to politics, poetry and social movements. A former youth worker and community organizer, he has also produced radio documentaries for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation’s Ideas on C.L.R. James and Frantz Fanon. He currently teaches in the Humanities, Philosophy, and Religion Department at John Abbott College and in the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada.


Bryan Mukandi is an academic philosopher and health humanities researcher, with a background in the practice of medicine in a resource-poor, sub-Saharan African context. His work is directed towards understanding and addressing the social configurations that improve or worsen the well-being of those served least well by society. He is currently a faculty member at the University of Queensland in Australia, and one of his current research projects is Seeing the Black Child, which seeks to expand, reconfigure and present a more complex understanding of childhood than dominant conceptions of childhood in Australia that take the figure of the white child as paradigmatic.


Transcript



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

01/06/23 • 71 min

plus icon
bookmark
Share icon

Generate a badge

Get a badge for your website that links back to this episode

Select type & size
Open dropdown icon
share badge image

<a href="https://goodpods.com/podcasts/the-black-studies-podcast-212747/the-courage-to-think-part-two-27257141"> <img src="https://storage.googleapis.com/goodpods-images-bucket/badges/generic-badge-1.svg" alt="listen to the courage to think– part two on goodpods" style="width: 225px" /> </a>

Copy