In this episode we talk with Dr. Yelena Bailey, author of How the Streets Were Made: Housing Segregation and Black Life in America. The hood, the ghetto, the streets, regardless of what we call it, in her new book, Dr. Bailey argues that the streets are not just a physical geographical space but that they are a “ sociocultural entity that has influenced our understanding of blackness in America for decades.”
Dr. Bailey explains the role of government policies, advertising campaigns, colonial social sciences, and popular culture plays in shaping the confinement of Africans within these urban spaces. A tradition of domestic and settler colonialism that she ties to the death of George Floyd.
She explains the impacts of:
She also talks about African resistance and the way African cultural production reflects that resistance. The program includes excerpts from and discussion of music by the Fugees, Nipsey Hussle, Kendrick Lamar and Buddy.
Dr. Bailey was raised in the Minneapolis area and earned her Ph.D. in literature at the University of California, San Diego. She has taught at a number of universities and colleges including Seattle Pacific University.
The People's War radio show is produced by WBPU 96.3 FM "Black Power 96" in St. Petersburg, Florida. It is hosted by Dr. Matsemela Odom and Muambi Tangu, bringing an African Internationalist perspective to the important issues of our world.
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Episode #115: DOJ indicts China: African, Indigenous activists respond
Episode #114: Long Live Thomas Sankara, hero of Burkina Faso, ”Land of the upright people”!
Episode #113: The Woman King film review round table
Episode #112: Defending the African Community! We are our own liberators!
Episode #111: Now that you’ve seen ”The Woman King”, view the African Internationalist classic film, ”Bush Mama”
Episode #110: Covid-19, Pop Culture and the Anticolonial Turn in Africana Studies
Episode #109:The Role of Black Students and Intellectuals in the African Revolution
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