Imagine Otherwise by Ideas on Fire
Arts:Books
To what extent should we embrace our personal connections to our work? How much should we let our audience influence our work? What are the best ways to collaborate in academia and performance?
In episode 33 of the Imagine Otherwise podcast, Cathy Hannabach interviews E. Patrick Johnson about his creative process, how he translates scholarly ideas into artistic work and vice versa, how Black gay men and women are crafting community-based oral histories, and how artistic and scholarly collaboration is a key way he imagines otherwise.
Transcript and show notes: https://ideasonfire.net/33-e-patrick-johnson
Cathy Hannabach on 3 Years of Imagine Otherwise
Kiki Petrosino on Writing from the Body
Fobazi Ettarh on the Limits of Vocational Awe
Melody Jue on Thinking Through Seawater
Sarah Stefana Smith on a Poetics and Politics of Bafflement
Anthony Romero on Sound and Socially Engaged Art
Emilly Prado on Making Space for Creativity
Amber Jamilla Musser on Valuing Embodied Knowledge
Sandra Ruiz on Resetting the Colonial Clock
Tania Lizarazo on Listening and Learning Together
Alix Olson on Transitioning from Performer to Professor
Ebony Elizabeth Thomas on Leaving No One Behind
Denne Michele Norris on QTPOC Literary Worlds
Jenn M. Jackson on Black Feminist Love and Community Building
Larisa Kingston Mann on DJ Dreams and Radical Publics
Nadine Hubbs on Listening Queerly
Marisol LeBrón on an Anti-Colonial Abolitionist Praxis
Jade S. Sasser on Reproductive Justice and Climate Change
Jessica Nydia Pabón-Colón on Women Graffiti Artists
Alyshia Gálvez on NAFTA and Transnational Food Justice
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