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
J. Kēhaulani Kauanui on Hawaiian Sovereignty
Jenny L. Davis on Indigenous Language Revitalization
Jian Neo Chen on Trans of Color Art and Activism
Aimee Bahng on Speculating from the Undercommons
Craig Santos Perez on a Decolonial and Demilitarized Pacific
Macarena Gómez-Barris on Fighting Extractive Capitalism
Veronica Corzo-Duchardt on Art Between Worlds
Imani Perry on Love as an Ethic
Manuela Lavinas Picq on Indigenous Futures
Francesca T. Royster on Writing Courageously
Stacie Williams on the Radical Librarianiship
Gayatri Gopinath on Queer Diasporic Aesthetics
Heath Fogg Davis on Gender's Administration
Aimi Hamraie on the Politics of Disability and Design
Sami Schalk on Disability and Black Women's Speculative Fiction
Bianca Laureano on Feminist Afro-Latinx Sex Education
Tavia Nyong'o on Revolutionary Queer Imaginaries
Tina Campt on Listening to Images
Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha on Disability Justice
Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha on Radical Memoir
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