Showing posts with label class. Show all posts
Showing posts with label class. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 30, 2021

Monday, March 29, 2021: Working Women in Puerto Rico; Women's Labor in a Lockdown Economy

Read more about Federici in
the 
New York Times article.

For this 5th Monday of the month show, join 1st Monday of the month host, Vylma V, as she talks with Bay Area activist Aixa Gannon about a recent panel linking working women of Puerto Rico with women in the diaspora working on social justice, along with an engaging conversation about women’s labor, Silvia Federici and our lockdown economy with Womens Magazine Collective members Margo and Jovelyn for the second half the show.  


Click here to listen to the show. 59:50 min 



BAASPR (Bay Area Alliance for Sustainable Puerto Rico) panel on Youtube





Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Monday, March 30, 2020: Escalating Interpersonal and State Violence in the Time of COVID-19 Pandemic

This Monday March 30th at 1pm on KPFA Radio's Women's Magazine, Margo Okazawa-Rey  talks to four young feminist leaders in the anti-violence and anti-sexual assault movement who are present or former Brown University students,  to look at the less visible and less talked about aspects of the Coronavirus.  They look at what is happening interpersonally and in the home, and how the Shelter in Place Policy affects women and other folks in precarious and already-vulnerable positions, especially people with disabilities and incarcerated persons.   And they look at what happens when you consider race and class as critical aspects of their experiences.  They discuss the emerging data and observations regarding the increasing violence in various forms that are resulting from or exacerbated by the Coronavirus Pandemic.

Camila Pelsinger, senior at Brown University, is a leader sexual violence prevention on campus, including as a coordinator for the Brown University Sexual Assault Peer Education program.  As Vice President of Brown’s student government, she developed a transformative justice program to support community-based approaches to addressing harm that prioritizes the needs of victims and survivors.

Rose Houglet, sophomore at Brown, covers gender issues and campus activism for campus publications and volunteers as a Sexual Assault Peer Educator. She also conducts gender-based violence research that examines community intervention methods at Rhode Island middle and high schools.

Stefanie Lyn Kaufman-Mthimkhulu (pronounced: tim-koo-loo), a graduate of Brown, is the Founder and Executive Director of Project LETS, a national grassroots organization led by and for folks with lived experience of mental illness/madness, Disability, trauma, and neurodivergence. Their work and community-organizing specialize in building radical peer support collectives and community mental health care structures outside of state-sanctioned systems of “care,” grounded in principles of anti-racism and Disability, Transformative, and Healing Justice.

Xochi Cartland is a junior at Brown University. With a background in Disability Justice, she  is a staff member at Project LETS and is Student Coordinator, alongside Camila, of the Transformative Justice Program. Her primary interest resides in building grassroot infrastructures for responding to harm and violence that operate outside of institutions.

Click here to listen to the show. 59:50 min

https://www.sinsinvalid.org/blog/10-principles-of-disability-justice


Tuesday, October 22, 2019

Monday, October 21, 2019: The Space Between Us hosted by Jovelyn Richards

Today's show in the first half is hosted by Jovelyn and Theresa Adams. Candis Watts Smith co-author with Tehama Lopez Bunyasi of Stay Woke talks with Jovelyn in a pre-recorded interview about Black Lives Matter, staying woke, her writings and her work in developing a more equitable society. Follow Candis on Twitter @ProfCandis.

Get your very own copy of Stay Woke at NYU PressAmazonBarnes and Noble, or request it at your local library!

In the second half of the show Kin Folkz and Jovelyn talk with Margo Okasawa-Rey about the book Gendered Lives, Intersectional Perspective, 7th ed. co-edited with Gwyn Kirk.  Who we are in the world or our identities and the structure of power is examined. Also they discuss womanists and feminists and why some Black women have trouble identifying as feminists. This segment was pre-recorded.

The book is available through Oxford Press and as an ebook through Red Shelf.






The Space Between Us is a live call-in show every third Monday of each month on KPFA Women's Magazine.

Click here to listen now. 59:59 min

Tuesday, July 9, 2019

Monday, July 8, 2019: Whose Image Is Our Body Image? - Part 1

This week on Women's Magazine we explore the racial, cultural, economic and emotional roots of our obsession with thin bodies.

Available in hardcover, paperback and eBook

Sabrina Strings, professor of Sociology at University of California, Irvine (and UC Berkeley alum), in her book Fearing the Black Body: The Racial Origins of Fat Phobia, brings a new lens to an old problem. Tracing the history of western body ideals through art, literature, religious, popular cultural and medical teachings, Strings argues persuasively that the current crusade against obesity is not about health, but rather a means of using the body to validate race, class, and gender prejudice.

"The obesity science is a pseudo-science..." -Sabrina Strings

Click here to listen to the entire show. 59:58 min (There is a break in the recording at 44:46 that lasts about 45 seconds.)

Also on today's show:
Shani Raviv

Tuesday, April 2, 2019

April 1, 2019: Roderick Ferguson's (Not) One-Dimensional Queer

In his new book, One-Dimensional Queer (a homage to Herbert Marcuse), Roderick Ferguson counters orthodox portrayals of a gay movement narrowly focused on civil rights, and shows how queer liberation emerged out of various insurgent struggles crossing the politics of race, gender, class, and sexuality. Tracing the rise and fall of this intersectional politics, he argues that the mainstreaming of queerness intentionally, and falsely, placed critiques of racism, capitalism, and the state outside the remit of gay liberation.  A fascinating unearthing of seldom discussed LGBT history, including groups like STAR (Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries) and the Philadelphia-area collective DykeTactics.

"...heterosexual patriarchy or toxic masculinity know no national boundaries..." -Roderick Ferguson


Click here to listen to the show. 59:50 min

Also on today's show:
Amy Foley on making feminist dance

Tuesday, June 5, 2018

Monday, June 4, 2018: Chrystos: Poet in Action

This week on Women's Magazine:

courtesy Poetry Foundation

Chrystos is a Native American of the Menominee nation, born in 1946 and raised in San Francisco. A political activist and speaker as well as an artist and writer, she is self educated. Her tireless momentum is directed at better understanding how issues of colonialism, genocide, class and gender affect the lives of women and Native people.

Her books include Fugitive Colors, Not Vanishing, Dream On, Fire Power and In Her I Am.

In 1995, Queer in Your Ear (Emily Charles & Mary Salome) interviewed Chrystos about her activism and poetry, and recorded her reading at two venues in San Francisco, Luna Sea and Old Wives' Tales. The monthly program Queer in Your Ear was cancelled before the program could air. Chrystos' words continue to inspire us, and we are very happy to bring excerpts from the readings and interview to you for the first time now, decades later.

Click here to listen now. 59:50 min

Tuesday, April 3, 2018

Monday, April 2, 2018: Mothering Middle-Aged Daughters

This week on KPFA Women's Magazine, Sandy Butler, coauthor of IT NEVER ENDS: Mothering Middle-Aged Daughters, talks about the challenges for women in remaining close - but not too close - to their daughters as they age. Butler is the author of two previous books, Conspiracy of Silence: The Trauma of Incest; and the Lambda award-winning Cancer in Two Voices. IT NEVER ENDS was a collaboration with Nan Fink Gefen.



Click here to listen to entire show. 55:28 min



SAN FRANCISCO VILLAGE READING

San Francisco Village
3220 Fulton St
San Francisco
Sunday, April 8, 2018 
2:00 pm - 3:30 pm


Also on today's show:
Women Directors Struggle for Opportunity
Previewing SF International Film Festival

Tuesday, July 18, 2017

Monday, July17, 2017: The Space Between Women and Financial Literacy

What is the Space Between Women and Money?


Jovelyn Richards hosts her live call-in show, The Space Between Us. Today the theme is the space between women and financial literacy with guest Veronica Dangerfield, award winning Financial Educator and Alison Mata, program manager of Oakland Women's Center. Listen to women's personal stories, memories, consciousness and the impact of money in our lives.

Click here to listen to the entire show. 59:50 min

Oakland Women's Center is excited to announce the first annual Smart Women, Smart Money Conference on Saturday, July 29, 2017!  


For more info go to https://sites.google.com/view/smartwomen-smartmoney/home

This conference is designed to improve the financial trajectory of the participant's life! The event will be held at California State University East Bay, Downtown Oakland and will run from 9AM-3:30PM. The full day of activities includes workshops, lunch, and raffle prizes! Workshops include: Salary Negotiation, Budgeting is Sexy, Investing in Your Business, and more!

Tickets can be purchased HERE
Pricing is as follows: $25 for 18-30, $35 for 30+.  They are offering limited number of $10 discounted tickets for low-income participants.  Call them today at (510) 823-2120 to get the code!

Monday, May 8, 2017

Monday, May 8, 2017: Activist & former political prisoner Bo Brown


This week on KPFA Women's Magazine, we talk with Bo (Rita D.) Brown, who spent eight years in prison for her work as part of the revolutionary George Jackson Brigade.  A white working-class butch from rural Oregon, Brown was known as the "Gentleman Bank Robber," for a number of years in Seattle.  In this interview with Kate Raphael, she talks about coming out, becoming politicized and her relationship with Black Panther Assata Shakur. Bo Brown is now dealing with Lewy-Body dementia; a benefit for her expenses will be held on May 13 in Oakland.  (If you can't make it but want to contribute, you can do so here.)

Sparks Fly for BO! May 13th, 2017
First Unitarian Church
685 14th Street Oakland Ca. 94612
Doors Open at 6pm 


Event will include: 
- First screening from documentary "The Gentleman Bank Robber"
- Live Music: 
-Public Cry
-Blackberri
- Mama's Boyz
- Rashida
- Speakers 
- Food. 
- Live screen printing of Vintage queer T-shirts!
- Prints, Posters & Art for Sale: 
-Just Seeds 
- Doug Minkler
- Terry Forman 
- Miranda Bergman & more 

All funds raised will go directly to Bo Brown

The Gentleman Bank Robber (sample) from Julie Perini on Vimeo.

Click here to listen to entire show. 59:50

Also on today's show:
Author Ellen Meeropol
Author Susan Griffin








Tuesday, August 30, 2016

Monday, August 29, 2016: Women's Magazine examines how race and class influence sexual assault cases?

Recently widespread outrage has erupted over the bias and leniency in court decisions involving rape and the general acceptance and prevalence of violence against women.  In California, a judge's decision to give a white former Stanford University swimmer an unusually lenient  six-month jail sentence for sexually assaulting an unconscious Stanford student sparked a campaign to have him removed after the victims stomach churning impact statement went viral.  The outrage of women has succeed in forcing Judge Aaron Persky to give up his docket of criminal cases. This is just one of the many cases of sexual assault that women have been protesting in the media garnering widespread attention and also raising the issue of how race and class influences sexual assault decisions.  

Another incident which Black feminists have taken the lead in debating is the alleged sexual assault by actor and director Nate Parker 17 years ago, which came to the attention of the media  after his recent remarks about the victims suicide while promoting his new film "Birth of Nation" about the 1831 slave rebellion led by Nat Turner, a film which had been destined for an Oscar.  Today we talk about that case and how class and race intersect with issues of sexual assault  with African American Lesbian Feminist filmmaker and writer  Aishah Shahidah Simmons. Simmons directed the groundbreaking film “No! The Rape Documentary.” Check out Aisha's Vimeo channel at https://vimeo.com/afrolez. Also see Afrolezproductions.com for more information and discussions about rape.

Click here to listen to entire show. 59:50 min

Tuesday, June 7, 2016

Monday, June 6, 2016: Echo Brown talks about Black Virgins Are Not for Hipsters

The Art of the Outsider


Listen now or Get MP3. 28:20 min







Echo Brown discusses her long-running one-woman show, Black Virgins Are Not for Hipsters, playing at the Marsh Berkeley through June 18. Humor shot through with some very serious moments, Brown's autobiographical show looks at the intersections of racism, colorism, sexism, poverty, dating and the Ivy League.  Oh, and hipsterism, of course.

"...plugging in and merging with the audience."

Hailed as a "transformational storyteller," Echo Brown is a writer, performer, & actress from Cleveland, Ohio. Echo’s meteoric rise in the San Francisco art scene with her hit one-woman show, Black Virgins Are Not for Hipsters, has been widely praised. Attracting the attention of TV networks and literary agencies, Echo continues to garner critical praise for her stunning debut.



Click here to listen to the show. 59:50 min.


Also on today's show:
Virgie Tovar
The Women's Community Calendar

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Monday, March 7, 2016: Sue Katz on Hillary vs. Trump?

Katz says "It's unthinkable to live in a country under their [Trump or Cruz or Rubio] rule."


Hillary vs. Trump? Should feminists even bother? Writer and rebel Sue Katz says she isn't giving up on Bernie Sanders just yet, and talks about Hillary's feminism of privilege.  Katz is the author of Thanks But No Thanks: The voter's guide to Sarah Palin and Lillian's Last Affair.

Listen now or Get MP3. 22:01 min





Click here to listen to entire show. 59:50 min.

Also on today's show:
"What Do Women Say?"
Comedian Gina Yashere