Showing posts with label disability. Show all posts
Showing posts with label disability. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 28, 2019

Monday, August 26, 2019: Health Justice Commons

Know Your Medical Rights

On this KPFA Radio’s Women’s Magazine we talk to Mordecai Ettinger, founding director of the Health Justice Commons. The Health Justice Commons works at the intersection of racial, economic, gender, disability and environmental justice to help marginalized communities to re-imagine and re-design health care and healing. Health Justice provide training and consultation to engage in healing justice, movement building, and incubate community-driven solutions which generate health abundance and alleviate the devastating health burden of social injustice and environmental racism.
HJC helps create community by providing online popular education classes on Understanding and Transforming the Medical Industrial Complex (next class starts September 12th). They offer Health Justice Advocacy training for all to know our rights and for healers and activists, and they are launching a national Medical Abuse Hotline to expose how common medical abuse is. Contact HJC.

Click here to listen to the show. 59:50 min
  
Mordecai Ettinger, center
Mordecai Ettinger has 20 years of experience as a social justice activist and organizer holistic scholar, radical scholar, and educator including having co-founded the TGI Justice Project and served as an Interim Co-Director at Justice Now.  He is adjunct faculty at the California Institute of Integral Studies.  His field is critical science, technology, and medicine studies and his  research spans environmental health and toxicology, the workings of the Medical Industrial Complex, to the neurobiology of the social nervous system, and its implications with regard to collective and historical trauma, healing, resilience and social change. Schooled by years of movement work, and trained in Somatic Experiencing, Reiki, and Cranial Sacral therapy, he has studied with Dr. Peter Levine, biophysicist and founder of Somatic Experiencing and Dr. Bessel van der Kolk. He is the author of the forthcoming book, We All Hold Up the Sky: Lessons in Health Justice for the 21st Century. Finally, Mordecai is gender non-binary queer.. He is a survivor of radiation poisoning and what is designated by the UN to be medical torture. He’s here for transforming the Medical Industrial Complex for our futures to be possible.



Tuesday, July 9, 2019

Monday, July 8, 2019: Whose Image Is Our Body Image? - Shani Raviv

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

Buy this book at your local bookstore or online.

Shani Raviv's memoir, Being Ana, explores the role that anorexia, personified as Ana, played in her life for ten years, from age 14 to 24. Moving from South Africa to Israel and back again, with parents who were depressed or absent, uncomfortable because of class issues and a severe squint, anorexia was less an extreme diet than a search for order and structure. Yet none of the adults around her recognized the problem and intervened. Shani talks about how she eventually healed and what you can do if you think someone you know is suffering from an eating disorder. For more information about eating disorders at NationalEatingDisorders.org.

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

Also on today's show:
Sabrina Springs



EVENT:

KPFA Movie Matinee, The Hunger Games
WHEN: JULY 27, 2019 @ 3:00 PM


WHERE: 474 24TH STREET, OAKLAND, CA 94612

Tuesday, January 22, 2019

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

The Space Between Us, starts the new year with Women & Comedy. Host Jovelyn Richards interviews Nina G. author of Stutterer Interrupted: The Comedian Who Almost Didn't Make It.

Nina G., Chey Bell and Jeanette Marin share more than a funny bone they are women living with disabilities in the world of comedy.  KPFA host Jovelyn Richards explores the spaces between the industry and women and the politics of what makes us laugh. Follow the links above to find the artists on FaceBook, Instagram, Twitter, Vimeo and/or YouTube.

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





Invisible Disabilities Comedy Show
Sunday, January 27 
7:00PM   Price: $16.00
Sacramento Punchline
2100 Arden Way 
Sacramento, CA 95825


All shows are 18 & over with valid photo ID.
There is a two drink minimum per person.
Cameras and video/audio recording devices are not permitted.

Ticket sales shut off online before doors open; there may be tickets available at the show.
All non-headliner shows' lineups are subject to change.

General Admission: $16.00

Drew Kimzey and Aliada Present: Invisible Disabilities! Comedians from all over Northern California tell jokes about their secret struggles. Not all disabilities can be seen!

Host: Amber Whitford
Headliner: Nina G
Featuring: Coral Best

Kelley Nicole
Sureni Weerasekera
Nicole Tran
Anica Cihla
Jeanette Marin
Emily Pedersen
Chey Bell

Tuesday, October 9, 2018

Monday, October 8, 2018: Family Stories of Resistance and Resilience - Novelist Barbara Artson

Barbara Artson grew up NOT hearing the stories of her family's exodus from Russia in the early 20th century, or the experiences that led to it, but she saw their impact, in her mother's fear of anything unfamiliar, in her deaf aunt's experience of being cut off from the world and then treated as if she were unintelligent because she was cut off. In her debut novel, Odessa Odessa, Barbara imagines those experiences and uses her knowledge as a psychoanalyst to reflect on how the legacy of trauma affects multiple generations, not only in this country but in Palestine as well. She also connects the story she tells, in which a mother is separated from her son by immigration authorities - in this case in Germany - to the trauma of parents and children separated at the U.S.-Mexico border. Barbara and Kate will be in conversation on Thursday night at 7PM, October 18 at Books, Inc. in Berkeley at 1491 Shattuck Ave.



Listen now or Get MP3. 22:12 min

Click here for the entire show. 59:50 min

Also on today's show:
Berkeley High School's Women's Union
Artist Lucia Ippolito

Thursday, January 4, 2018

Monday, January 1, 2018: Laugh in the New Year with Women's Magazine

Greetings, Women's Magazine listeners! Despite dire predictions regarding the future of KPFA and Pacifica, as of now we are still here and tomorrow, New Year's Day 2018, I'll be bringing you an hour of funny and smart women.

In the first segment comics Dhaya Lakshminarayanan, Karinda Dobbins, Maysoon Zayid, JADE (Just Another Disabled Entertainer) and Nina G. join me to talk about the highs and lows of 2017 and beyond, what they're looking forward to in 2018 and what it's like doing comedy as women whose multiple identities are so often under attack.


It's wild, it's witty and it's informative. Follow the links below to connect to audio file of the show that was aired on Monday and the full, unedited interviews. So put on your headphones and start laughing. And follow the links above to check out the websites and performance schedules of the artists.

Click here for the interview with Dhaya and Karinda. 29:51 min

Click here for the interview with JADE and Nina. 37:27 min

Click here for the interview with Maysoon. 17:26 min

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

Also on today's show:
Eryn Mathewson

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Monday, July 18, 2016: Lesbian feminist poet Barbara Ruth

Then we hear a segment produced by Adrienne Lauby of lesbian feminist writer and poet Barbara Ruth reading some of her poems and short writings. Ruth, whose work has been published widely, describes herself as an old, arthritic, tree-loving, hypertensive, lesbian, epileptic, fibromyalgic Potowatomee, Ashkenazi Jewish, Welsh, chemically hypersensitive, neurodivergent daughter of Yemaya, spoonie, writer and photographer.

My poems and photos appear today in Slink Chunk. Womanifesto #11 was begun in 1974, so qualifies as a Dyketactics era poem Paola. It was rejected twice before it found it's home. On the Line was written last year, rejected three times before this publication. It begins: "If Paris is a woman, San Francisco is a lesbian."
Enjoy

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

Also on today's show:
Feminist resistance to neoliberalism
Women's Community Calendar