loader from loading.io

On Trains: Radical Kinship Series

A Revolutionary Love Letter

Release Date: 02/06/2023

Unseen with Set and Pedro Part 2 show art Unseen with Set and Pedro Part 2

A Revolutionary Love Letter

In this week's episode, we continue our conversation with Filmmaker Set Hernandez and Pedro about their documentary film UNSEEN (2023). The story captures seven years of Pedro's life, as he navigates the U.S. soceity as a blind undocumented immigrant and aspiring social worker. In the second part of our conversation with Set and Pedro, we turn to the DREAMer narrative and who is left out when we individualize or amplify only one kind of narrative: the able bodied, aspiring, working body. You can stream Unseen on PBS.ORG/POV or the PBS app until June 16, 2024. We hope you enjoy this episode....

info_outline
Unseen with Pedro and Set Part 1 show art Unseen with Pedro and Set Part 1

A Revolutionary Love Letter

In this week's episode, we speak with Filmmaker Set Hernandez and Pedro about their documentary film UNSEEN (2023). The story captures seven years of Pedro's life, as he navigates the U.S. soceity as a blind undocumented immigrant and aspiring social worker. In the first part of our conversation with Set and Pedro, we talk through the intersections of immigration, disability, and citizenship. You can stream Unseen on PBS.ORG/POV or the PBS app until June 16, 2024. We hope you enjoy this episode.  For Transcript --https://bit.ly/S3EP7_Shownotes-Transcript

info_outline
On unsettling migrant poetics with Jennifer Tamayo Part 2 show art On unsettling migrant poetics with Jennifer Tamayo Part 2

A Revolutionary Love Letter

We continue our conversation with Jennifer Tamayo, a poet, educator, and organizer. Jennifer is the author of the visual art and poetry collection [Red Missed Aches, Read Mistakes, Red Mistakes, Read Missed Aches] (2011), YOU DA ONE (2017), to kill the future in the present (2018), and bruise/bruise/break (2022).  In this episode, Jennifer reads two of their poems: "THERE'S A WOUND ON MY THROAT" and "Jennifer, Jeniffer, Jenniffer, Jennif(f)er." We hope you enjoy this week's episode.  For Shownotes and Transcript --https://bit.ly/S3EP6_Shownotes-Transcript

info_outline
On unsettling migrant poetics with Jennifer Tamayo show art On unsettling migrant poetics with Jennifer Tamayo

A Revolutionary Love Letter

In this week's episode, we speak with Jennifer Tamayo, a poet, educator, and organizer. Jennifer is the author of the visual art and poetry collection [Red Missed Aches, Read Mistakes, Red Mistakes, Read Missed Aches] (2011), YOU DA ONE (2017), to kill the future in the present (2018), and bruise/bruise/break (2022).  In the first part of our almost two-hour long conversation with Jennifer, we delve into Jennifer's visual art work and practice; migrant poetics and migrant radical politics; of being unsettled; and rejecting settler colonial poetics. We hope you enjoy this episode.  ...

info_outline
On Anger with Eunsoo Jeong Part 2 show art On Anger with Eunsoo Jeong Part 2

A Revolutionary Love Letter

In this week's episode, continue our conversation with with comic artist, zine creator, color designer Eunsoo Jeong, a.k.a. Koreangry. Her zine and comic series KOREANGRY addresses issues of racism, anti-blackness, sexism, xenophobia, immigration and mental health. In part 2 of our conversation, Eunsoo shares her artistic practices and how to center joy, when you are pursuing your artistic practice. For Shownotes and Transcript --https://bit.ly/S3EP4_Shownotes-Transcript 

info_outline
On Anger: with Eunsoo Jeong of KOREANGRY Part 1 show art On Anger: with Eunsoo Jeong of KOREANGRY Part 1

A Revolutionary Love Letter

In this week's episode, we speak with comic artist, zine creator, color designer Eunsoo Jeong, a.k.a. Koreangry. Her zine and comic series KOREANGRY addresses issues of racism, anti-blackness, sexism, xenophobia, immigration and mental health. In part 1 of our conversation, we talk about Eunsoo's apporach to anger, how she built her community through zine and comic creation, and making love to hot saucy Korean Fried Chicken.  For Shownotes and Transcript --https://bit.ly/S3EP3_Shownotes-Transcript  A Revolutionary Love Letter: To All Migrants, Past, Present, and Future is a...

info_outline
A Conversation with Katherine Sarwopeni Antarikso Part 2 show art A Conversation with Katherine Sarwopeni Antarikso Part 2

A Revolutionary Love Letter

In this week's episode, we continue our conversation with Katherine Sarwopeni Antarikso about her poetry chapbook, "The Accidental Immigrant." We talk about the history of sugar in Indonesia and Katherine's relationship to the archive.  For Shownotes and Transcript --    A Revolutionary Love Letter: To All Migrants, Past, Present, and Future is a podcast hosted by Keish and Angel about all things we wished we had known growing up undocumented in the part of Turtle Island called the United States. We host conversations between writers, artists, and organizers talking about...

info_outline
A Conversation with Katherine Sarwopeni Antarikso Part 1 show art A Conversation with Katherine Sarwopeni Antarikso Part 1

A Revolutionary Love Letter

In this week's episode, we speak with Katherine Sarwopeni Antarikso about her poetry chapbook, "The Accidental Immigrant," as well as her work as a community organizer and archivist in Philadelphia.  For Shownotes and Transcript --    A Revolutionary Love Letter: To All Migrants, Past, Present, and Future is a podcast hosted by Keish and Angel about all things we wished we had known growing up undocumented in the part of Turtle Island called the United States. We host conversations between writers, artists, and organizers talking about migrant rights from a left perspective.

info_outline
Interrogating Citizenship with Harsha Walia Part 2 show art Interrogating Citizenship with Harsha Walia Part 2

A Revolutionary Love Letter

On this week's episode, we continue our conversation with Harsha Walia, author of Border and Rule (2021) and Undoing Border Imperialism (2013). We discuss the importance of understanding borders through an internationalist perspective, and how all organizing is care work. Trained in the law, Harsha Walia is a community organizer and campaigner in migrant justice, anti-capitalist feminist, and anti-imperialist movements including No One Is Illegal and Women's Memorial March Committee. For Show Notes & Transcript -- https://bit.ly/S2E9_shownotes-transcript A Revolutionary Love Letter: To...

info_outline
Interrogating Citizenship with Harsha Walia Part 1 show art Interrogating Citizenship with Harsha Walia Part 1

A Revolutionary Love Letter

On this week's episode, we speak with Harsha Walia, author of Border and Rule (2021) and Undoing Border Imperialism (2013). Trained in the law, Harsha Walia is a community organizer and campaigner in migrant justice, anti-capitalist feminist, and anti-imperialist movements including No One Is Illegal and Women's Memorial March Committee. Harsha is here to chat with us about citizenship. For Show Notes & Transcript -- A Revolutionary Love Letter: To All Migrants, Past, Present, and Future is a podcast hosted by Keish and Angel about all things we wished we had known growing up undocumented in...

info_outline
 
More Episodes

This is a bonus episode, originally recorded on February 10, 2022 as part of the Radical Kinship Series, organized by Dr. Alan Pelaez Lopez. The talks highlighted undocumented and formerly undocumented scholars and artists who write about citizenship and illegality, undocumented and unauthorized migration, settler colonialism, and or the global circuit of forced migration.

Keish and I decided that we wanted to talk about the word trains to think about the history of labor, dispossession, displacement, and fugitivity. 

The Radical Kinship Series co-sponsored by the On the Same Page Program, the Multicultural Community Center, the Undocumented Student Program, and the Berkeley Interdisciplinary Migration Initiative at UC Berkeley.

For Show Notes & Transcript -- https://files.cargocollective.com/c1845354/Ep11_On-Trains_-RadicalKinshipSeries.pdf

A Revolutionary Love Letter: To All Migrants, Past, Present, and Future is a podcast hosted by Keish and Angel about all things we wished we had known growing up undocumented in the part of Turtle Island called the United States. We host conversations between writers, artists, and organizers talking about migrant rights from a left perspective.