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Peripheries: Episode 11

Peripheries

Release Date: 04/04/2023

Season 2: Episode 10: KYNG Interview show art Season 2: Episode 10: KYNG Interview

Peripheries

In this Episode, I chat with KYNG from DaRoyalCouch show. We do a deep dive into our most vulnerable areas of identity and explore how our inner and outer selves shape experiences from our childhood to intimate relationships, advocacy work, and career endeavors. It's been awhile since my last episode dropped, but this one is worth the wait!

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Rachel Dolezal Reads the Prologue to her Book show art Rachel Dolezal Reads the Prologue to her Book

Peripheries

Listen to Rachel read the Prologue to her book, "In Full Color: Finding My Place in a Black & White World." Whether you were one of the first people to read her memoir when it was published in 2017, or if you still haven't started, hearing the author read their own writing sometimes adds new meaning to the text. This is a 9 minute listen. To purchase an autographed copy for yourself or to give as a gift, visit:  

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Season 2: Episode 9: Vocabulary D-I show art Season 2: Episode 9: Vocabulary D-I

Peripheries

In this Episode, I continue to explore vocabulary terms relevant to this podcast. Following last episode (A-C), I discuss the definitions and context for terms beginning with D-I, beginning with Diaspora and ending with Identity. 

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Season 2: Episode 8: The ABC's of Race & Culture show art Season 2: Episode 8: The ABC's of Race & Culture

Peripheries

We can all benefit from a tune-up of our vocabulary. In this era of cancel culture, some people are scared to attempt a conversation about topics related to identity, race or culture - for fear of saying the wrong thing. You might already know that saying "colored people" is offensive, but did you know that the term "cakewalk" also has roots in oppression? Rachel shares brief definitions & context for about 50 terms from A to C that intersect with the content on this podcast. You can access the recommended Reading List and behind-the-scenes content on this podcast's Patreon page. Go...

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Season 2: Episode 7: Dr. Ronnie Gladden show art Season 2: Episode 7: Dr. Ronnie Gladden

Peripheries

In this episode of Peripheries, Rachel Dolezal and Ronnie Gladden have an open dialogue about their identity as individuals & how they navigate a world where they are coded and deciphered in binary terms. Does the outer have to match the inner reality, or can we nurture dualities of self somewhere between the mind, body and heart? What role does our appearance play in how others behave toward us, and how do we show up as our full selves in spaces that are organized on an either-or premise? Should we eliminate or expand the number of options for identity on forms? To follow Dr. Ronnie's...

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Season 2: Episode 6: Robin Abrams-Tolden show art Season 2: Episode 6: Robin Abrams-Tolden

Peripheries

Listen to Robin's story about finding love, purpose, and belonging from childhood through retirement. Her journey will inspire you to be true to yourself, even if it means living on the Periphery of social circles. From Chicago to Mississippi & Arizona, Robin has impacted generations of children through her inclusive teaching methods. Growing up as the darkest of her siblings, she shares how complexion affected social responses to her mother, siblings, and herself, and how these experiences gave her a broader understanding of cultural acceptance and community.

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Season 2: Episode 5: Fe Bencosme show art Season 2: Episode 5: Fe Bencosme

Peripheries

In this episode, I discuss the construct of race with author and educator, Fe Bencosme. Fe spent her childhood in the US Virgin Islands and the Dominican Republic before moving to New York, the Middle East, and eventually Houston, TX. She has traveled to many countries, across six continents, and has an important perspective on the topics of race, culture, and shared humanity. We examine how dissent on the topic of race and identity is not allowed in academia and explore ideas for greater inclusivity and critical thought in education. Read Fe's book, "You Are Not Your Race: Embracing Our...

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Season 2: Episode 4: Dr. Clyde N.S. Ramalaine show art Season 2: Episode 4: Dr. Clyde N.S. Ramalaine

Peripheries

In this episode of Peripheries, I sit down with Dr. Clyde Ramalaine to explore the fundamental human right of self-definition and examine the similarities and differences between the construct of race & acts of racism in South Africa and the United States. Dr. Ramalaine shares his journey, from being a Freedom Fighter as a teenager - on the run in fear of his life from the apartheid operatives - to a Bishop and most recently an author, political advisor, and doctoral graduate whose thesis focuses on race, identity, and the politics of power. Although this is the podcast's longest episode...

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Season 2: Episode 3: Shannon Ayers show art Season 2: Episode 3: Shannon Ayers

Peripheries

In this episode, I sit down with Shannon Ayers to discuss her life experiences and the perspective she has on race, culture, family, and breaking free from society's constraints. Mrs. Ayers has a varied career and interesting personal life, with unique experiences in politics and motherhood, from New Orleans to DC, and Japan to Iceland. Her book, "Tunnel Vision: The State of Our Union" is available on Amazon, and you can connect with Shannon at:   Email:  

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Season 2: Episode 2: Brittany Miller show art Season 2: Episode 2: Brittany Miller

Peripheries

Tune into this conversation to hear one woman's journey living on the Periphery of both Blackness and whiteness in America. Growing up poor and in an all-white town in rural Arizona, Brittany vowed to make a more comfortable life for herself as an adult and to raise her children with more social-consciousness than she was offered as a child. 

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More Episodes

In this episode of Peripheries, I share three letters from people around the world with their thoughts on race & identity and then give an academic overview of the three ways race & ethnicity are defined (mythical, biological, administrative). The input from the letters on how people want to see race contrast with the ways in which race has been defined and continues to be redefined in society, begging the question: Why are we so invested in redefining race in our modern era rather than letting go of this myth?