loader from loading.io

Intersecting Oppressions of Race, Disability, and Mental Health During COVID-19 (Disability & Mental Health Series)

The Nasiona Podcast

Release Date: 02/17/2021

Women of Color Writers’ Authentic Voices: Natalie Obando, Part 2 show art Women of Color Writers’ Authentic Voices: Natalie Obando, Part 2

The Nasiona Podcast

We continue with the second part of my conversation with , the current national president of the and first Latina to take the helm. They continue to discuss the , her experiences and thoughts about the White Gaze in publishing and storytelling industries, how she uses her influence to transition us out of it so we can become more authentic and reflect a more realistic representation, and much more. They also dissect the harmful urge to center the comfort of others by anglicizing our names, thereby decentering ourselves at the outset of relationships, and the kind of impact this form of...

info_outline
Women of Color Writers’ Authentic Voices: Natalie Obando, Part 1 show art Women of Color Writers’ Authentic Voices: Natalie Obando, Part 1

The Nasiona Podcast

Today’s 2-part conversation is the first of’s new series showcasing the authentic voices of Women of Color writers. The Nasiona teamed up with the’s and the organization to publish their inaugural first anthology, entitled. Check our website at for more information on the anthology. For our podcast series, I interviewed everyone we published in the anthology to present you with an in-depth exploration of their individual literary journeys, their relationships to authenticity, experiences where they learned that language and their stories have power, obstacles they have experienced as...

info_outline
Relationship Between Psychological Trauma and Physical Illness show art Relationship Between Psychological Trauma and Physical Illness

The Nasiona Podcast

What is the relationship between psychological trauma and physical Illness? Co-producer joins on the podcast to interview Molly “Marco” Marcotte to answer this question.  Molly “Marco” Marcotte (they/them) is program designer, evaluator, and consultant in their eighth year of work in the anti-violence field. They have co-implemented and evaluated over 30 county-level sexual violence primary prevention initiatives, co-authored multiple state-level and organizational change models and corresponding evaluation plans, designed culturally relevant programming and evaluation for...

info_outline
Blue Blood: Challenging the Rhetoric that Trans People are ‘Unnatural’ show art Blue Blood: Challenging the Rhetoric that Trans People are ‘Unnatural’

The Nasiona Podcast

We all begin in water and are called back to water. Blue Blood challenges the rhetoric that trans people are “unnatural” through captivating verses about metamorphosis and meditations on the concept of home. Robin Gow invites readers to celebrate identity; to question what their own body means to them.

info_outline
Decolonizing & Indigenizing Storytelling, Part 2 show art Decolonizing & Indigenizing Storytelling, Part 2

The Nasiona Podcast

We share Part 2 of a virtual public event Julián Esteban Torres López gave on what it means to decolonize and indigenize storytelling, hosted by Texas A&M, San Antonio. He talks about the relationship between language and identity; how the concept of time can be used to challenge hegemonic epistemologies; the importance of centering/circulating thinking/art from the Global South; and more. Dr. Alexandra Rodriguez Sabogal interviews Julián, followed by a Q&A w/ the audience moderated by Dr. Katherine Gil

info_outline
On Healing, Transformation, & Reclaiming Authority of Your Authenticity show art On Healing, Transformation, & Reclaiming Authority of Your Authenticity

The Nasiona Podcast

What does it mean to show up as you beyond the you you were told to be? Christine Cariño joins The Nasiona to discuss the philosophy of authenticity, how getting over trauma often means finding your way back to that person you were before the trauma, and the transformative process of rerooting and replanting yourself and reclaiming deferred dreams. This episode is about healing, empowerment, and giving ourselves permission to say yes to ourselves and to create the conditions we need to become ourselves.

info_outline
Decolonizing & Indigenizing Storytelling, Part 1 show art Decolonizing & Indigenizing Storytelling, Part 1

The Nasiona Podcast

What does it mean to decolonize and Indigenize storytelling? How do institutionalized Euro-centric storytelling frameworks limit creativity, understanding of stories and histories, and how we relate to others, our selves, our environment, and our art creations? In this episode, Julián Esteban Torres López addresses the importance of decolonizing storytelling, affirming Indigenous storytelling traditions, and creating safe and encouraging spaces for BIPOC stories.

info_outline
Being Latina/e/o/x show art Being Latina/e/o/x

The Nasiona Podcast

A tour of what it means to be Latina/e/o/x through the voices of previous The Nasiona Podcast guests: Sylvia Salazar, Colette Ghunim, Alondra Adame, Eva Gonzalez, Diana Castellanos, Mireya S. Vela, Liza Ann Acosta, Alexandra Meda, Christina Igaraividez, J.L. Torres, Irma Herrera, Beezy Montaña, Ra Avis, Patrick A. Howell, Carlos Carrasco, and Deborah Taffa. Our stories are complex, nuanced, and deserve to be heard. In the show notes, you can find links to the previous guests’ episodes.

info_outline
Growing up Black and Brown in a White Town show art Growing up Black and Brown in a White Town

The Nasiona Podcast

What’s it like growing up Black and brown in a predominantly white town? Joe Sparkman and Julián Esteban Torres López share their experiences of growing up together in the 1990s as teenagers in Nashua, New Hampshire: Money magazine’s best place to live in the US in 1987 & 1997; where JFK announced he would run for president; and home to the first racially integrated US team in modern baseball. With this episode we glimpse into the kinds of situations that give rise to activists and social justice warr

info_outline
The Nuyorican Hallway: Belonging & Living Between Worlds show art The Nuyorican Hallway: Belonging & Living Between Worlds

The Nasiona Podcast

J.L. Torres is the author of Migrations, the inaugural winner of the Tomás Rivera Book Prize. His work focuses on the diasporican experience—living in the inbetweeness that forms and informs the Puerto Rican experience. We dissect the central themes of Migrations—a collection of stories deeply rooted in Puerto Rico's history—where he elevates the experiences of Othered individuals. This is a far-ranging conversation that spans colonialism, Nuyorican identity, colorism, Critical Race Theory, and heal

info_outline
 
More Episodes

Today, I introduce you to one of my oldest friends, Joe Sparkman, one half of The Nasiona Podcast’s music production team, The Heavyweights. We’ve got Joe and Marcus Allen to thank for our new musical vibe. Later in February, Aïcha Martine Thiam and I are going live with our new The Nasiona music series, where we will center, elevate, and amplify Black, Indigenous, and People of Color musical artists, and shed light on their experiences. Be on the lookout for music by William Broughton, Whitney & The Saying Goes, Stephanie Henry, Tony Tennyson, Isabella Fong, Chromic, Beezy Montana, Mallika Vie, Annah Sidigu, Eki Shola, Samantha Pearl, and Jinnat. On today’s episode, you will hear music produced by The Heavyweights, including songs by Jovi Rockwell and Nicole Scherzinger.

But the focus of today’s episode is Joe Sparkman. As a Black-Filipino United Statesian man with multiple sclerosis, Joe Sparkman talks about the “Scarlet Letter” of his diagnosis, the challenges he has faced getting a job, interactions he has had with doctors, and how his life and mental health have been impacted during the COVID-19 pandemic. This is a candid conversation about the realities and the insidious nature of intersecting systems of oppression in the United States.

I have known Joe since 1994, when he first moved to New Hampshire and I moved back there from Colombia in the middle of 8th grade, and we have a couple other episodes in store for you dissecting our experiences as people of color living in a predominantly white state. So be on the lookout later this year for those episodes.

Today’s conversation in particular, however, is a special partnership with the Adira Foundation, whose mission is to invest in better lives for people with neurodegenerative diseases about living with multiple sclerosis; and with StoryCorps, whose mission is to record, preserve, and share the stories of Americans from all backgrounds and beliefs. Toward the end of the interview, you will also hear Morgan Feigal-Stickles, a StoryCorps facilitator, who also asks Joe a couple of questions. Joe and I spoke on October 14th, 2020, and we are happy to share that StoryCorps has entered this interview into the Library of Congress and has also submitted it into the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture.

Here’s my conversation with Joe Sparkman.

 

The Nasiona Podcast amplifies the voices and experiences of the marginalized, undervalued, overlooked, silenced, and forgotten, as well as gives you a glimpse into Othered worlds. Hosted, edited, and produced by Julián Esteban Torres López. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram: @JE_Torres_Lopez

Please follow The Nasiona on TwitterInstagram, and Facebook for regular updates: @TheNasiona

https://thenasiona.com/

Original music for The Nasiona Podcast was produced by the Grammy Award-winning team of Joe Sparkman and Marcus Allen, aka The Heavyweights. Joe Sparkman: Twitter + Instagram. Marcus Allen: Twitter + Instagram.

The Nasiona Magazine and Podcast depend on voluntary contributions from listeners like you. We hope the value of our work to our community is worth your patronage. If you like what we do, please show this by liking, rating, and reviewing us; buying or recommending our books; and by financially supporting our work either through The Nasiona’s Patreon page or through Julián Esteban Torres López's Ko-Fi donation platform. Every little bit helps.

Thank you for listening, and thank you for your support.