Dance Hubs Ep. 1: Origin Stories and Scenes of Arrival
Consortium for Gender, Sexuality, Race and Public Culture
Release Date: 01/15/2021
Consortium for Gender, Sexuality, Race and Public Culture
In the aftermath of the 1992 LA Uprisings, Anna Deavere Smith crafted TWILIGHT: LOS ANGELES, a play based on Smith’s interviews with over 200 Los Angeles residents. 30 years later, through the lens of TWILIGHT, we ask: how can the arts advance social justice? Can they help us understand structural racism, as more than individual prejudice? Can they provide models for working through conflict? Can they show us both possibilities and limits to our strategies for social change? Today we are in conversation with Dr. Elizabeth Alexander, distinguished poet and President of the Mellon...
info_outline The Arts of Racial Reckoning: Oskar Eustis & Héctor TobarConsortium for Gender, Sexuality, Race and Public Culture
In the aftermath of the 1992 LA Uprisings, Anna Deavere Smith crafted TWILIGHT: LOS ANGELES, a play based on Smith’s interviews with over 200 Los Angeles residents. 30 years later, through the lens of TWILIGHT, we ask: how can the arts advance social justice? Can they help us understand structural racism, as more than individual prejudice? Can they provide models for working through conflict? Can they show us both possibilities and limits to our strategies for social change? Today we speak with two other dramaturgs who are prominent figures in their respective fields of theater,...
info_outline The Arts of Racial Reckoning: Anna Deavere SmithConsortium for Gender, Sexuality, Race and Public Culture
In the aftermath of the 1992 LA Uprisings, Anna Deavere Smith crafted TWILIGHT: LOS ANGELES, a play based on Smith’s interviews with over 200 Los Angeles residents. 30 years later, through the lens of TWILIGHT, we ask: how can the arts advance social justice? Can they help us understand structural racism, as more than individual prejudice? Can they provide models for working through conflict? Can they show us both possibilities and limits to our strategies for social change? The Arts of Racial Reckoning is executive produced by Dorinne Kondo. This episode was produced and edited by...
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interviews Ph.D. Candidate in the Department of American Culture at the University of Michigan on “Muslims Firsts,” particularly Muslim women who wear the hijab and are celebrated for being “the first” to do something. We talk about Noor Tagouri, the first Muslim woman to pose in Playboy magazine, what it means to be a first, and how it works in the market. Editor: Esteban Ramirez Producer: Allyson M. Holley The Muslims as Seen on TV podcast is produced and distributed by the Consortium for Gender, Sexuality, Race and Public Culture, a faculty-led...
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interviews , Ph.D. Candidate in the School of Cinematic Arts at the University of Southern California on representations of Black Muslims in the US media. The focus is on how images of Black Muslims have changed over time, from the 1959 documentary “The Hate That Hate Produced,” the 1977 TV miniseries, “Roots,” the 1993 feature film “Menace II Society,” to the 2005 TV drama “Sleeper Cell.” Editor: Esteban Ramirez Producer: Allyson M. Holley The Muslims as Seen on TV podcast is produced and distributed by the Consortium for Gender, Sexuality, Race and...
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Playwright and Vida showrunner Tanya Saracho joins USC professor Elda María Román to talk about how Latinx representation on the stage, page and screen (both big and small) are never an easy task. Instead they invite writers to think and work through all sorts of nuance, "messiness," and breadth. Their discussion affirms how and why our identities can never be seen as monolithic. Produced and distributed by The Consortium for Gender, Sexuality, Race and Popular Culture, a faculty-led initiative at USC Dornsife.
info_outline Dance Hubs Ep. 2: If You Build It, They Will PlayConsortium for Gender, Sexuality, Race and Public Culture
Julien and Sofia, the founders of “the Loft,” find their first flatmates, and transform their messy rental into a dream space for all sorts of creative endeavors. Also, we ask the “Loft Kids” how 7-14 street dancing strangers coming from all over the world, speaking different languages, with different cultures, racial backgrounds and sexual orientations, how they all got along together in a space with no locks on doors, one bathroom, and a stranger on every couch. How did the Loft Kids create a way of surviving and thriving across their differences and how did the experience impact...
info_outline Dance Hubs Ep. 1: Origin Stories and Scenes of ArrivalConsortium for Gender, Sexuality, Race and Public Culture
It’s summer 2010. Julien and Sofia, two street dancers, one from France the other from Italy, find themselves in desperate need of a space to live, move, and breathe in New York City. That’s when Julien decided to look into some lofts available in the old industrial Bushwick neighborhood in Brooklyn. Hosted by Edwin Hill. Dance Hubs is produced and distributed by The Consortium for Gender, Sexuality, Race and Popular Culture, a faculty-led initiative at USC Dornsife.
info_outline Dance Hubs: Season 1 TrailerConsortium for Gender, Sexuality, Race and Public Culture
Welcome to Dance Hubs, an audio series about spaces of creative movement where dancers assemble and exchange, dwell and get down, and pass through, as they navigate the national borders and global intersections of culture.
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Evelyn Alsultany, Associate Professor in the Department of American Studies and Ethnicity at USC and author of Arabs and Muslims in the Media: Race and Representation after 9/11 interviews Sue Obeidi, Director of the Muslim Public Affairs Council’s Hollywood Bureau about the Obeidi-Alsultany Test, criteria they co-authored to assess representations of Muslims in Hollywood.
info_outlineIt’s summer 2010. Julien and Sofia, two street dancers, one from France the other from Italy, find themselves in desperate need of a space to live, move, and breathe in New York City. That’s when Julien decided to look into some lofts available in the old industrial Bushwick neighborhood in Brooklyn.
Hosted by Edwin Hill. Dance Hubs is produced and distributed by The Consortium for Gender, Sexuality, Race and Popular Culture, a faculty-led initiative at USC Dornsife.