Oyèrónké Oyèwùmi

4 podcasts

We talk to Karo Moret, Diego Falconí and Lucía Piedra Galarraga interculturality, multiculturality, and migrant sit-ins. They share ideas on cosmopolitics, the Hispanic world, atavisms, and Afrofuturism; on El Cid's beard, the Royal Spanish Academy, and taking academia to the street. They examine the ways in which a transvestite theory of childhood challenges the imaginaries embodied in literature and explore the legal loopholes and the counter-routes of knowledge that could allow us, collectively, to come together in the south. 

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Specials Altars African diaspora anti-racism Creative Commons Diego Falconí Travez Karo Moret Lucía Piedra Galarraga Oyèrónké Oyèwùmi sexual dissidence

We talk to Diego Falconí Travez, Lucía Piedra Galarraga and Karo Moret about slavery and love, the Caribbeanization of identities, and violence as a potential resource. They discuss affects, phobias, autophagies, and unsettling objects. And they examine the Latino world in relation to the mask of gay culture, coming out of the closet as a liberal promise, and resent(i)ment as a circular form that prevents memory from disappearing. 

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Specials Altars African diaspora Altars, Sugar, and Ashes anti-racism Creative Commons Diego Falconí Travez Karo Moret Oyèrónké Oyèwùmi sexual dissidence
10.01.2020
48 MIN
English
Son[i]a #303
Oyèrónké Oyèwùmi
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Professor Oyèrónké Oyèwùmi examines the ways in which universalism in academia distorts our understanding of African cultures, especially in relation to race and gender. In this podcast, Professor Oyèwùmi talks about age, seniority, and respect, about unscrupulousness and academia, dispossession and spirituality. She considers the oxymoron of the notion of “single mother” from the point of view of Yoruba culture, and she also notes how observance of community practices from non-Western cultures may be a necessary step as we face the planetary challenges to come.

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We talk with Lucía Piedra Galarraga, Diego Falconí Travez and Karo Moret from the Study Group on Afro/Black Ideas, Practices, and Activisms about altars, ekekos, nefandos, Saint Barbara, and Valdivia's Siamese twins. They turn their attention to the politics of hair, talk about sugar as the star product plying the Caribbean routes, and acknowledge the usefulness of ashes in proving the extermination of the ancient Andean sodomite communities.

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Specials Altars anti-racism Creative Commons Diego Falconí Travez Karo Moret Oyèrónké Oyèwùmi sexual dissidence
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Son[i]a
Son[i]a #384
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Son[i]a #384
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34:58