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Episode 2 |  Lamont Jones on the Card Game from Black Culture: BID WHIST!

By Jakiah Glass | March 24, 2025

Have you ever played a game of Bid Whist before? Is it like playing spades or is there a significant difference? Author Lamont Jones, a lawyer in the professional boxing field who also served as Executive Director of USA Boxing and General Counsel of USA Track & Field, has made it his mission to champion […]

Episode 1 |  Author Aaron Robertson on The Black Utopians

By Jakiah Glass | March 18, 2025

What does it look like to not only survive, but to thrive, in a society that surrounds you and your community with hostility and detriment? For many, this is the most relevant burning question right now as we are seeing a seismic shift in the way the United States does business at home and abroad. […]

Episode 19 | Poet Camille Dungy on a Black Mother’s Garden in a White Neighborhood

By Jakiah Glass | March 6, 2025

When African American poet Camille Dungy decided to move her family to the predominantly White community of Fort Collins, CO, she did not expect to embark on a seven-year journey to diversify her front yard into a thriving ecosystem that invites all sorts of wild life. This HOA-defiant act spurred her to apply for a […]

Episode 18 | Small Talk at FHI with Scholar Bakari Kitwana on Hip-Hop at 50!

By Jakiah Glass | March 6, 2025

A random back-to-school party in 1973 Brooklyn, New York ended up being ground zero for the birth of hip-hop culture at the electrifying fingertips of 18-year old local legend, DJ Kool Herc! As we wrap up celebrating hip-hop’s year-long 50th anniversary, We commemorate this beloved genre with a talk-back event featuring hip-hop scholar Bakari Kitwana, […]

Episode 17 | Dr. Orisanmi Burton on the Long Attica Revolt & Prisons as an Ongoing Site of War

By Jakiah Glass | March 6, 2025

Living conditions for incarcerated people in upstate New York’s Attica Correctional Facility were nothing short of dehumanizing. Black inmates were especially brutalized by the nearly all-white guard staff who were mostly from the rural town where the prison still stands today. In September 1971, when inmates revolted and took over the penitentiary to demand better […]

Episode 16 | Black Vaudeville in Jazz-Age America with Dr. Michelle R. Scott

By Jakiah Glass | March 4, 2025

The Theater Owners’ Booking Association, or T.O.B.A., a theater network that employed Black entertainers to perform for African American audiences across the country, was a key player when vaudeville was the mainstream form of entertainment in early 20th century America. The Theater Owners’ Booking Association, or T.O.B.A., a theater network that employed Black entertainers to […]

Episode 15 | J.T. Roane on the History of Black Urban Placemaking

By Jakiah Glass | March 4, 2025

Black organizing in urban spaces, particularly following The Great Migration onward, has always courted intense scrutiny from the powers-that-be. Black organizing in urban spaces, particularly following The Great Migration onward, has always courted intense scrutiny from the powers-that-be. What is the incredible history of this important Black self-empowerment in 20th century Philadelphia? Dr. J.T. Roane, […]

Episode 14 | The Black Working Class with Blair LM Kelley

By Jakiah Glass | February 23, 2025

Too often, the drive for upward mobility and the desire to identify with the middle class causes us to discredit the value of blue collar workers, particularly those African Americans who are working class. Award-winning author and historian Dr. Blair LM Kelley joins host Dr. Mark Anthony Neal to discuss her latest book, “Black Folk: […]

Episode 13 | Dr. Jennifer Nash on Motherhood and Black Feminism

By Jakiah Glass | February 23, 2025

Black mothers and birthing people are shown to be grossly neglected and misunderstood by the medical industrial complex that is our current healthcare system.  And beyond bringing life into the world, Black motherhood is fraught with societal strife, from the Moynihan Report released in March, 1965 to seemingly never-ending incidents of Black youth being killed […]

Episode 12 | Discovering Blackness in Antiquity with Dr. Sarah Derbew

By Jakiah Glass | February 23, 2025

What are the intersections between Ancient Greece and Africa and how does this shared history de-center the Transatlantic Slave Trade in a more expansive view of Blackness in the world? Dr. Sarah F. Derbew, Assistant Professor of Classics at Stanford University, joins host Prof. Mark Anthony Neal to discuss her first publication, “Untangling Blackness in […]

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