Episodes

  • Assata: An Autobiography with Isabella Kajiwara
    Nov 1 2024

    What does it really mean to live a revolutionary life? Assata Shakur’s autobiography offers deeply personal – and candid – reflections on struggle, survival, and liberation. This is why it is such a must-read for organisers across the world.


    Led by Isabella Kajiwara, the latest bookshelf season – Literature for Liberation – is exploring seminal autobiographies from revolutionaries across various struggles, inviting readers to reflect on the role of storytelling in our collective political education and movement ecosystems.


    Isabella explains that the aim of the season is not to individualise struggle or put people on pedestals, but to study revolutionary lives as a lens through which to understand the wider struggle they are part of. By understanding how Assata Shakur understood political education, resisted carceral repression, and leaned on kinship throughout her organising, we can learn important lessons about what it means for each of us to live a revolutionary life.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show more Show less
    48 mins
  • Guest Episode: Storytelling for Indigenous Sovereignty
    Nov 1 2024

    In this episode actress and Quechua storyteller, Nathalie Kelley discusses with contributing SHADO editor Samara Almonte, her journey as an Indigenous storyteller amidst growing-up in diaspora. Nathalie is a graduate of Kiss The Ground's Soil Advocacy program, and on the board of the Fungí Foundation. She is passionate about using her IG platform of 1.6 million followers to highlight the threats against Indigenous communities around the world while elevating Indigenous wisdom and technologies as means of coming back into harmony with our ecosystem.


    Resources:

    • Vive el Quechua
    • Julia Watson. Lo—TEK. Design by Radical Indigenism
    • Julia Watson
    • Sisa Quispe (@sisa_quispe) • Instagram
    • newamauta



    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show more Show less
    35 mins
  • BP and the infrastructure of Genocide with Energy Embargo for Palestine
    Sep 15 2024

    How is our energy system intertwined with the Israeli occupation of Palestine? Mariam and Felix, members of Energy Embargo for Palestine—an anti-imperialist climate collective—join us to explain how the fossil fuel industry sustains the Zionist project.

    After months of investigating BP, they discuss the company's involvement in historical repressive regimes, political maneuvering, pipeline construction, and the swindling of the British public, all in pursuit of controlling Middle Eastern oil.


    References:


    • Pipeline to genocide: BP's oil route to Israel
    • A People’s Green New Deal, Max Ajl
    • The Oil Road, James Marriott and Mika Minio-Paluello



    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show more Show less
    55 mins
  • The Dispossessed with Isabella Kajiwara
    Aug 13 2024

    Do you often feel hopeless? Do you find it hard to imagine a better future for our world? So do we - which is why we’re bringing you this 3 part mini-series: World Building and Re-Imagination: How Fiction Can Free Us


    Our bookclub - shado’s bookshelf - ran earlier this year, and was a journey through some of the best science fiction, speculative and political fiction of past and present. How can fiction help us imagine and create different worlds? These kind of questions are more necessary now than ever, in a political moment defined by apathy and fear.


    We need radical and visionary politics of action and creation! This mini-series we’ll be taking each book and delving into the stories that can help us imagine otherwise, sharing insights from our book club for those who missed it. Our last book in the series, The Dispossessed by Ursula Le Guin is a titan of science fiction, credited for changing the genre with its brilliant and complex worldbuilding. What would a world without hierarchy really look like in practice, and is it possible?



    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show more Show less
    31 mins
  • Begin the World Over with Isabella Kajiwara
    Aug 4 2024

    Do you often feel hopeless? Do you find it hard to imagine a better future for our world? So do we - which is why we’re bringing you this 3 part mini-series: World Building and Re-Imagination: How Fiction Can Free Us


    Our bookclub - shado’s bookshelf - ran earlier this year, and was a journey through some of the best science fiction, speculative and political fiction of past and present. How can fiction help us imagine and create different worlds? These kind of questions are more necessary now than ever, in a political moment defined by apathy and fear.


    We need radical and visionary politics of action and creation! This mini-series we’ll be taking each book and delving into the stories that can help us imagine otherwise, sharing insights from our book club for those who missed it. Our second book in the series, Begin the World Over by Kung Li Sun, is a revolutionary counterfactual novel about the US Founders’ greatest fear —that Black and Indigenous people might join forces to undo the newly formed United States of America— coming true.



    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show more Show less
    36 mins
  • Palestine+100 with Isabella Kajiwara
    Jul 17 2024

    Do you often feel hopeless? Do you find it hard to imagine a better future for our world? So do we - which is why we’re bringing you this 3 part mini-series: World Building and Re-Imagination: How Fiction Can Free Us


    Our bookclub - shado’s bookshelf - ran earlier this year, and was a journey through some of the best science fiction, speculative and political fiction of past and present. How can fiction help us imagine and create different worlds? These kind of questions are more necessary now than ever, in a political moment defined by apathy and fear.


    We need radical and visionary politics of action and creation! This mini-series we’ll be taking each book and delving into the stories that can help us imagine otherwise, sharing insights from our book club for those who missed it. Our first book, Palestine+100, is an anthology which poses a question to twelve Palestinian writers: what might your country look like in the year 2048 - a century after the tragedies and trauma of what has come to be called the Nakba?



    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show more Show less
    39 mins
  • Guest Episode: For First Nations Storytelling is Self-determination
    Jul 5 2024

    Contributing SHADO editor Samara Almonte is back to discuss the power of storytelling through a First Nations worldview with distinguished professor Larissa Behrendt AO. Larissa has a legal background with a strong track record in the areas of Indigenous law, policy, creative arts, education and research. She is a Native Title holder and member of the Yuwaalaraay (yuwalarai) Euahlayi Aboriginal Corporation and is also a member of the Metropolitan Local Aboriginal Land Council. Larissa is also an award-winning author, filmmaker and host of Speaking Out on ABC Radio. In this episode, Larissa shares about her upbringing as an Aboriginal woman and how storytelling has been a practice for cultural preservation, healing and advocacy for her.


    Additional Resources:


    • If Not Us Then Who?
    • Twenty-Four Exceptional Films by Indigenous Australian Filmmakers That You Can Stream Right Now
    • Vision Maker Media – The Premiere Source of Media By and About Native Americans



    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show more Show less
    42 mins
  • Guest episode: Circular Design for a Just Transition with Samara Almonte and What Design Can Do
    May 21 2024

    In this episode, contributing shado editor Samara Almonte is back to connect with Natasha Berting, a designer and writer from Bali, Indonesia and the communications editor for What Design Can Do (WDCD). WDCD is an international organisation that seeks to accelerate the transition to a sustainable, fair and just society using the power of design. Samara and Natasha discuss how WDCD works to address system issues at large, for example through circularity, as a way to address the climate crisis. But where does the concept of circularity come from and who should benefit from it?


    To learn more about circularity, visit the following resources:


    • What is Circularity?
    • Disruptive Design Method
    • Flourish Systems Change Michael Pawlyn & Sarah Ichioka
    • Slow Factory Open Education
    • Fernando Laposse: Totomoxle
    • Sustainable & Product Design - Taina Campos
    • Sanitary Napkins Manufacturer – Saathi: Eco-friendly, period
    • DEAL (doughnuteconomics.org)
    • What Design Can Do (@whatdesigncando) • Instagram photos and videos
    • WDCD Amsterdam 2024 - What Design Can Do
    • Redesign Everything



    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show more Show less
    37 mins