32m ·
Published
13 Jun 21:33
In this episode Dr. Audra Diptée is in conversation with Professor Ana Lucia Araujo of Howard University. They discuss the politics of race and the practice of racism in modern-day Brazil. Professor Araujo's research focuses on the history, memory, and legacy of slavery and the Atlantic slave trade in global perspectives. To learn more about her work see her website: http://www.analuciaaraujo.org
34m ·
Published
05 Oct 15:48
In this podcast, Professor Gaiutra Bahadur of Rutgers University is in conversation with Audra A. Diptée. Professor Bahadur discusses the story of and challenges in writing her book "Coolie Woman" which was shortlisted for Britain's Orwell Prize. The podcast discusses the history of her great-grandmother who left India alone and pregnant in the early 20th century to go to British Guiana (modern day Guyana). Together Bahadur & Diptee discuss the ways in which the very remarkable story of her grandmother was in fact a very ordinary history of Indian women travelling to the Caribbean under the indentured labour system. They also discuss the challenges of recovering lost voices and the ways in which the politics and power of historical memory operates in the present day.
26m ·
Published
15 Jun 20:19
In this espisode, Dr. Audra Diptee is in conversation with Dr. Raul Pacheco-Vega about the challenges of developing public policy when addressing water insecurity and water privitization. They also discuss the importance of using a historical lens and historical methods when undertaking policy analysis.
Dr. Raul Pacheco-Vega is a faculty member with the Centro de Investigacion y Docencia Economicas (Mexico). Their discussion was recorded in Paris (April 2019) while they were both holding the post of Invited Professor with the Institut des Hautes Etudes de l'Amérique Latine at the Université Sorbonne Nouvelle.
Podcast notes:
Dr. Raul Pacheco-Vega: http://www.raulpacheco.org/
Centro de Investigacion y Docencia Economicas (Mexico)
https://www.cide.edu/
Private Water Companies Mentioned
* Suez Environnement
* Veolia Water
People Mentioned in Podcast:
Dr. Michael Bess, División de Historia at the Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas in Mexico
https://cide.academia.edu/MikeBess
Dr. Juliette Levy, University of California (Riverside)
https://history.ucr.edu/people/juliette-levy
Book Mentioned:
Heiko Feldner, Kevin Passmore, Stefan Berger, Writing History: Theory and Practice (Bloomsbury, 2010)
28m ·
Published
04 May 12:41
In this episode, you will hear Bridget Brereton who is Professor Emerita of the University of the West Indies in Trinidad as she is being interviewed by Professor David Trotman of York University. The two discuss a number of themes including the politics of history, reparations for slavery, Caribbean regionalism, and the link between public history and collective memory.
Podcast notes:
Historical References
* Woodford Square named after Sir Ralph James Woodford (Governor of Trinidad, 1813-1828), https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ralph_James_Woodford
* Sir Thomas Picton, Governor of Trinidad, 1797-1803, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Picton
* Destruction of Grey Friars Church in Trinidad, https://www.joshualuecheekong.com/greyfriars-grief
Organizations Mentioned
Alma Jordan Library
https://libraries.sta.uwi.edu/ajl/
Caricom Reparations Commission
http://ncr.org.tt/about-us/caricom-regional-commission
Citizens for Conservation (Rudylynn Roberts)
https://www.facebook.com/pages/category/City/Citizens-for-Conservation-Trinidad-and-Tobago-462499293822720/
Cross Rhodes Project (Shabaka Kambon)
crossrhodestt.com/
Heritage Library
https://www.nalis.gov.tt/Libraries/Heritage-Library
National Trust of Trinidad and Tobago
http://nationaltrust.tt/
Paria Publishing - Gerard ‘Jerry’ Besson.
— Caribbean History Archives
http://caribbeanhistoryarchives.blogspot.com/
Trinidad and Tobago Heritage Library
https://www.nalis.gov.tt/Libraries/Heritage-Library
Trinidad & Tobago National Committee on Reparations (Chairman, Mr. Aiyegoro Ome)
http://ncr.org.tt/about-us
Trinidad and Tobago National Archives
https://www.natt.gov.tt/
Trinidad and Tobago National Library
https://www.nalis.gov.tt/About-Us/National-Library-of-Trinidad-and-Tobago
Academics Mentioned
Sir Roy Augier
https://www.mona.uwi.edu/history/staff/our-staff-0
Sir Hilary Beckles
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hilary_Beckles
Dr. Susan Craig-James
The Changing Society of Tobago, 1838-1938 (Cornerstone, 2008)
Dr. Elsa Goveia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elsa_Goveia
Sir Arthur Lewis
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W._Arthur_Lewis
Dr. Rita Pemberton: https://sta.uwi.edu/fhe/history/RitaPemberton.asp
Dr. Verene Shepherd
Radio program mentioned: “Talking History”, Jamaica’s first weekly radio history education programme
https://nationwideradiojm.com/personalities/talking-history/
Dr. David V. Trotman,
http://www.davidvtrotman.com/
Article mentioned: ‘Acts of Possession and Symbolic Decolonisation in Trinidad and Tobago,’ Caribbean Quarterly, Vol. 58, No. 1 (2012), 21-43.
Dr. Maureen Warner-Lewis:
https://www.researchgate.net/scientific-contributions/2094635407_Maureen_Warner-Lewis
29m ·
Published
12 Jan 22:35
In this episode of the History Watch Podcast series, Audra Diptee is conversation with Dr. Vanessa Watson about the legacies of colonial urban planning on present day Africa. For more on Dr. Watson, please see the following link: https://uct.academia.edu/VanessaWatson
24m ·
Published
15 May 08:16
In this podcast, Sir Woodville Marshall of the University of the West Indies discusses the role of the Association of the Caribbean Historians as well as power and historical narratives in Caribbean contexts.
About Sir Woodville Marshall: He is one of the founding members of the Association of Caribbean Historians and a scholar of Caribbean history.
His publications include the following books:
From Plantations to University Campus: The Social History of Cave Hill, 2013.
I Speak for the People: The Memoirs of Wynter Crawford (2003)
The Colthurst Journal: Journal of a Special Magistrate in the Islands of Barbados and St. Vincent, July 1835-September 1838 (1977)
32m ·
Published
14 May 15:25
In this podcast Dr. Audra Diptee is in conversation with the celebrated and award winning Palestinian author and poet Mourid Barghouti at The Rockefeller's Bellagio Center in Italy. They discuss the creation of state Israel, the Palestinian commemoration of Nakba Day (Day of Catastrophe), the reality facing everyday Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza, and what it means to have a Palestinian identity when the nation of Palestine no longer exists on current world maps. The podcast ends with a recital of one of his poems entitled "It's all so fine."
Acknowledgements: The History Watch Project acknowledges and thanks The Rockefeller Foundation for facilitating an opportunity that made this interview possible.
About Mourid Barghouti: He has published 12 books of poetry and several books. In 2010, he was awarded the Palestine Award for Poetry. His poems are published in both Arabic and English. His work has appeared in various international literary magazines including The Times Literary Supplement and Modern Poetry in Translation. He prose has been published in several languages. He was also awarded the very prestigious Naguib Mahfouz Medal for Literature in 1997.
Select Publications:
Midnight and Other Poems (2008)
I Was Born There, I Was Born Here, Bloomsbury, 2011
I Saw Ramallah, 2003
A Small Sun, 2003
24m ·
Published
23 Feb 23:32
In this podcast Dr. Pablo Idahosa of York University discusses the politics of displacement and the varied meanings of diaspora to different communities.
Pablo Idahosa's: http://founders.laps.yorku.ca/about/message-from-college-head/
About Pablo Idahosa: Dr. Pablo Idahosa is a professor in the Faculty of Social Sciences at York University. He is an internationally recognized specialist in African Studies. His publications, include The Populist Dimension of African Political Thought: Essays in Reconstruction and Retrieval and Development’s Displacements: Ecologies, Economies and Cultures at Risk. Dr. Idahosa’s research interests include, but are not limited to, the relationship between development and modernity in Africa, the relationship between development and cultural production in Africa, ethnicity and displacement in the Niger Delta, and the politics of ethnicity, globalization and development. He has previously served as the Coordinator of the African Studies Program at York University and is currently the Head of Founder’s College.
21m ·
Published
06 Dec 14:28
In this podcast, the Surinamese author Cynthia McLeod - who specializes in historical fiction - is in conversation with Dr. Audra A. Diptee of the History Watch Project. They discuss the relationship between history and literature. They also discuss the fascinating story of Elizabeth Sampson: A free black woman in eighteenth century Suriname who owned more than 10 plantations and over 1,000 slaves.
Credits: This episode would not have been possible without the support of the Centre for Transcultural Analysis at Carleton University (http://carleton.ca/ctca/).
For more on Cynthia Mcleod: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cynthia_McLeod
Cynthia McLeod's Books (in English)
1) The Free Negress Elizabeth (2008)
2) The Cost of Sugar (1985)
3) Tutuba: The girl from the Slave-Ship Leusden (2013)
29m ·
Published
14 Feb 19:58
In recognition of Black History month, this episode of the History Watch Podcast series David Austin (Professor, John Abbot College) discusses the politics of race in Montréal with CBC's Adrian Harewood. Austin's talk addresses efforts made to combat racism, state repression, as well as the silences in knowledge production. The episode is a recording of an event co-organized and co-sponsored by the History Watch Project and the Institute of African Studies at Carleton University.