Imagine Otherwise by Ideas on Fire
Imagine Otherwise by Ideas on Fire

Imagine Otherwise by Ideas on Fire

Cathy Hannabach

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Episodes

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A podcast about bridging art, activism, and academia to build more just futures. On each episode, host Cathy Hannabach interviews the scholars, dancers, authors, artists, and filmmakers imagining collective freedom and creating it through culture.

Recent Episodes

Raven Maragh-Lloyd on Black Networked Resistance
AUG 23, 2024
Raven Maragh-Lloyd on Black Networked Resistance

How can communities creatively adapt and reshape online practices to forge resilient digital publics?

In episode 162 of Imagine Otherwise, host Cathy Hannabach interviews media studies scholar Raven Maragh-Lloyd about the historical contours of Black digital resistance.

The Ideas on Fire team was honored to work with Raven on her new book Black Networked Resistance: Strategic Rearticulations in the Digital Age, which is an insightful analysis of how Black technology users adapt and reshape resistance strategies and forge Black publics in the digital age. The book is out now from the University of California Press.

In their conversation, Raven and Cathy chat about how digital resistance is best understood as a creative process rather than just an outcome of digital practices and how Black communities create and sustain that process across time periods and platforms.

They dive into a bunch of different examples, from Instagram archiving around Juneteenth and Black women's online networks of care to the politics of cancel culture and where the migration of Black Twitter in the wake of the platform's demise.

The episode concludes with Raven's vision for critical hopefulness in digital spaces, a critical hopefulness that reckons with the violences of the past and forges more just futures.

Transcript and show notes: https://ideasonfire.net/162-raven-maragh-lloyd

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19 MIN
Natalie Zervou on Dance in the Age of Austerity
JUN 21, 2024
Natalie Zervou on Dance in the Age of Austerity

The relationship between dance and politics has long been a complex one. In moments of national and international crisis, artists are often at the center of resistance movements, and the embodied knowledges honed by dancers, choreographers, and performers can become key survival techniques for diverse communities.

In episode 161 of Imagine Otherwise, host Cathy Hannabach interviews dance studies scholar and Ideas on Fire author Natalie Zervou, author of the new book Performing the Greek Crisis: Navigating National Identity in the Age of Austerity.

The book is out now from the University of Michigan Press, and it offers a deep dive into how the Greek dance world and arts communities navigated the decade-long Greek financial crisis that began in 2009.

In the interview, Natalie situates dance in Greece's complex economic and political standing in the European Union, explaining how choreographers, performers, funders, and audiences manage this standing through the performing arts.

They also discuss the vibrant regional dance festival circuit in Greece, where festival organizers and dancers use them as platforms for political critique, cultural expression, and international engagement.

Natalie also addresses recent Greek dance performances about the European refugee crisis, explaining how they engage the urgent and racialized politics of mobility and displacement in the context of neoliberal capitalism and racist state violence.

They close out the episode with Natalie's vision for a new creative economy in which dance and artistic labor is valued and the embodied arts serve as a vital way to build more just futures.

Transcript and show notes: https://ideasonfire.net/161-natalie-zervou

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25 MIN
Juan Llamas-Rodriguez on the Visual Politics of Border Tunnels
DEC 11, 2023
Juan Llamas-Rodriguez on the Visual Politics of Border Tunnels

How do media representations of US–Mexico border tunnels shape immigration discourse, public policy, and anti-immigrant violence?

To help us think through how these tunnels are represented and often overrepresented in US media, in episode 158 of Imagine Otherwise, host Cathy Hannabach interviews Ideas on Fire author Juan Llamas-Rodriguez about his new book Border Tunnels: A Media Theory of the US–Mexico Underground.

For all of their visual obscurity and inaccessibility, tunnels are hypervisible in media representations not only of the US–Mexico border region but also the bodies—both real and imagined—that are associated with the borderlands.

In the conversation, Juan shares his research into how border tunnels are represented in video games like first-person shooters, television news coverage like Anderson Cooper 360°, copaganda reality shows like Border Wars, and action films like Fast and Furious.

They also discuss why it is so important to think infrastructurally about media production and how designers and activists are using speculative design to reimagine what the US–Mexico borderlands are and the role of tunnels in that process.

Finally, they close out the conversation with Juan's challenge to both media makers and media consumers alike to accept responsibility for the material consequences of representation and use it to create a world where the free movement of people across and beyond all borders is celebrated and realized.

Transcript, teaching guide, and show notes: https://ideasonfire.net/158-juan-llamas-rodriguez

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23 MIN