Beholden
Jennifer Wright-Berryman (she/her), Ph.D. is an associate professor of social work at the University of Cincinnati. She studies suicide prevention and equitable death care for LGBTQIA+ communities. Jennifer recently published the book Equity at the End: The New American Way of Death with Dr. Staci Zavattaro (University of Central Florida). Jennifer is the co-founder (with Kat Vancil-Coleman) of Equal Deathcare [https://www.equaldeathcare.org/], a website resource for LGBTQIA+ communities to access death care resources nationally and in their home state. Jennifer has also authored two novels, The Dying Five and The Dying Five, 2. More information about Jennifer and her books can be found on her website [https://jenniferwrightberryman.com/]. In this interview, Jennifer discusses her identities, the invisibility of non-heterosexual identities when married to a person of the opposite gender, privilege, "research poverty", fluidity of attraction and various intimacies beyond the sexualized, her work in bringing equity into death care, and her creative process and making time for writing. Content awareness: we briefly discuss death and suicide. These topics might be difficult for folks. If you are in a mental health crisis, please seek out the care of a trained mental healthcare provider, and/or please consider reaching out to The Trevor Project [https://www.thetrevorproject.org/] (which specializes in suicide prevention for LGBTQIA+ folks; if you are not LGBTQIA+ but have funds you wish to use to support those in crisis, please consider donating to The Trevor Project). For additional conversations about death, please consider attending a Death Café [https://deathcafe.com/] (these occur regularly around the world, virtually and in-person; Allison hosts these once a month) and listening to other episodes of this podcast (such as 3, 4, 10, 13, 15, 16, 17, 21). For the listener that might be less familiar with the differences between equity and equality, please see a good descriptive article here [https://onlinepublichealth.gwu.edu/resources/equity-vs-equality/]. Essentially, equality works to treat folks equally, whereas equity acknowledges that systems treat folks unequally and works to level the systems by supporting folks in specific ways to make their experience on par with that of others. From this space of equity, equality can then be utilized more effectively. For transcripts of this show, please email ignitewellbeing.naperville@gmail.com with ‘Transcripts’ in the subject line and/or check your favorite podcast provider, as oftentimes they supply transcription services. If you are interested in book recommendations related to topics discussed, including death and dying, please see Allison's bookshop on Bookshop.org [https://bookshop.org/shop/Ignitewell-being] Purchasing books through Bookshop offers greater support to authors as well as curators, such as Allison. *Please note that the opinions and experiences of those interviewed in this podcast are not necessarily the opinions and experiences of the interviewer. One of the intents of this podcast is to interview a variety of people with a variety of experiences and opinions.* If you are interested in participating in a future podcast, which involves thoughtful, caring, and connecting conversations to encourage proximity and a sense of interconnection, please email ignitewellbeing.naperville@gmail.com with ‘Participate’ in the subject line. To learn more about Ignite Well-being, in the suburbs of Chicago, and/or the host, Allison, please see their website [https://ignitewell-being.com/], Patreon [https://www.patreon.com/ignitewellbeing], Substack [https://d.docs.live.net/97484375fa467307/Documents/Website%20for%20Ignite%20wellbeing/podcast/interview%20questions%20with%20lali.docx#EEE;background:white;%22frameborder=%220%22scrolling=%22no%22%3E%3C/iframe%3E], or Linktree [https://linktr.ee/ignitewellbeing]. Listeners may schedule with Allison on Calendly. [https://calendly.com/ignitewellbeing-naperville] Deepest bow to the paid supporters on Patreon, who make this work more financially sustainable. Sincere apologies for sound artifacts resulting from impaired WiFi connectivity from a major communications carrier. Thank you to Pixabay and SergePavkinMusic for the song used in the podcast. And thank you to cloudconvert and Audacity for making podcasting more accessible.
25 Folgen
Kommentare
0Sei die erste Person, die kommentiert
Melde dich jetzt an und werde Teil der Beholden-Community!