Sustainability Matters

Virtual, Real, Resilient: Jewish Spaces in 21st Century Europe

57 min · 6. Mai 202657 min
Episode Virtual, Real, Resilient: Jewish Spaces in 21st Century Europe Cover

Beschreibung

On this episode of Sustainability Matters, we explore how Jewish Europe is being reshaped across physical and digital spaces in the 21st century. How do virtual environments change the way heritage is preserved and shared? Can digital reconstructions and online communities sustain cultural identity? What happens when these spaces are affected by rising antisemitism, shifting politics, and changing public visibility—against a longer history of loss and reconstruction? All this and more with Dr. Maja Hultman and Dr. Joachim Schlör, editors of Virtual and Real-Life Spaces of Jewish Europe in the 21st Century, [https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783111268132/html] published by De Gruyter Brill. Discourse on sustainable digital spaces is just one of our sustainability initiatives here at De Gruyter Brill. Explore the recent De Gruyter Brill Annual Impact Report [https://degruyter-live-craftcms-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/DGB_25/Documents/dgb_impact-report-2025.pdf]for a closer look at our sustainability commitments and progress in 2025. Host: Dr. Shawn Rowlands [https://www.rtc.bt/social-sciences-faculty] Guests: Dr. Maja Hultman [https://www.gu.se/en/about/find-staff/majahultman] and Dr. Joachim Schlör  [https://www.southampton.ac.uk/people/5x2wnz/emeritus-professor-joachim-schloer]

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Alle Folgen

117 Folgen

Episode Virtual, Real, Resilient: Jewish Spaces in 21st Century Europe Cover

Virtual, Real, Resilient: Jewish Spaces in 21st Century Europe

On this episode of Sustainability Matters, we explore how Jewish Europe is being reshaped across physical and digital spaces in the 21st century. How do virtual environments change the way heritage is preserved and shared? Can digital reconstructions and online communities sustain cultural identity? What happens when these spaces are affected by rising antisemitism, shifting politics, and changing public visibility—against a longer history of loss and reconstruction? All this and more with Dr. Maja Hultman and Dr. Joachim Schlör, editors of Virtual and Real-Life Spaces of Jewish Europe in the 21st Century, [https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783111268132/html] published by De Gruyter Brill. Discourse on sustainable digital spaces is just one of our sustainability initiatives here at De Gruyter Brill. Explore the recent De Gruyter Brill Annual Impact Report [https://degruyter-live-craftcms-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/DGB_25/Documents/dgb_impact-report-2025.pdf]for a closer look at our sustainability commitments and progress in 2025. Host: Dr. Shawn Rowlands [https://www.rtc.bt/social-sciences-faculty] Guests: Dr. Maja Hultman [https://www.gu.se/en/about/find-staff/majahultman] and Dr. Joachim Schlör  [https://www.southampton.ac.uk/people/5x2wnz/emeritus-professor-joachim-schloer]

6. Mai 202657 min
Episode Who Gets to Be Indigenous? Cover

Who Gets to Be Indigenous?

On this episode of Sustainability Matters, we examine how indigeneity is defined and contested in conversations around identity, science, and sovereignty. Is it something we inherit, or a political construct? How can scientific and Indigenous knowledge systems collaborate without losing their distinct integrity? And what happens when genetic research defines belonging in ways that conflict with cultural and political self-understandings?  All this and more with Dr. Benjamin Gregg, author of “Scientific Integrity and Indigenous Justice in Genetic Research [https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783111592077-009/html],” which is Chapter 5 in the book Indigeneity as Social Construct and Political Tool: Critique and Reconstruction of a Contested Identity [https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783111592077/html], published by De Gruyter Brill.  Host: Ramzi Nasir [https://x.com/ramzinasir] Guest: Dr. Benjamin Gregg [https://liberalarts.utexas.edu/government/faculty/bggregg]

1. Apr. 20261 h 12 min
Episode Play Like a Girl: Girlhood and Identity in Video Games Cover

Play Like a Girl: Girlhood and Identity in Video Games

On this episode of Sustainability Matters, we look at how video games are reshaping the representation of girlhood, identity, and coming-of-age through play. Why have games so often been associated with boyhood? What overlooked histories of girls’ gaming cultures challenge this narrative? And how are contemporary games challenging traditional heroic narratives with more complex stories about growing up, belonging, and self-discovery? All this and more with Dr. Stephanie Harkin, author of Girlhood Games: Gender, Identity and Coming of Age in Video Games [https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783111560939/html], which is Volume 20 in the series “Video Games and the Humanities”, [https://www.degruyterbrill.com/serial/vgh-b/html] published by De Gruyter Brill. Host: Ramzi Nasir [https://x.com/RamziNasir] Guest: Dr. Stephanie Harkin [https://www.rmit.edu.au/profiles/h/stephanie-harkin ]

4. März 202649 min
Episode The Power of Unions: Rise, Fall, Return? Cover

The Power of Unions: Rise, Fall, Return?

On this episode of Sustainability Matters, we ask: why do unions rise, why do they fall, and what does it take for them to rise again? How do leadership, strategy, and internal democracy shape their trajectory? And what can the turbulent history of a major New York transit union teach us about the labour movement today? All this and more with Dr. Marc Kagan, author of Take Back the Power: The Fall and Rise and Fall of NYC’s Transport Workers Union Local 100, 1975–2009 [https://brill.com/display/title/73488?srsltid=AfmBOoriqHIhlV1DkttG-ew6LDEeoha3ur3Ny4O9A0p6Jzn9dPN7QJDQ], which is Volume 7 in the series Studies in Political Economy of Global Labor and Work [https://brill.com/display/serial/PELW], published by De Gruyter Brill. Host: Ramzi Nasir [https://x.com/RamziNasir] Guest: Dr. Marc Kagan [https://marckagan.substack.com/ ]

11. Feb. 20261 h 12 min
Episode Religion in a Culture of Digitality: Belief, Power, and Participation Cover

Religion in a Culture of Digitality: Belief, Power, and Participation

On this episode of Sustainability Matters, we ask: How is digital technology transforming religious belief and practice today? How does digital culture reshape religious authority, education, and governance? And how do emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence complicate questions of belief, legitimacy, and responsibility within religious communities? All this and more with Dr. Thomas Schlag and Katharina Yadav, editors of Religious Communication, Interaction and Transformation in a Culture of Digitality, [https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783111721729/html] published by De Gruyter Brill.  Host: Ramzi Nasir [https://x.com/RamziNasir] Guests: Dr. Thomas Schlag [https://www.theologie.uzh.ch/en/faecher/praktisch/team/schlag.html] and Katharina Yadav [https://www.theologie.uzh.ch/de/faecher/praktisch/pt_religionspaedagogik/personen/doktorierende/katharina-yadav.html]

14. Jan. 202643 min