Chambered Nautilus

Roi Kwabena's DEEP OBEAH

6 min · 4 de abr de 2022
portada del episodio Roi Kwabena's DEEP OBEAH

Descripción

Celebrating the memory of the author of Deep Obeah, Dr. Roi Kwabena. He was a cultural anthropologist [http://nefertamu.tripod.com/poet.html], but not an academic. His work was done entirely outside of the walls of academia, a form of cultural activism that inspired others who—even without a degree in anthropology—began to call themselves anthropologists nonetheless. He was an artist, a musician, a poet, a teacher, an essayist, a researcher, a publisher, and for a while a politician as well. What distinguishes Roi Kwabena ....was his combination of art and analysis, culture and politics, publication and public engagement, in the service of a committed critique of imperialism and neo-colonialism. A man from “the periphery,” he operated across the periphery and the centre. ---Professor Maximilian C. Forte from Zero Anthropology [http://openanthropology.org/roi-kwabena.htm] My thanks to Professor Maximilian Forte for permission to share Dr. Kwabena's words and music, they are powerful.

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8 episodios

episode Roi Kwabena's DEEP OBEAH artwork

Roi Kwabena's DEEP OBEAH

Celebrating the memory of the author of Deep Obeah, Dr. Roi Kwabena. He was a cultural anthropologist [http://nefertamu.tripod.com/poet.html], but not an academic. His work was done entirely outside of the walls of academia, a form of cultural activism that inspired others who—even without a degree in anthropology—began to call themselves anthropologists nonetheless. He was an artist, a musician, a poet, a teacher, an essayist, a researcher, a publisher, and for a while a politician as well. What distinguishes Roi Kwabena ....was his combination of art and analysis, culture and politics, publication and public engagement, in the service of a committed critique of imperialism and neo-colonialism. A man from “the periphery,” he operated across the periphery and the centre. ---Professor Maximilian C. Forte from Zero Anthropology [http://openanthropology.org/roi-kwabena.htm] My thanks to Professor Maximilian Forte for permission to share Dr. Kwabena's words and music, they are powerful.

4 de abr de 20226 min
episode I've Known Rivers - Langston Hughes read by Anindo Marshall artwork

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Kenyan–American, master teacher of Dunham Technique, percussionist, and composer, Anindo Marshall [https://werglobal.show/anindo-marshall/], reads Langston Hughes seminal ode and witness to the history of humankind from the beginning of civilisation through the eyes of the Blacks experience. As Charlotte Stevenson wrote in the online magazine for York St John University, "Words Matter," (https://blog.yorksj.ac.uk/englishlit/black-history-month-ive-known-rivers-langston-hughes/) "What Hughes stresses is the need for that ‘flow of human blood in human veins’, all of those voices who have remained in silence, to persevere in being heard no matter what it takes. That straightforward honesty is vital to the thoughts he shaped and put out into the world to make positive change." The river represents a meaningful, traumatic, and hopeful reflection.

27 de mar de 20221 min