Possessed: the historical ideas that haunt us
An introduction to Possessed
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7 episodios
Season 1 Teaser Trailer
Civil Disobedience
Civil disobedience is taught widely in American schools as an integral part of the American story. Henry David Thoreau is honored as a civil hero. Susan B. Anthony earned placement on American coinage, and Martin Luther King received a holiday in his honor. But what counts as civil disobedience? What makes it civil, and what makes it disobedient? For this episode, we explore the the concept of civil disobedience in the United States, with a special attention to the religious and philosophical contexts in which it emerged. Guests: Alexander Livingston [https://government.cornell.edu/alexander-livingston], associate professor at Cornell University
The Nuclear Family
As David Brooks has written, the nuclear family was a blip in human history, not a regulating norm. Yet many of us continue to think that the nuclear family is the way that family ought to be—and, importantly, that care ought to be provided for children and others. Why do we think this way? And what other ways might we provide care for the young and others in need of care? Guests: Jennifer Augustine [https://sc.edu/study/colleges_schools/artsandsciences/sociology/our_people/faculty_staff_directory/augustine_jennifer.php] + Allison Dunatchik [https://sc.edu/study/colleges_schools/artsandsciences/sociology/our_people/faculty_staff_directory/dunatchik_allison.php] Cited in the show: David Brooks' Atlantic article: "The Nuclear Family Was a Mistake [https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2020/03/the-nuclear-family-was-a-mistake/605536/]"
Measuring Happiness
Many psychologists today propose that scientific research can help us learn how to become happy. This proposal rests on the provocative assumption that happiness is the sort of thing that you can measure scientifically, an idea that would have been rejected throughout most of western history. This episode examines the origin of the idea that happiness is measurable. We are joined by Leah McClimans, who has authored a new book on measuring wellbeing and using measurements to improve medical outcomes. Guest: Leah McClimans [https://sc.edu/study/colleges_schools/artsandsciences/philosophy/our_people/directory/mcclimans_leah.php], of USC's Philosophy Department
The idealized body
What makes a body ideal? Is it how it looks, what it does, or what it signifies? In this episode, we explore the ever-shifting idea of the ideal, or idealized body, with two professional dancers and professors of dance, whose work grapples daily with bodies in motion, under scrutiny, and in transformation. What kinds of ideals continue to regulate, elevate, or distort our sense of what a body should be? How are we today still possessed by these ideas? Guests: Jennifer Deckert [https://sc.edu/study/colleges_schools/artsandsciences/theatre_and_dance/our_people/directory/deckert_jennifer.php] and André Megerdichian [https://sc.edu/study/colleges_schools/artsandsciences/theatre_and_dance/our_people/directory/megerdichian_andre.php] of USC's Blackmon Dance Program
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