Disrupted Knowledge

My Doubtful Cézanne (Dr. Briony Carlin)

56 min · 15. mai 2024
episode My Doubtful Cézanne (Dr. Briony Carlin) cover

Beskrivelse

In this final episode of the first series, Dr. Briony Carlin explores different ways that knowing emerges and the different kinds of knowledge that can add up to form research. She speaks to Dr. James Trayford about the limits of matter, and making multi-sensory, creative scholarship that disrupts disciplinary boundaries, and to artistic-curator and PhD researcher Dan Goodman about autoethnography and painting practices that might not be called “art”.  This podcast series is a companion piece to the book “Disrupted Knowledge: Scholarship in Time of Change” published by ⁠⁠Brill⁠⁠ [https://brill.com/display/title/64108] and ⁠⁠Haymarket Books⁠⁠ [https://www.haymarketbooks.org/books/2419-disrupted-knowledge]. Funding for this podcast is provided by the ⁠⁠Institute for Social Science⁠⁠ [https://www.ncl.ac.uk/social-science/] at Newcastle University. Produced by Karl Birrane. Theme Music by Anna Heslop. Stars Sonification Music by Dr. James Trayford [https://www.audiouniverse.org/] Special thanks to the Culture Lab at Newcastle University

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6 Episoder

episode My Doubtful Cézanne (Dr. Briony Carlin) cover

My Doubtful Cézanne (Dr. Briony Carlin)

In this final episode of the first series, Dr. Briony Carlin explores different ways that knowing emerges and the different kinds of knowledge that can add up to form research. She speaks to Dr. James Trayford about the limits of matter, and making multi-sensory, creative scholarship that disrupts disciplinary boundaries, and to artistic-curator and PhD researcher Dan Goodman about autoethnography and painting practices that might not be called “art”.  This podcast series is a companion piece to the book “Disrupted Knowledge: Scholarship in Time of Change” published by ⁠⁠Brill⁠⁠ [https://brill.com/display/title/64108] and ⁠⁠Haymarket Books⁠⁠ [https://www.haymarketbooks.org/books/2419-disrupted-knowledge]. Funding for this podcast is provided by the ⁠⁠Institute for Social Science⁠⁠ [https://www.ncl.ac.uk/social-science/] at Newcastle University. Produced by Karl Birrane. Theme Music by Anna Heslop. Stars Sonification Music by Dr. James Trayford [https://www.audiouniverse.org/] Special thanks to the Culture Lab at Newcastle University

15. mai 202456 min
episode This Is Britain (Dr. David Bates) cover

This Is Britain (Dr. David Bates)

Dr. David Bates discusses some of the key themes and concepts relating to race and racism in British culture today, including the debates around race, culture and commemoration which took place in the aftermath of the global Black Lives Matter protests of 2020. This podcast series is a companion piece to the book “Disrupted Knowledge: Scholarship in Time of Change” published by ⁠Brill⁠ [https://brill.com/display/title/64108] and ⁠Haymarket Books⁠ [https://www.haymarketbooks.org/books/2419-disrupted-knowledge]. Funding for this podcast is provided by the ⁠Institute for Social Science⁠ [https://www.ncl.ac.uk/social-science/] at Newcastle University. Produced by Karl Birrane. Music by Anna Heslop. Special thanks to the Culture Lab at Newcastle University

8. mai 202425 min
episode Not Being The Cool Disabled Person (Dr. Sarah Hill) cover

Not Being The Cool Disabled Person (Dr. Sarah Hill)

Dr. Sarah Hill explores the role that social media plays in the lives of young disabled women and addresses common discourses related to disability and social media. This podcast series is a companion piece to the book “Disrupted Knowledge: Scholarship in Time of Change” published by ⁠Brill⁠ [https://brill.com/display/title/64108] and ⁠Haymarket Books⁠ [https://www.haymarketbooks.org/books/2419-disrupted-knowledge]. Funding for this podcast is provided by the ⁠Institute for Social Science⁠ [https://www.ncl.ac.uk/social-science/] at Newcastle University. Produced by Karl Birrane. Music by Anna Heslop. Special thanks to the Culture Lab at Newcastle University Further Reading Hale, C., Brough, J., Allam, A., Lydiard, S., Springfield, F., Fixter, A., Wright, N., Clutton, V., Bole, K. (2021) Submission to the department of health and social care’s inquiry into women’s health and wellbeing in England, Chronic Illness Inclusion, June, Available from https://chronicillnessinclusion.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/CII.DHSC- Womens-Health-England-June-2021.pdf [https://chronicillnessinclusion.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/CII.DHSC- Womens-Health-England-June-2021.pdf] Hill, S. (2017). Exploring disabled girls’ self-representation practices online. Girlhood Studies, 10(2), 114–130. https://doi. org/10.3167/ghs.2017.100209 Hill, S. (2023) Navigating visibility and risk: disabled young women’s self-presentation practices on social media, Journal of Gender Studies, DOI: 10.1080/09589236.2023.2219971 Todd, A. (2018). Virtual (dis)orientations and the luminosity of disabled girlhood. Girlhood Studies, 11(3), 34–49. https:// doi.org/10.3167/ghs.2018.110305

1. mai 202436 min
episode Uncertain Intimacies (Dr. Chris Haywood) cover

Uncertain Intimacies (Dr. Chris Haywood)

Dr. Chris Haywood explores the phenomena of swinger or lifestyle clubs in the UK, how club owners are trying to create inclusive spaces, challenge the idea of female sexual passivity and how gender and sexuality become unusually reconfigured in spaces dedicated to recreational hetero erotic sex. This podcast series is a companion piece to the book “Disrupted Knowledge: Scholarship in Time of Change” published by ⁠Brill⁠ [https://brill.com/display/title/64108] and ⁠Haymarket Books⁠ [https://www.haymarketbooks.org/books/2419-disrupted-knowledge]. Funding for this podcast is provided by the ⁠Institute for Social Science⁠ [https://www.ncl.ac.uk/social-science/] at Newcastle University. Recorded by Chris Haywood. Produced by Karl Birrane. Theme Music by Anna Heslop. Episode Music by Professor Christopher Whitehead. Special thanks to the Culture Lab at Newcastle University

24. april 202439 min