Treasure Shields Redmond awam
[search 0]
lebih
Download the App!
show episodes
 
Artwork
 
The Memoir My Dad Wouldn't Write is a Radically honest conversation between a daughter and her dad. My dad has had an incredible life as a poet, activist, professor, and cultural worker. He wouldn't write a memoir, so this series of conversations is partly that. If you would like to learn to podcast or you have your own elders' stories you'd like to record, join Dr. Treasure Shields Redmond’s PODCASTING WITH A PURPOSE course here: https://gettheacceptanceletter.lpages.co/podcasting-with-a-pu ...
  continue reading
 
Loading …
show series
 
Henry Dumas was a gifted poet and fiction writer who was killed in 1968. Since then, my father (and now I) have executed Henry Dumas's estate. Listen as I lead my father and his good friend, renowned poet Quincy Troupe in a conversation about Dumas and how Quincy's friendship with Toni Morrison helped to propel Dumas's work into the public sphere. …
  continue reading
 
Most people don't know that I didn't meet my dad in person until I was 11 years old. Why? Listen and find out! #podcast #oralhistory #BAM #BlackLivesMatter The Memoir My Dad Wouldn't Write is a radically honest conversation between a daughter and her dad. My dad has had an incredible life as a poet, activist, professor, and cultural worker. He woul…
  continue reading
 
Audio Essay: “The Ghost of Henry Dumas” Our beloved Henry Dumas was shot & killed by a NYC transit cop in 1968. Since then my father has lovingly edited the work he left behind. I am my father’s daughter. Here an audio essay of the print version I published in the Yale Review. If you would like to support the continuity of this podcast, get on our …
  continue reading
 
New Podcast! Sankofa For Henry Dumas Today marks 58 years since Henry Dumas was shot to death at the age of 33 by a New York City Transit Police officer. My father, Eugene Redmond, met Henry Dumas in 1967 when he became a teacher-counselor and director of language workshops at Southern Illinois University's Experiment in Higher Education, in East S…
  continue reading
 
My 84 year old Dad is a Black Arts Movement poet. The Black Arts Movement was the artistic component of the Black Power Movement. Black Studies was the academic response to the Black Power Movement. In this episode, we finish our discussion of how he came to be an architect of Black Studies in U.S. universities. The Memoir My Dad Wouldn’t Write is …
  continue reading
 
My 83 year old Dad is a Black Arts Movement poet. The Black Arts Movement was the artistic component of the Black Power Movement. Black Studies was the academic response to the Black Power Movement. In this episode, my Dad discusses how he came to be an architect of Black Studies in U.S. universities. * The Memoir My Dad Wouldn't Write is a radical…
  continue reading
 
New Podcast! “How A Poet Heals At 83”. My superhero of an 83 year old Dad is out of rehab and back home! In this episode we talk about what healing looks like now. * The Memoir My Dad Wouldn't Write is a radically honest conversation between a daughter and her dad. My dad has had an incredible life as a poet, activist, professor, and cultural worke…
  continue reading
 
My superhero of an 83 year old Dad is presently recovering from back surgery in a rehab facility. In this episode we talk about how he wound up here and what his goals for healing are. * The Memoir My Dad Wouldn't Write is a radically honest conversation between a daughter and her dad. My dad has had an incredible life as a poet, activist, professo…
  continue reading
 
In the words of the great American poet Gwendolyn Brooks: "We are each other's business; we are each other's harvest; we are each other's magnitude and bond. In this episode my dad details some of the many jobs he had and how he moved from laborer to academic. He also shares how his income was always a communal offering to his family. As he reveals…
  continue reading
 
In 1966, SIUE officially began an East St. Louis special program named “Experiment in Higher Education” (EHE). This program was established through federal funding and provided financial support to disadvantaged students for their first two years of college. This was my dad's first teaching job. This is where he received crucial mentoring and set c…
  continue reading
 
My father met a woman who would forever shape him as and artist and a man. She became a signature mentor, and provided him with character building guidance that he still draws from to this day. That woman, was the great African-American dancer, choreographer, creator of the Dunham Technique, author, educator, anthropologist, and social activist Kat…
  continue reading
 
After the murder of George Floyd, the world has responded in an unprecedented wave of protests. My dad has lived through several massive surges of political fervor like the current one. These “surges” are often (but not always) accompanied by “consciousness raising.” What does it mean to come to consciousness? My dad and I discuss how he came to co…
  continue reading
 
After the murder of George Floyd, the world has responded in an unprecedented wave of protests. My dad has lived through several massive surges of political fervor like the current one. These "surges" are often (but not always) accompanied by "consciousness raising." What does it mean to come to consciousness? My dad and I discuss how he came to co…
  continue reading
 
What comparisons can we draw between the 1960’s and now within the context of the Covid 19 pandemic? I’ve been observing social distancing from my 82 year old dad, but I was eager to talk with him about how to use history to cope with the current health crisis. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/treasure-shields-redmo…
  continue reading
 
What is it like to love a home it feels like the world despises? For my Dad, East St. Louis is at the end of that question. In this episode we move further up his timeline through the turbulent 1960's and into East St. Louis's slow transition from manufacturing hub to prime example of why he is so strongly pro-reparations. --- Support this podcast:…
  continue reading
 
My dad has seen how stories are shaped by who writes them and who publishes them. As a journalist and expert at almost every level of the field -- typesetting, editing, reporting, column production, and sales -- his insight into how the 20th century's news industry shaped culture is fascinating! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.…
  continue reading
 
My father left the Marines with the intention of becoming a news man. It was the dawn of the 1960's and print journalism was in its hey day. He became the first Black editor of his university's newspaper. There was also a "Newness" in Negro political thought. My father attended the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, and witnessed the bi…
  continue reading
 
It was the final half of the 1950's. The U.S. was basking in the glow of its Ozzie and Harriet delusions. It was a culture in deep denial and in no way prepared for the sea change of a decade it was headed toward. In many ways my dad, Eugene B. Redmond was the same. He'd joined the Marines after less than a year in college. He was a young man in fl…
  continue reading
 
As a man who came of age in the late 1950's, my father has seen conceptions of manhood evolve and evolve again. In this current political moment, full of revelation and retribution, my father and I talk about how he was "taught" manhood through the examples around him. (Plus we explore the tradition of nick naming in the African American community.…
  continue reading
 
My dad's upsouth childhood included the Mississippi river in a way that seems inconceivable now. From fishing it, to swimming it, to being baptized in it, to making love next to it, the river figured largely in the lives and imaginations of post war East St. Louis. In this Mississippi river themed episode, we're joined by photographer and colleague…
  continue reading
 
The ability to protest for Black dignity, and for justice was something my dad learned early on. He is a member of the generation that created the modern "demonstration." As he moved in to manhood in the final years of the 1950's, listen to what his earliest protest experiences taught him, AND MORE! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spot…
  continue reading
 
This is a special remote episode. Listen as my father and I travel the actual roads where he came into contact with Red Foxx, and The Ike Turner Ikettes. Listen as he calls back into existence the bustling post-war Black East St. Louis of his childhood. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/treasure-shields-redmond/suppo…
  continue reading
 
67 years before Michael Brown jr. was murdered in Ferguson, my father was teen hearing about Emmett Till being lynched by white men. In this episode, he talks about how this news and the community events that happened afterward made a life long impression. Go to www.FemininePronoun.com to read the creative non fiction I wrote about this pivotal tim…
  continue reading
 
East St. Louis's Black community of the 1940's and 50's was a swirl of influences. Most Black people were recent migrants from the south or the children of southern migrants. They were a new citified version of Blackness, and with that newness came the stresses and pressures of urban life. A closer physical proximity. A different economic competiti…
  continue reading
 
Trigger warning: My Dad was 13 when he was introduced to sex . . . by a woman who was nearly 30. If descriptions of what most would name molestation are triggering for you, this may be the episode you need to skip. My father has not gone back on his word to be honest. As we continue our conversations through his life, we hit upon this maturation po…
  continue reading
 
In the 1940's, East St. Louis, Illinois' Black community was "art-full" according to my Dad. There were impromptu singing groups, and instruments created from refuse, discards and ordinary household items. Families listened to country, blues and gospel, and voice acted dramas on the radio. "Dial M For Murder" was performed at the high school and in…
  continue reading
 
In a mere 72 hours after his mothers death, a 9 year old Eugene became the son of his grandmother, a devout Jehovah's Witness in her mid sixties. And not only that, she was cruel, and sometimes physically abusive. In this episode my dad reflects on whether she was a protagonist or an antagonist in his story and how this "Hard hearted Hannah" shaped…
  continue reading
 
John Henry Redmond was named for a strong man. He was my Dad's hero, and a man of innumerable talents. So why did he essentially abandon his nine children upon the passing of my dad's mother, spend the rest of his days in semi-hiding, ending his life buried under an assumed name? In this episode we find out why.--- Support this podcast: https://pod…
  continue reading
 
My dad says he was orphaned through the death of his mother at age 9 and through the abandonment of his father at the same time. In this episode he shares his memories of Emma Jean Hutchison, a woman who bore 9 children and was pregnant when she died of an aneurism in 1947. We talk about how his mother's death, which to him felt like a disappearanc…
  continue reading
 
The words "Pearl Harbor" were what my Dad heard and remembered as a four year old. That surprise military strike by the Imperial Japanese represents his earliest memory. He'd just turned 4 a week prior. In this episode there is an interesting resonance between the attack spearheaded by the Japanese and an alluring Japanese bride whom my father watc…
  continue reading
 
The very first episode of The Memoir My Dad Wouldn't Write is an introduction to my Dad, Eugene B. Redmond, and to me (Treasure Shields Redmond), and to the REAL reason I feel so urgent about creating this project.--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/treasure-shields-redmond/support…
  continue reading
 
Loading …

Panduan Rujukan Pantas

Podcast Teratas