10 episodes

Hear artists, activists, scholars, and others from around the world talking about how their work intersects with social justice, and how we can confront the biggest social justice challenges of our time. Just Three is a project of the Center for the Study of Social Difference at Columbia University. Hosted by Catherine LaSota.

Just Three Center for the Study of Social Difference

    • Society & Culture
    • 5.0 • 8 Ratings

Hear artists, activists, scholars, and others from around the world talking about how their work intersects with social justice, and how we can confront the biggest social justice challenges of our time. Just Three is a project of the Center for the Study of Social Difference at Columbia University. Hosted by Catherine LaSota.

    JUST THREE: Noni Carter

    JUST THREE: Noni Carter

    In our ninth episode, and the final episode of season one of the Just Three podcast, host Catherine LaSota is in conversation with writer, scholar, and educator Noni Carter. Noni was a graduate coordinator for the Transnational Black Feminisms working group at the Center for the Study of Social Difference in 2019-20.

    Noni discusses her life in academic work, questioning the formative language, and the definitions of "human" and "re-humanizing," that is deeply entrenched in various practices. She asks, how can we relate to the world, the environment, and more in different ways? She also talks about the narratives that are told around young black women of color, and her own goals as a writer of YA and speculative fiction. Noni also brings up the importance of intersectionality and celebrating each other's differences, and the importance of slowing down and asking ourselves, as individuals, which of our deeply held beliefs are socially constructed.

    Noni Carter is a historical and speculative fiction author. She has published work in RSA Journal, Kweli Journal (forthcoming), and is the author of the YA historical fiction novel, Good Fortune (Simon & Schuster, 2010), winner of the Parent’s Choice Gold award. She is a 2016 graduate of Voices of Our Nation and the recipient of the 2019 PEN/Phyllis Naylor Working Writer Fellowship for her work-in-progress novel Womb Talk. Noni is currently finishing a PhD in French and Francophone studies with a focus on memory, gender, and slavery in the literary traditions of the Black diaspora, specifically the French Caribbean. She works as an editorial assistant with Small Axe Journal and as rapporteur for Columbia’s Cultural Memory Seminar. She served as a 2018-2019 graduate fellow for the Institute for Research on Women, Gender, and Sexuality, and as the 2019-20 graduate assistant for CSSD working group Transnational Black Feminisms.

    More about Noni Carter: https://www.nonicarter.com/
    More about Columbia University's Cultural Memory Seminar: https://universityseminars.columbia.edu/seminars/cultural-memory/
    More about Small Axe Journal: http://smallaxe.net/

    Learn more about the Transnational Black Feminisms working group here:
    https://www.socialdifference.columbia.edu/projects-/transnational-black-feminisms

    Website of the Center for the Study of Social Difference: https://www.socialdifference.columbia.edu/

    Music in our podcasts is by Blue Dot Sessions, and episodes are mixed by Craig Eley.

    Catherine LaSota, host of the JUST THREE podcast, is Executive Director of the Center for the Study of Social Difference at Columbia University.

    • 22 min
    JUST THREE: Jen Lewis

    JUST THREE: Jen Lewis

    In our eighth episode of the JUST THREE podcast, host Catherine LaSota talks with artist Jen Lewis, who contributed a chapter to and provided the cover art for the Palgrave Handbook of Critical Menstruation Studies, which was developed by the Menstrual Health and Gender Justice working group at the Center for the Study of Social Difference.

    In this conversation, Jen talks about her artistic process in working with photography and menstrual fluid, the problems with how we are socialized about menstruation, and the importance of engaging with other people in building our conversations around social justice issues.

    Jen Lewis is the Conceptual Artist and Menstrual Designer behind Beauty in Blood, a bold, transformative macrophotography and video art project that confronts social taboos pertaining to menstruation and the female body. She received her B.A. in the History of Art from the University of Michigan (Ann Arbor) in 2001. Her work has been displayed in group exhibitions internationally, such as Women at the Contemporary Art Institute of Detroit (United States), Period Pieces at the Urban Artroom (Sweden), the 9th Annual Juried Art Show at The Kinsey Institute (United States) and Art to Change the World at ArtPrize® (United States) and, most recently, the Nasty Women Exhibition at the Knockdown Center in New York City. Her work can also be seen in The Vagina Dispatches video series produced by The Guardian. Jen also curated a special theme exhibit for the joint conference of the Society for Menstrual Cycle Research and the Center for Women’s Health and Human Rights entitled “Widening the Cycle: A Menstrual Cycle and Reproductive Justice Art Show” in June 2015. Jen calls the Ann Arbor, Michigan area home.

    Learn more about Jen Lewis and her work here:
    www.beautyinblood.com
    Find out more about some of Jen's projects and collaborators here:
    www.wideningthecycle.com
    www.factoronto.org
    www.menstruationresearch.org

    Access the Palgrave Handbook of Critical Menstruation Studies here.

    Learn more about the Menstrual Health & Gender Justice working group here:
    www.socialdifference.columbia.edu/projects-/menstrual-health-and-gender-justice

    Website of the Center for the Study of Social Difference: https://www.socialdifference.columbia.edu/

    Music in our podcasts is by Blue Dot Sessions, and episodes are mixed by Craig Eley.

    Catherine LaSota, host of the JUST THREE podcast, is Executive Director of the Center for the Study of Social Difference at Columbia University.

    • 23 min
    JUST THREE: George Estreich

    JUST THREE: George Estreich

    In our seventh episode of the JUST THREE podcast, host Catherine LaSota talks with writer and musician George Estreich, who worked with Rachel Adams on the publication of Alison Piepmeier's book Unexpected: Parenting, Prenatal Testing, and Down Syndrome (NYU Press, February 2021), which was celebrated in a launch event hosted by the Motherhood & Technology working group at the Center for the Study of Social Difference.

    In this conversation, George talks about his experience as a parent and a writer, how writing and social justice intersect (as well as the limitations of writing), and the challenges we face in a society where the performance of intellect becomes a method of evaluating worth.

    George Estreich’s publications include a chapbook, Elegy for Dan Rabinowitz (Intertext, 1993) and a full-length poetry collection, Textbook Illustrations of the Human Body, which won the Gorsline Prize from Cloudbank Books (2003). The Shape of the Eye (SMU Press, 2011; Penguin, 2013), his memoir about raising a daughter with Down syndrome, received the 2012 Oregon Book Award in Creative Nonfiction. Estreich has published essays and articles in The New York Times, The Oregonian, Avidly, The American Medical Association Journal of Ethics, Salon, Tin House, and McSweeney’s Internet Tendency. His recent book Fables and Futures: Biotechnology, Disability, and the Stories we Tell Ourselves (MIT Press, 2019) was a finalist for the Oregon Book Award and was named a Best Science Book of 2019 by NPR's Science Friday. Fables and Futures explores the way we think and talk about human-directed biotechnology, from next-generation prenatal tests to CRISPR/Cas9, the genome-editing tool. Blending personal narrative and scholarship, Estreich argues that with biotech able to select and shape who we are, we need to imagine what it means to belong.

    Learn more about George Estreich and his work here:
    https://georgeestreich.com/

    More about Alison Piepmeier's book Unexpected, including a link to purchase from NYU Press, can be found here:
    https://nyupress.org/9781479879953/unexpected/

    Learn more about the Motherhood & Technology working group here:
    https://www.socialdifference.columbia.edu/projects-/motherhood-and-technology

    Website of the Center for the Study of Social Difference: https://www.socialdifference.columbia.edu/

    Music in our podcasts is by Blue Dot Sessions, and episodes are mixed by Craig Eley.

    Catherine LaSota, host of the JUST THREE podcast, is Executive Director of the Center for the Study of Social Difference at Columbia University.

    • 26 min
    JUST THREE: Alyssa A.L. James

    JUST THREE: Alyssa A.L. James

    In our sixth episode of the JUST THREE podcast, host Catherine LaSota talks with writer, podcaster, and anthropology graduate student Alyssa A.L. James, who works as the graduate coordinator for the Black Atlantic Ecologies working group at the Center for the Study of Social Difference.

    In this conversation, Alyssa talks about her research, the podcast she co-hosts with fellow Black woman Ph.D. student in Anthropology Brendane A. Tyne, and the fact that none of us are free until all of us are free. She also shares the following quote that she always keeps close by:

    “People need to see that, far from being an obstacle, the world's diversity of languages, religions and traditions is a great treasure, affording us precious opportunities to recognize ourselves in others.” (attributed to Youssou N'Dour)

    Alyssa A.L. James is a third-year anthropology Ph.D. student in the Department of Anthropology at Columbia University. She is a 2020 SSHRC Doctoral Fellow whose research centers the stakes of commodifying the colonial past in the contemporary revival of coffee production in Martinique. She is an editorial assistant for the Small Axe journal, and co-host of the Black feminist anthropology podcast, Zora's Daughters. In her free time, you'll find Alyssa dancing, travelling, and writing about it.

    Learn more about the Zora's Daughters podcast and listen to episodes by visiting their website here:
    https://zorasdaughters.com/

    You can also find Zora's Daughters on Apple, Spotify, and other podcast platforms. Follow them on Instagram here: https://www.instagram.com/zorasdaughters/

    Learn more about the Black Atlantic Ecologies working group, which is supported by the Earth Institute at Columbia University, here:
    https://www.socialdifference.columbia.edu/projects-/black-atlantic-ecologies

    Website of the Center for the Study of Social Difference: https://www.socialdifference.columbia.edu/

    Music in our podcasts is by Blue Dot Sessions, and episodes are mixed by Craig Eley.

    Catherine LaSota, host of the JUST THREE podcast, is Executive Director of the Center for the Study of Social Difference at Columbia University.

    • 13 min
    JUST THREE: Musu Bakoto Sawo

    JUST THREE: Musu Bakoto Sawo

    In our fifth episode of the JUST THREE podcast, host Catherine LaSota talks with activist Musu Bakoto Sawo, who contributed a chapter entitled Let Girls Be Girls - My Journey Into Forced Womanhood to the Palgrave Handbook of Critical Menstruation Studies, which was developed by the Menstrual Health and Gender Justice working group at the Center for the Study of Social Difference.

    In this conversation, Musu, who has been an activist since the age of 9, discusses issues of patriarchy and misuses of power that perpetuate the problem of gender violence, and she also shares her personal history as a child bride and female genital mutilation survivor.

    Musu Bakoto Sawo is the national coordinator for Think Young Women and the deputy executive secretary of the Truth, Reconciliation and Reparations Commission of The Gambia. She has gained in-depth knowledge of human rights through more than 17 years of activism in children and women’s rights, and her membership in different community-based organizations. She has translated this knowledge into capacity building, research, networking, program development, and practical engagement with human rights mechanisms, as well as with grassroots, national, and international organizations and platforms. She holds an LLM in human rights and democratization in Africa.

    Learn more about the the Think Young Women organization by visiting their social media platforms here:
    Twitter
    Facebook
    Instagram

    Learn more about the Menstrual Health and Gender Justice working group here, and find the open access Palgrave Handbook of Critical Menstruation Studies, for which Musu Bakoto Sawo contributed a personal narrative, here.

    Website of the Center for the Study of Social Difference: https://www.socialdifference.columbia.edu/

    Music in our podcasts is by Blue Dot Sessions, and episodes are mixed by Craig Eley.

    Catherine LaSota, host of the JUST THREE podcast, is Executive Director of the Center for the Study of Social Difference at Columbia University.

    • 28 min
    JUST THREE: Deepthi Sukumar

    JUST THREE: Deepthi Sukumar

    In our fourth episode of the JUST THREE podcast, and our first episode of 2021, host Catherine LaSota talks with activist Deepthi Sukumar, who contributed a chapter entitled Caste is My Period to the Palgrave Handbook of Critical Menstruation Studies, which was developed by the Menstrual Health and Gender Justice working group at the Center for the Study of Social Difference.

    In this conversation, Deepthi talks about her decades-long work with the Safai Karmachari Andolan organization, a movement for the elimination of manual scavenging. Manual scavening is the illegal practice of cleaning, carrying and disposing of human excreta from dry latrines or sewers, often done by people who fall lowest in the caste hierarchy of India. Deepthi discusses her work to empower women who are manual scavengers to stand up for their rights, and she offers some powerful examples of social transformation.

    Deepthi Sukumar is a Dalit woman and an activist. She has been working for the liberation and rehabilitation of women engaged in manual scavenging for more than two decades. Her parents migrated to the city of Chennai from a remote area in Andhra Pradesh for education and employment. She travels widely to villages and small towns to meet Dalit women living in diffcult circumstances and who have become victims of human rights violations.

    Learn more about the Safai Karmachari Andolan organziation here.

    Learn more about the Menstrual Health and Gender Justice working group here, and find the open access Palgrave Handbook of Critical Menstruation Studies, for which Deepthi Sukumar contributed a personal narrative, here.

    Website of the Center for the Study of Social Difference: https://www.socialdifference.columbia.edu/

    Music in our podcasts is by Blue Dot Sessions, and episodes are mixed by Craig Eley.

    Catherine LaSota, host of the JUST THREE podcast, is Executive Director of the Center for the Study of Social Difference at Columbia University.

    • 26 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
8 Ratings

8 Ratings

jlolewis ,

Digestible, informative, & thought provoking

Great format to learn more about current social justice issues through a variety of perspectives and voices. Host Catherine LaSoto uses a fresh, simple interview style to delve into BIG questions about human rights and social issues around the world. Definitely a worthwhile follow for anyone concerned with ethical, sustainable progress an social change.

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