
Fifty Feminist States: Interviews with Feminist Activists and Artists Across the U.S. (Amelia Hruby)
Explore every episode of Fifty Feminist States: Interviews with Feminist Activists and Artists Across the U.S.
Pub. Date | Title | Duration | |
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21 Sep 2018 | Introducing Fifty Feminist States! | 00:00:55 | |
Welcome to Fifty Feminist States! Subscribe now and season one will launch on September 27, 2018. And if you want updates in the meantime, follow us on Instagram at @fiftyfeministstates. | |||
27 Sep 2018 | Episode 1 - Doulas, birth work, and home births in the state ranked 49th for reproductive rights | 00:20:59 | |
Season one of Fifty Feminist States is here! In this episode, the feminist road trip begins in Nebraska, where Amelia talks to Coop, Amber and Alex about doulas, birth work, and home births in the state ranked 49th for reproductive rights. | |||
04 Oct 2018 | Episode 2 - From the history of suffrage to the contemporary ski scene in Wyoming | 00:20:59 | |
In this episode, we have two conversations—one with Professor Colleen Denney about the history of women’s suffrage in Wyoming along with the current unequal conditions there for women, and another with ski guide Jessica Baker about succeeding in the male-dominated field of guiding and extreme sports. | |||
11 Oct 2018 | Episode 3 - Body positivity & fat feminist activism and performance art with Amy Pence-Brown | 00:25:18 | |
In this episode, we hear from Amy Pence-Brown about her body positive art and activism, including her 2015 Stand for Self Love and the Rad Camps she runs for women and teens. | |||
18 Oct 2018 | Episode 4 - Feminist politics in the Montana senate and the Montana Racial Equity Project | 00:33:45 | |
In this episode, we hear from Diane Sands, a current senator in the Montana senate who has a long history of feminist activism in the state. She discusses the progressive history that has made Montana one of the more radical Mid/Mountain-west states and the work she’s done to keep it that way. Amelia also speaks with Aspen Hougan, a volunteer for the Montana Racial Equity Project, about the reality of racial injustice in Montana and building racial literacy in the state. | |||
01 Nov 2018 | Episode 6 - Running for political office for the first time in South Dakota | 00:14:34 | |
In this episode, we hear from Toni Miller and Rachel Willson, two South Dakota women currently running for offices in South Dakota’s state legislature. Hear what inspired them to run and why they’re hopeful for their campaigns and the future of South Dakota. | |||
08 Nov 2018 | Episode 7 - Feminist podcasting, yoga in academic settings, trivia for reproductive justice, and immigration in the Trump era — all in the Twin Cities | 00:42:51 | |
In this episode, we hear from Raechel and Melody of the Feminist Killjoy, PhDs podcast, Professor Beth Barila, Cheeky Kitty Minneapolis, and immigration attorney Julia Decker — all feminists in the Twin Cities who work on different projects surrounding gender justice. This episode is jam-packed with ideas and inspiration for feminist activism and a great portrait of how much work just one (or really two here) city can hold. | |||
12 Feb 2019 | Season two trailer & introducing our theme song! | 00:05:15 | |
We're back! Tune in for a preview of what's coming up this spring and to hear the premiere of the Fifty Feminist States theme song by Danielle Sines + Jessica Neria! | |||
14 Feb 2019 | Episode 8 - Queer family + native identity in Centre County, PA | 00:32:13 | |
In this episode, Amelia travels to Pennsylvania and speaks to Brooklyn and Sarah -- two activists and artists from Chicago who are living in Centre County, PA. Tune in for a conversation about trans + queer identity, native + indigenous politics, and what it means to make a home in a place that isn’t particularly welcoming to you. | |||
21 Feb 2019 | Episode 9 - Organizing for Palestinian liberation with Dr. Ashley Bohrer | 00:35:28 | |
In this episode, Amelia travels to Syracuse, New York to speak with Dr. Ashley Bohrer about her work with the Center for Jewish Nonviolence. We learn a lot about Palestine, Israel, and contemporary Jewish identity in the US. | |||
28 Feb 2019 | Episode 10 - Apothecaries and climate change in Vermont with Emma Merritt and Lucia Green-Weiskel | 00:30:37 | |
In this episode, Amelia travels to Vermont to speak with herbalist Emma Merritt of Railyard Apothecary in Burlington, VT + PhD candidate Lucia Green-Weiskel, an academic and mother living in Johnson, VT. Together, we think about how we can reshape our relationship with plants and the planet through cooperative + domestic labor. | |||
07 Mar 2019 | Episode 11 - Refugee resettlement in the whitest state in the US with In Her Presence | 00:25:39 | |
In this episode, Amelia travels to Portland, Maine and speaks to Claudette Sara Ndayininahaze and Abusana Micky Bondo about their organization In Her Presence which provides resources for refugee and immigrant women in Maine. | |||
14 Mar 2019 | Episode 12 - Finding work and community aligned with feminist values in seacoast New Hampshire with Crystal Paradis | 00:18:25 | |
In this episode, Amelia travels to New Hampshire to speak with Crystal Paradis, founder of Feminist Oasis. They chat about the challenges of finding work that’s aligned with your values and what takes to build feminist community. Crystal also shares a few fun (and not so fun) facts about New Hampshire politics. | |||
21 Mar 2019 | Episode 13 - Witching the vote + decolonizing white witchcraft with Lakshmi Ramgopal and Witch the Vote | 00:48:51 | |
In this episode, Amelia travels to Massachusetts to learn a whole lot about witchcraft and political resistance from artist + academic Lakshmi Ramgopal and Paige + Cheryl of Witch the Vote. | |||
28 Mar 2019 | Episode 14 - Fatventuring in Rhode Island with Samantha Puc | 00:30:48 | |
In this episode, Amelia travels to Providence, RI to speak with Samantha Puc, the co-editor of Fatventure Magazine about what it means to make a magazine about fatness that rejects diet culture and the process of coming out as fat. | |||
04 Apr 2019 | Episode 15 - Defending Alisha Walker and decriminalizing sex work with Red from Support Ho(s)e | 00:52:24 | |
In this episode, Amelia travels to back to New York to talk to Support Ho(s)e organizer Red about their work organizing for the defense of Alisha Walker and what it really means to support sex work and sex workers. | |||
11 Apr 2019 | Episode 16 - New modes of seeing and being seen with Alexandra Thomas | 00:40:06 | |
In this final episode of season two, Amelia travels to Connecticut to talk to activist, academic + museum educator Alexandra Thomas about her research on Black studies + visual culture and her fat feminist politics, including her call for feminist groups to eat cupcakes together and go be loud in museums. | |||
16 May 2019 | Episode 17 - Building women-owned businesses in rural North Carolina with Danielle Baker and Caroline Stephenson | 00:34:30 | |
In the first of three special episodes from northeastern North Carolina, Amelia interviews Danielle Baker of Bakers' Peanuts in Roxobel, NC and Caroline Stephenson of Cultivator book store in Murfreesboro, NC. | |||
23 May 2019 | Episode 18 - Listening to rural voices and combatting classism in Woodland, NC with Ashleigh Phillips | 00:47:25 | |
In the second of three special episodes from northeastern North Carolina, Amelia speaks to Ashleigh Bryant Phillips about her hometown of Woodland, NC, how her writing has developed there, and why we should be listening to and cultivating the creativity of rural voices. | |||
30 May 2019 | Episode 19 - From concerned community members to outraged activists—environmental grassroots organizing against coal ash in Northampton County, NC | 00:45:33 | |
In the third of three special episodes from northeastern North Carolina, Amelia speaks to Joyce Buffalo, Wanda Flythe, and Deborah Ferruccio about their successful grassroots campaign to keep a coal ash storage facility out of their county. | |||
01 Oct 2019 | Episode 20 - Writing as a way to make sense of Mixed Feelings with Alyson Thompson | 00:35:06 | |
In the first of two episodes from Missouri, Amelia interviews Alyson Thompson, a St. Louis activist and writer. They chat about Alyson’s work with The 4A Project and her new organization Mixed Feelings, as well as how her writing practice has helped her better understand and create community around her experience as a mixed race person. | |||
03 Oct 2019 | Episode 21 - Rethinking binaries through food and/as feminist art with S. E. Nash (Missouri) | 00:25:37 | |
S.E. Nash is an artist and educator in Kansas City, MO. In this second episode from Missouri, hear Amelia talk to Sean about how he integrates food and fermentation into his art practice to challenge binary ways of thinking about gender and life. | |||
10 Oct 2019 | Episode 23 - A physician’s perspective on abortion access in Kansas and Missouri with Dr. Valerie French | 00:32:16 | |
In this Kansas City episode, Amelia speaks to Dr. Valerie French about her life in Missouri and her work as an OBGYN in Kansas. They talk about abortion procedures, patient care, and issues around recent bills in the Missouri legislature that restrict abortion access. | |||
17 Sep 2019 | Welcome to season three! | 00:08:58 | |
Welcome back to the Fifty Feminist States podcast! In this season three preview, hear Amelia’s reflections on traveling over the summer and learn more about what's coming up on the podcast this fall. | |||
15 Oct 2019 | Episode 24 - Transnational Trans organizing from Arkansas to Latin America with inTRANSitive | 00:42:12 | |
In Little Rock, Arkansas, Amelia speaks with Diego Barrera, one of the cofounders of inTRANSitive, a collective founded in 2017 to uplift Trans voices in Arkansas through community building, organizing, and political education. Tune in to hear their conversation about Trans migrant stories, transnational actions for Trans liberation, and what it means to call a place home. | |||
17 Oct 2019 | Episode 25 - Design for social change and business for better communities in Northwest Arkansas with Marty Lane & Hannah Withers | 00:57:56 | |
In this second episode from Arkansas, Amelia visits Fayetteville, AR and talks to Marty Lane, a graphic design professor and activist, and Hannah Withers, a local business owner and organizer, about their community work for social change. Tune in to learn more about feminist pedagogy and designing with marginalized communities and to hear one of our most candid conversations about feminism yet. | |||
08 Oct 2019 | Episode 22 - Supporting and empowering Trans Women of Color to live their best lives in Memphis, TN with Jasmine Tasaki | 00:35:50 | |
In the first of two episodes from Memphis, TN, Amelia speaks to Jasmine Tasaki, the founder and executive director of WeCareTN, a non-profit organization that works to support and empower Trans Women of Color through job-readiness programs, direct financial support, and a variety of mutual aid programs founded on healing justice principles. Tune in to learn about Jasmine’s life and work, as well as the community that has supported and uplifted her. | |||
22 Oct 2019 | Episode 26 - Learning from the first and only reproductive justice organization in Memphis, TN with Cherisse Scott | 00:47:17 | |
In the second of two episodes from Memphis, TN, Amelia speaks to Cherisse Scott the founder of SisterReach, Tennessee’s first and only reproductive justice organization. Tune in to hear Cherisse’s story including her crisis pregnancy center experience, the path that led her to found SisterReach, and how she was recently silenced by the Tennessee Senate. | |||
29 Oct 2019 | Episode 27 - Visiting the only queer feminist bookstore in Mississippi with Jaime Harker | 00:36:11 | |
This episode takes Amelia to Water Valley, Mississippi to talk to Jaime Harker, the owner of Violet Valley Bookstore, the only queer feminist bookstore in MS. They talk about feminist presses, how books create community, and why it’s so important to cultivate queer spaces in the South. | |||
31 Oct 2019 | Episode 28 - Exploring the past and present of women in aviation with the 99s | 00:21:19 | |
In this episode, Amelia visits the 99s Museum of Women Pilots in Oklahoma City to speak with Shaylyn Sawyer, the museum manager. They discuss the global history of women in aviation, how the 99s has empowered women pilots for 90 years (!!), and why the field is still so male-dominated. | |||
05 Nov 2019 | Episode 29 - Cultivating wellness for BLK PEARLs and seeing the South clearly with Tori Wolfe-Sisson | 00:45:22 | |
In the first of two episodes from Alabama, Amelia speaks with Tori Wolfe-Sisson in Birmingham about BLK PEARL, a learning and leisure alliance that cultivates wellness through visibility and economic development with Black, Brown, Indigenous, Transgender & Queer Women. They spend the first half of the interview discussing Tori’s organizing work, and then have a really candid conversation about the stories people tell about Alabama and how to look beyond stereotypical narratives of the South. Plus Tori gives us an audio tour of forgotten and destroyed monuments in Birmingham and Montgomery. | |||
07 Nov 2019 | Episode 30 - Podcasting for the feminist revolution with Adrienne van der Valk of Feminist Hotdog | 00:37:14 | |
In this special podcast crossover episode, we hear from Adrienne van der Valk of Feminist Hotdog about what it’s like to be a feminist in Alabama and how podcasting can be a tool for the feminist revolution. | |||
12 Nov 2019 | Episode 31 - Women’s colleges and global citizens with JLP Prince | 00:26:07 | |
In this episode, Amelia catches up with JLP Prince, the Director of Community, Civic and Global Engagement at Agnes Scott College. They talk about the strengths of women’s colleges (Amelia and JLP went to the same one for undergrad!), how to empower women to become global citizens, and even a bit about queer, feminist geek culture. | |||
14 Nov 2019 | Episode 32 - Spoken word poetry, discourse & resilience with Dr. Alix Olson | 00:30:31 | |
In this second episode from Georgia, Amelia interviews Dr. Alix Olson about her past as a spoken word poet and her present-day position teaching Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Emory University. They talk about how spoken word poetry and queer theory have changed since the 90s, Alix’s journey from activist to academic, and the challenging implications of the discourse of resilience. | |||
21 Nov 2019 | Episode 34 - Poetry as power and how spaces shape lives with Hannah Drake | 00:41:49 | |
In this second episode from Kentucky (and the final episode of season 3!), we hear from Hannah Drake, an author and activist from Louisville who writes poetry about race, gender, and social justice. She talks about how she started writing, shares her experiences in spaces not made for her, and reads one of her most-requested poems for us. She also reminds listeners of the problems with White Feminism and why social justice work isn’t just about “resisting our way back to comfort.” | |||
19 Nov 2019 | Episode 33 - Feminist community, family, and art in Louisville, KY | 00:41:07 | |
In this first episode from Kentucky, we hear from visual artist Laurie Blayney and small business owner Hannah Jones in our very first mother-daughter interview! They discuss what they love about Louisville, the struggles the city faces, and the feminist activism happening there. And at the end, they share one thing they’ve learned about being a feminist from each other. | |||
12 Dec 2019 | 25 states celebration! | 00:23:40 | |
In this very special bonus episode, Amelia celebrates hitting the halfway milestone of this fifty state project! Tune in to hear the story of how it all started AND to learn what guests from the first three seasons are up to now. | |||
13 Feb 2020 | Episode 35 - Food as family and how restaurants support and are supported by immigrant women with Bini Pradhan of Bini's Kitchen | 00:22:40 | |
Welcome to season four, Fifty Feminist States fam! This season we’ll be visiting the West Coast, and in this episode, Amelia travels to San Francisco to visit Bini Pradhan of Bini’s Kitchen. Tune in to learn about why Bini immigrated from Nepal to the US, how her Nepalese restaurant supports the lives of womxn and immigrants across the Bay Area, and to hear more about La Cocina, the restaurant incubator that made her work possible. | |||
20 Feb 2020 | Episode 36 - Forgotten feminists and Japanese-American culture in the Pacific Northwest with Mayumi Tsutakawa | 00:39:29 | |
In this episode, Amelia speaks with Mayumi Tsutakawa, a Japanese-American writer and curator from Seattle. They discuss her family’s influence on the art world, her career as a journalist and curator, and her new lecture “Washington’s Undiscovered Feminists” that tells the stories of five remarkable, but often unsung, women from Washington. Mayumi also reflects on the past and present of the feminist movement, and shares about her family’s history at Japanese internment camps through the story of her maternal grandmother. | |||
27 Feb 2020 | Episode 37 - Creating an app for plus-sized folks to know if we can ALL GO with Rebecca Alexander | 00:36:23 | |
In this episode, Amelia speaks with Rebecca Alexander, the founder of AllGo, a review app where plus-size people rate the comfort and accessibility of public spaces. Tune in to hear her discuss why she started this company, challenges she’s faced securing funding, and the many creative endeavors her team’s launched to bring this project to life. | |||
28 Feb 2020 | Episode 38 - Body sovereignty, indigeneity, and learning to pronounce Łush Kumtux Tumtum with Shilo George | 00:39:25 | |
In this episode, Amelia speaks with Shilo George, a Southern Cheyenne-Arapaho woman, Queer SuperFat Activist, and founder of Łush Kumtux Tumtum Consulting. They discuss body sovereignty, Native culture, and healing historical trauma. | |||
01 May 2020 | Episode 39 - Fly fishing for equity with Erica Nelson | 00:40:17 | |
Learn about fly fishing for equity from Brown Folks Fishing ambassador and self-taught angler Erica Nelson! In her conversation with Amelia, they discuss how Erica learned to fish, how being Native shapes her relationship to the land she fishes on, and why all feminism needs to be intersectional. | |||
08 May 2020 | Episode 40 - Tattooing and/as feminist practice with Amy Shapiro-Esswein | 00:32:14 | |
Learn about tattooing and the visual practice of Denver artist Amy Shapiro! In her conversation with Amelia, they discuss how Amy learned to tattoo, the status of women in the industry, her photo and music projects, and how being a parent has shifted her practice. | |||
15 May 2020 | Episode 41 - Supporting immigrant communities and fighting detention centers with Allegra Love of the Santa Fe Dreamers Project | 00:34:47 | |
Learn about the work of Santa Fe Dreamers Project as they nurture immigrant communities, fight detention centers, and support trans migrants in New Mexico. In this interview, Executive Director Allegra Love talks about how hard her team works to protect their clients from the depravity of ICE and the American immigration system, the ways COVID-19 has impacted her work, and how much we have to learn from the resilience of immigrants. | |||
22 May 2020 | Episode 42 - Unpacking the role of the feminist artist and the healing power of portraiture with Sarah Stolar | 00:43:14 | |
Today we’re sharing two special episodes from two special feminist artists in New Mexico! Hear from Sarah Stolar, an interdisciplinary artist living in Santa Fe who paints monumental portraits of survivors and creates intricate film and video installations about girlhood, and Rosemary Meza-DesPlas, a visual and performance artist living in Farmington, New Mexico who brings her Latina heritage and her hair to her mixed media work and her poetry performances. Tune in to both episodes to hear them reflect on their artistic practices, their feminist practices, and what brings the two together. | |||
29 May 2020 | Episode 44 - Exploring what we’re born into with Gina Giordano and Tara Brooke of Doula Trainings International and Born Into This | 00:41:01 | |
Learn about the role of full-spectrum doulas in our reproductive lives and how doula work is transforming during COVID-19 with Gina Giordano and Tara Brooke of Doula Trainings International (DTI) and Born Into This. In their conversation with Amelia, they discuss why they founded DTI, what a doula is, how their commitments to reproductive and social justice led them to start Born Into This, how birth disparities connect to health disparities, and more. This is an amazing conversation for anyone who’s been born (that’s all of us!), and we hope you’ll tune in. | |||
12 Jun 2020 | Episode 45 - Harm reduction in Las Vegas and needle exchange during COVID-19 with Chelsi of Trac-B Exchange | 00:32:13 | |
What is harm reduction and how do needle exchanges help communities? In this episode, Amelia speaks with Chelsi Cheatom of Trac-B Exchange in Las Vegas, Nevada. They discuss the many programs the Exchange offers including syringe vending machines and sex worker outreach and training, as well as how harm reduction work has shifted to respond to COVID-19. | |||
17 Jun 2020 | Episode 46 - Illustration for intersectional liberation with Kaile Akina | 00:35:08 | |
It’s the end of season five! In this episode, Amelia speaks with illustrator Kaile Akina about her journey as an artist, her experience as a woman of color in Utah, and the role and status of feminism there. Tune in to learn more about Kaile’s work and to hear what’s next for Fifty Feminist States. | |||
06 Oct 2020 | An Update, A New Book & 20,000 Downloads! | 00:12:33 | |
It's been too long, Fifty Feminist States fam! This week Amelia is back from hiatus with an update about the podcast, news about her brand new book Fifty Feminist Mantras, and a BIG THANK YOU for helping us hit 20,000 downloads! | |||
20 Oct 2020 | Episode 47 - Decolonizing Yoga with Susanna Barkataki | 00:48:12 | |
Welcome to season six! Fifty Feminist States is back for a mini-season with three very special conversations about healing, white supremacy, and voting this fall. In this episode, Amelia interviews Susanna Barkataki, a speaker, teacher, author, and yoga unity activist living and working on unceded Seminole land in Florida. They discuss what it’s like to be an Indian woman practicing and teaching yoga in the U.S., the ways in which yoga succeeds and fails as a feminist practice, and the necessary steps for decolonizing yoga in the West. It’s such a powerful conversation and a beautiful sneak peek into Susanna’s upcoming book. | |||
27 Oct 2020 | Episode 48 - Coming Home to our Bodies with Mary Grace Allerdice | 00:36:10 | |
In this episode, Amelia speaks with Mary Grace Allerdice, a dancer, astrologer and healer living and working on unceded Muscogee (Creek) land in Georgia. They discuss what it means to be a home/body, their shared love for Patti Smith, what the planets teach us about social justice, and why we’re so alienated from each other and the earth. Tune in to this one for a big heap of healing magic. | |||
03 Nov 2020 | Episode 49 - Revisiting Suffragette City with Fiona Davis, MJ Rose, and Katherine Chen | 00:28:22 | |
In this episode, Amelia speaks with Fiona Davis, MJ Rose, and Katherine Chen, contributors to the new historical fiction collection Stories from Suffragette City. Together they celebrate the book’s pub day, discuss the escapist and critical ways we can revisit the past in historical fiction, and talk about their plans for voting and Election Day. | |||
18 Feb 2021 | Episode 50 - Helping Communities Heal from Lead Exposure with LaTricea Adams of Black Millennials for Flint | 00:29:33 | |
In this episode, Amelia speaks with LaTricea Adams, CEO and cofounder of Black Millennials for Flint. LaTricea share the origin story of the organization, what she wishes more people knew about lead, and why environmental justice is a critical component of racial justice and gender justice activism. | |||
24 Feb 2021 | Episode 51 - Intersectional Environmentalism with Leah Thomas | 00:28:50 | |
In this episode, Amelia speaks with Leah Thomas aka @greengirlleah, the cofounder of Intersectional Environmentalist. Leah shares how she became an eco-creative and why she coined the term “intersectional environmentalism.” They also chat about cannabis equity, Leah’s upcoming book, and why we should all talk more about Kimberlé Crenshaw. | |||
18 May 2021 | Episode 52 - Introducing...Fifty Feminist States Podcast Fellow Mary L. Chang | 00:21:38 | |
In this episode, Amelia speaks with Fifty Feminist States podcast fellow Mary L. Chang! Amelia & Mary talk about how Mary got into music writing, common misconceptions about Mary and her work, the importance of empathy amidst diversity, and a few of Mary’s heroes. | |||
19 May 2021 | Episode 53 - Introducing...Fifty Feminist States Podcast Fellow L'Oreal Thompson Payton | 00:20:39 | |
In this episode, Amelia speaks with Fifty Feminist States podcast fellow L’Oreal Thompson Payton! Amelia & L’Oreal talk about L’Oreal’s book project on “trusting your dopeness,” her background as a freelance writer, how she deals with imposter syndrome, and their favorite Beyonce songs. | |||
20 May 2021 | Episode 54 - Introducing...Fifty Feminist States Podcast Fellow Angie Yglesias | 00:19:31 | |
In this episode, Amelia speaks with Fifty Feminist States podcast fellow Angie Yglesias! Amelia & Angie talk about Angie’s activist experience, why diversity & representation are so important in storytelling, and accessibility and empowerment through media. | |||
15 Jun 2021 | Episode 55 - Starting to Remember the Real You with Mary L. Chang | 00:20:39 | |
In this episode, 2021 Fifty Feminist States Podcast Fellow Mary L. Chang discusses how to get started in recognizing and understanding your authentic self. She encourages all listeners to take the time to be honest with themselves about the things in their world that are no longer in alignment with the person they are today. Mary shares important realizations about long-held beliefs that she absorbed from outside influences, how they affected her self-esteem and career path, and how saying goodbye to these beliefs has given her newfound freedom to make her own choices and live her best life. Mary also talks about the importance of identifying the passions that light you up, as they hold the key to your happiness. | |||
03 Sep 2021 | Episode 56 - Reproductive Health as a Social Justice Issue with Regina Townsend | 00:35:35 | |
In this episode, Fifty Feminist States Fellow L’Oreal Thompson Payton interviews Regina Townsend, aka @brokenbrownegg. Regina shares her infertility journey and why she created The Broken Brown Egg, “an infertility advocacy blog and source of connection for individuals seeking a personal story of infertility written from the African-American viewpoint.” L’Oreal and Regina also chat about what it’s like being Black women navigating infertility, why reproductive health should be considered a social justice issue and how this is all about much more than babies. | |||
10 Sep 2021 | Episode 57 - Farewell for now, friends | 00:18:48 | |
In this episode, Fifty Feminist States host Amelia Hruby shares the bittersweet news that Fifty Feminist States is ending, and this is the final episode. Listen as she explains how and why she came to this decision, looks back to the very first episode of the show, and shares her reasonings, reflections, and gratitude for this journey. The archive of episodes will live on and be available for feminists in generations to come to learn and be inspired. There are costs associated with keeping the podcast archive online, so if you’d like to support our ongoing costs, you can donate to our Glow.fm page. We're forever grateful for your support of this show & hope to be back in your earbuds in new formats in the future. In the meantime, we'll see you on the road, wild ones. | |||
22 May 2020 | Episode 43 - Bringing her hair and her Latina heritage to her art with Rosemary Meza-DesPlas | 00:46:48 | |
Today we’re sharing two special episodes from two special feminist artists in New Mexico! Hear from Rosemary Meza-DesPlas, a visual and performance artist living in Farmington, New Mexico who brings her Latina heritage and her hair to her mixed media work and her poetry performances, and Sarah Stolar, an interdisciplinary artist living in Santa Fe who paints monumental portraits of survivors and creates intricate film and video installations about girlhood. Tune in to both episodes to hear them reflect on their artistic practices, their feminist practices, and what brings the two together. |