Season 03ish - Episode 02 (Crossover): Zora's Daughters

In the second episode of this mini-season, "Crossover," Anar Parikh chats with Alyssa James and Brendane Tynes, the creators of Zora's Daughters--a society and culture podcast that uses Black feminist anthropology to think about race, politics, and popular culture.  Episode Transcript Closed-Caption  What We Talked About: Tynes, Brendane. 2020. "How Do We Listen to the Living." Anthropology News, August 31.  Zora's Daughters' Reaction to How Not To Travel Like a Basic B*tch - Zora's Daughters Semester 2 Episode 16 - "The Empire Claps Back" Credits:  Associate Editor / Executive Producer - Anar Parikh Intro/Outro: "Waiting" by Crowander" Sound Effects: Mike Koenig

Om Podcasten

Anthropological Airwaves is the official podcast of American Anthropologist, the flagship journal of the American Anthropological Association. It is a venue for highlighting the polyphony of voices across the discipline’s four fields and the infinite—and often overlapping—subfields within them. Through conversations, experiments in sonic ethnography, ethnographic journalism, and other (primarily but not exclusively) aural formats, Anthropological Airwaves endeavors to explore the conceptual, methodological, and pedagogical issues that shape anthropology’s past, present, and future; experiment with new ways of conversing, listening, and asking questions; and collaboratively and collectively push the boundaries of what constitutes anthropological knowledge production. Anthropological Airwaves shares the journal’s commitment to advancing research on the archaeological, biological, linguistic, and sociocultural aspects of the human experience by featuring the work of those who study and practice anthropology within and beyond the academy.