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Kathleen Collins

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Indoor VoicesIndoor VoicesEpisode 110: The big questionsIn collaboration with the John Jay College Office for the Advancement of Research, Kathleen moderates a conversation about the value of the humanities with colleagues David Munns (History), Allison Pease (Provost & Senior Vice President of Academic Affairs), Belinda Rincon (Latin American and Latinx Studies and English), and Dean Ringel (History). A bonus segment includes a conversation with Dr. Charissa Che, English department faculty at John Jay. Visit IndoorVoicesPodcast.com for more information.2025-04-301h 42Indoor VoicesIndoor VoicesEpisode 109: Kathleen Collins on common unhappinessKathleen discusses her novel, Study in Hysteria (Vine Leaves Press, 2024), with Dr. April Burns, Associate Professor of Psychology at Guttman Community College. This CUNY Academy Book Talk was recorded live at the CUNY Graduate Center on March 5, 2025. Visit IndoorVoicesPodcast.com for more information.2025-03-2958 minWinn TucsonWinn TucsonGuests - Chris Burgard, Chris CollinsGuests - Chris Burgard, Chris Collins Finally, the election for Proposition 414 has arrived. The question before voters is simple: do we give the city $800 million, or do we say no and keep our money in our own pockets? Our guest today is Chris Burgard, Chief Security Officer for His Glory Ministries. Chris is the director of the groundbreaking miniseries "The War on Truth," a sequel to "Capital Punishment: Everything They Told Me About J6 Was a Lie." Chris Collins, Executive Pastor at Oro Valley Church of the Nazarene. The church is facing opposition...2025-03-111h 31Drunk Black HistoryDrunk Black HistoryDuane Jones (w/ Jazzmin and Kathleen from "Girl, That's Scary")Get tickets for the upcoming Black History Month LIVE "Drunk Black History" shows in LA (2/21) and NYC (2/28) at www.drunkblackhistory.com! Livestream tickets are available for the LA show! On this month's episode, Brandon is joined by podcasters Jazzmin and Kathleen from the "Girl, That's Scary" podcast to discuss the short career of groundbreaking actor, Duane Jones. Guest Links:  - https://www.girlthatsscary.com/- https://www.instagram.com/girlthatsscary/- https://x.com/GirlThatsScaryDBH Links:- https://www.instagram.com/o...2025-01-0354 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesEpisode 103: Adam Berlin on men and movie-moves Kathleen talks with John Jay College English professor Adam Berlin about his new short story collection, All Around They’re Taking Down the Lights (Livingston Press 2024). Visit IndoorVoicesPodcast.com for more.2024-11-1250 minArroe Collins All Level Sports...Arroe Collins All Level Sports...Directors Kathleen Jayme And Asia Youngman From ESPN's I'm Just Here For The RiotESPN introduces its newest 30 for 30 documentary film, I’m Just Here for the Riot, premiering Tuesday, June 4, at 7:30pm ET on ESPN and streaming on ESPN+.On June 15, 2011, the Canucks’ Game 7 Stanley Cup Finals loss to the Boston Bruins sparks a massive riot in downtown Vancouver. Police cars are overturned and burned, windows are shattered, stores are looted, and waves of young people are caught up in the mayhem. I’m Just Here For The Riot chronicles the aftermath of an event captured on hundreds of cell phone cameras; the rioters are outed, shamed, and see their lives...2024-06-2109 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesEpisode 92: Louis Bury on the way things go Kathleen talks with Louis Bury, associate professor of English at Hostos Community College and author of The Way Things Go (punctum books, 2023). Visit indoorvoicespodcast.com for more.2024-02-121h 16Behind the BooksBehind the BooksThe Power of Nostalgia - Interview with Kathleen CollinsBob and Anna interview Kelly Newman from the Circulation Team at the Hopewell Branch, as well as Kathleen Collins about her debut novel, Study in Hysteria.  Intro and Welcome 3:01 Interview with Kelly Newman 13:50 Programs and Services @ MCLS 18:22 Interview with Kathleen Collins 32:59 Summary and Closing Show Notes: Learn more about Kathleen Collins and her work at https://katcoindustries.com/. The MCLS Event Calendar is located at www.eventkeeper.com/mars/xpages/M/MCL/EKP.cfm. For more information about programming for Black History Month @ MCLS, please see https://mcl.org/black-history-month/. 2024-02-0736 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesEpisode 91: Dara Byrne on making way for inspirationKathleen talks with Dara Byrne, Dean of Macaulay Honors College. Visit IndoorVoicesPodcast.com for more.2023-12-1751 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesEpisode 90: Academic librarians on popular cultureKathleen talks with her CUNY librarian colleagues - Vikki Terrile, Assistant Professor at the Graduate School of Library and Information Studies at Queens College and Stephanie Margolin, Associate Professor and librarian at Hunter College – about pop culture scholarship in the academy and in their library careers.2023-10-1957 minavethyldalibraryavethyldalibraryPDF Reader - PDF File The Afterlives of Kathleen Collins A Black Woman Filmmaker's Search for New Life (Studies in the Cinema of the Black Diaspora) PDF Document**Download The Afterlives of Kathleen Collins: A Black Woman Filmmaker's Search for New Life (Studies in the Cinema of the Black Diaspora) Full Edition,Full Version,Full Book** by L. H. Stallings Reading Now at : https://happyreadingebook.club/?book=0253059038 OR DOWNLOAD EBOOK NOW! [PDF] Download PDF Reader - PDF File The Afterlives of Kathleen Collins: A Black Woman Filmmaker's Search for New Life (Studies in the Cinema of the Black Diaspora) PDF, Document Ebook | READ ONLINE Download PDF Reader - PDF File The...2023-09-2700 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesEpisode 85: Samantha Majic on celebrity feminismKathleen talks with Samantha Majic, Professor of Political Science at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, about her new book, Lights, Camera, Feminism: Celebrities and Anti-trafficking Politics. Visit indoorvoicespodcast.com for more.2023-06-0545 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesEpisode 84: Andrew Sidman on Quantitative Literacy and Reasoning   Kathleen talks with John Jay's Interim Dean of Academic Programs and Professor of Political Science Andrew Sidman about the college's strategic plan initiative focusing on quantitative literacy and reasoning. Visit indoorvoicespodcast.com for more.2023-05-1743 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesEpisode 76: Kate Brandt on adult literacyKathleen talks with Kate Brandt, Professional Development Coordinator in CUNY’s Adult Literacy/ HSE/ESL Programs. Visit indoorvoicespodcast.com to learn more.2022-09-1144 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesEpisode 72: David Munns on living in spaceJohn Jay College Associate Professor of History David Munns talks about his co-authored book, Far Beyond the Moon ; A History of Life Support Systems in the Space Age, with Richard Relkin, John Jay’s Director of Media Relations. Visit us at IndoorVoicesPodcast.com 2022-04-1450 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesStudent & professor talk about languageDr. Rebecca Shapiro is an Associate Professor of English and Linguistics in the English Department at New York City College of Technology and the author of Fixing Babel: An Historical Anthology of Applied English Lexicography. She talks with former student Estephanie Montero about language learning. Visit us at indoorvoicespodcast.com.2022-03-0945 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesThe intersection of art and social justiceCynthia Tobar, faculty librarian and head of archives at Bronx Community College, talks with Gregory Sholette and Chloë Bass about Social Practice CUNY (SPCUNY), a unique pedagogical initiative that supports the integration of art with interdisciplinary research, community collaboration, environmental justice and urban studies.2022-02-2443 minVegan VisibilityVegan VisibilityThe Vegan Phoenix is Rising with Christin CollinsWhat does it mean to change direction over and over, landing on one's feet each time? Such is the case with Christin Collins, author of Her Phoenix Rising. Combination memoir and personal development book, Her Phoenix Rising, is an engaging read. Christin has worked with organizations large and small to inspire awakening among their employees, leaders and stakeholders. Through live in-person events including keynote addresses and workshops, Christin uses her personal experiences to stir curiosity and illuminate inner knowing. She shares her story in an authentic way and integrates simple but powerful lessons...2022-01-2729 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesMolly Rosner on representations of history for childrenKathleen talks with Molly Rosner, Director of Education Programs at the LaGuardia and Wagner Archives at LaGuardia Community College, about her book, Playing with History: American Identities and Children’s Consumer Culture.2022-01-0545 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesDaniel Vater's culinary journeyClaire Stewart, Associate Professor in the Hospitality Management Program at CUNY's New York City College of Technology, talks with former student and CUNY BA program alumnus, Daniel Vater, about his multi-faceted culinary career.2021-12-201h 12Indoor VoicesIndoor VoicesHannah Kavanagh, uncensored and uncutHannah Kavanagh, a Hunter@Macaulay senior, talks with Kathleen about producing and hosting the first student-run podcast at CUNY, CUNY Uncut. Visit indoorvoicespodcast.com for more.2021-11-151h 01Indoor VoicesIndoor VoicesBringing Vietnamese refugee stories to lightKhánh Lê (Queens College and the Graduate Center) talks with adjunct professor Julian Costa (NYC College of Technology) and Gabriel Da Silva (Pace University) about the book they’ve recently completed, What They Know: Reflections of Vietnam, a project originally started by Dr. Rebecca Dean in the 1980s. To learn more, visit Indoorvoicespodcast.com.2021-11-0132 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesMichelle Valladares on CCNY's unique creative writing programMichelle Valladares, Director of the MFA in Creative Program and Lecturer in English at City College, talks with Kathleen about the program, its providential Harlem location, and why it's seeing an unprecedented number of enrollments.2021-10-1858 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesSmashing StatuesErin Thompson, Associate Professor of Fraud, Forensics, Art Law & Crime in the Department of Art and Music at John Jay College of Criminal Justice and Todd Fine, CUNY Graduate Center PhD candidate and president of the Washington Street Advocacy Group, talk about Erin's forthcoming book, Smashing Statues: The Rise and Fall of America’s Public Monuments. 2021-10-0442 minPop LiteracyPop LiteracyKathleen Collins on Growing Up a TV Junkie in the ‘70s, ‘80s, and ‘90s and Her Book ‘From Rabbit Ears to the Rabbit Hole’TV scholar Kathleen Collins grew up loving television before it was cool—while others fancied themselves sophisticated for digging film and music, she was unapologetically obsessing over Square Pegs. In her book From Rabbit Ears to the Rabbit Hole, she shares her nostalgic journey as a kid growing up with a four-channel, cathode-ray set, to her choice to study television as an academic pursuit, and through our national obsession with streaming today. In this conversation, we travel back in time with her to discuss why Norman Lear’s 1970s shows stand the test of time, why the only w...2021-08-171h 01Indoor VoicesIndoor VoicesYarimar Bonilla: Living and breathing Puerto RicoYarimar Bonilla, Professor in the Department of Africana & Puerto Rican/Latino Studies at Hunter College and in the PhD Program in Anthropology at the Graduate Center, assumes the role of Acting Director of El Centro, the Center for Puerto Rican Studies at Hunter College, on July 1. In this episode, she talks with Vanessa Valdés, Director of the Black Studies Program and Professor of Spanish and Portuguese at City College. Visit indoorvoicespodcast.com2021-06-211h 11Indoor VoicesIndoor VoicesA (r)evolution in journalism: Jeremy Caplan on entrepreneurial media makersJeremy Caplan, director of teaching and learning at the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism, talks with Michael Rain, alumnus and founder of research and media company Enodi, about the J school’s new online intensive Entrepreneurial Journalism Creators program.2021-06-1449 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesThe urban optimism of Sunnyside GardensJohn Jay College librarian and professor Jeffrey Kroessler and architect Laura Heim discuss their book, Sunnyside Gardens: Planning and Preservation in a Historic Garden Suburb, with Owen Gutfreund, Associate Professor of Urban Policy and Planning at Hunter College. Visit indoorvoicespodcast.com for more information.2021-06-0751 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesLight in Dark Times: The Human Search for MeaningAlisse Waterston (John Jay) and Charlotte Corden talk with Kathleen about their graphic novel, Light in Dark Times: The Human Search for Meaning published by the University of Toronto Press.2021-05-2455 minBar Crawl RadioBar Crawl RadioKathleen Collins on Why TV MattersThis BCR episode was recorded at a great Upper West Side, Manhattan eateries and bar -- 5Napkin. Finally, we are back having conversations with amazing people in our favorite bars.Kathleen Collins is the Graduate Studies Librarian at John Jay College of Criminal Justice since 2007 – and a whole lot more. She has a double degree in psychology – a degree from the Cultural Reporting and Criticism Program at NYU and has written three books on television – “Dr. Joyce Brothers: The Founding Mother of TV Psychology” [2016] – and “Watching What We Eat: The Evolution of Television. We met at "Studio 25" -- 5Napkin's co...2021-05-141h 06New Books in FilmNew Books in FilmKathleen Collins, "From Rabbit Ears to the Rabbit Hole: A Life with Television" (UP of Mississippi, 2021)In her new book From Rabbit Ears to the Rabbit Hole: A Life with Television (University of Mississippi Press, 2021) TV scholar and fan Kathleen Collins reflects on how her life as a consumer of television has intersected with the cultural and technological evolution of the medium itself. In a narrative bridging television studies, memoir, and comic, literary nonfiction, Collins takes readers alongside her from the 1960s through to the present, reminiscing and commiserating about some of what has transpired over the last five decades in the US, in media culture, and in what constitutes a shared cultural history.In a...2021-05-1354 minNew Books in Popular CultureNew Books in Popular CultureKathleen Collins, "From Rabbit Ears to the Rabbit Hole: A Life with Television" (UP of Mississippi, 2021)In her new book From Rabbit Ears to the Rabbit Hole: A Life with Television (University of Mississippi Press, 2021) TV scholar and fan Kathleen Collins reflects on how her life as a consumer of television has intersected with the cultural and technological evolution of the medium itself. In a narrative bridging television studies, memoir, and comic, literary nonfiction, Collins takes readers alongside her from the 1960s through to the present, reminiscing and commiserating about some of what has transpired over the last five decades in the US, in media culture, and in what constitutes a shared cultural history.In a...2021-05-1356 minNew Books in Performing ArtsNew Books in Performing ArtsKathleen Collins, "From Rabbit Ears to the Rabbit Hole: A Life with Television" (UP of Mississippi, 2021)In her new book From Rabbit Ears to the Rabbit Hole: A Life with Television (University of Mississippi Press, 2021) TV scholar and fan Kathleen Collins reflects on how her life as a consumer of television has intersected with the cultural and technological evolution of the medium itself. In a narrative bridging television studies, memoir, and comic, literary nonfiction, Collins takes readers alongside her from the 1960s through to the present, reminiscing and commiserating about some of what has transpired over the last five decades in the US, in media culture, and in what constitutes a shared cultural history.In a...2021-05-1354 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesLaGuardia students document and create through COVIDCynthia Tobar, Head of Archives at Bronx Community College, talks with Molly Rosner, Assistant Director of Education Programs at the LaGuardia and Wagner Archives at LaGuardia Community College and Summer Walker, a student in la Guardia’s Commercial Photography program, about their project Portraits of an Epicenter: NYC in Lockdown.2021-05-1044 minIsabella BischoffIsabella BischoffNur einmal - Kathleen CollinsNew York 1963. Das Ende des Schwarz-Weiß Denkens scheint zum Greifen nahe. Die Erzählungen der afroamerikanischen Autorin Kathleen Collins schrieb sie in dieser aufgeheizten Zeit. Junge Frauen fahren in den Süden, um die Bürgerrechtsbewegung dort zu unterstützen. Liebe zwischen Menschen unterschiedlicher Hautfarbe scheint möglich. Kathleen Collins schreibt von einem verheißungsvollen Aufbruch mit vielen Hindernissen. Isabella Bischoff hat das Buch ausgezeichnet gefallen:2021-04-2900 minThe Last Great MigrationThe Last Great MigrationSE2, EP8 - "Keeping Faith" w/Kathleen Collins-ChatmonI had the pleasure of speaking with my Aunt Kathleen and gaining some insight into her upbringing. I learned things about her and my grandfather that I never knew prior to this talk.  Enjoy, like, share and subscribe.--- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app--- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/lastgreatmigration/messageSupport this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lastgreatmigration/support2021-04-2936 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesCity Tech Librarians Talk PodcastingNew York City College of Technology librarians Junior Tidal and Nora Almeida discuss their podcast, City Tech Stories, and Junior’s new book, Podcasting: A Practical Guide for Librarians.2021-04-2657 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesJojo Karlin on drawing ideasCUNY Grad Center and Manifold fellow alum Jojo Karlin describes her doodle-based note taking process. She talks about how and why she came to draw her dissertation on Virginia Woolf, about the experience of taking visual notes both in person and via Zoom, about digital humanities, open access, the Manifold digital platform, and the call to be curious at heart of the Graduate Center.2021-04-1242 minThe Strands That Bind UsThe Strands That Bind UsKathleen Newman-Bremang: Sr. Editor on Frustration and Freedom Through HairThe Strands That Bind Us –Kathleen Newman-Bremang is the senior editor for Refinery 29, tv host, and freelance television producer. She has been a close friend of Matthew’s for over 10 years and actually helped Matthew land his job as the hair expert on CTV’s THE SOCIAL, which she produced for many years.Today we talk about her hair journey as a black woman growing up in a predominately white Toronto suburb, being called out by a professor for trying to “act white” by wearing her hair straight, and navigating work places with expectations of what “p...2021-04-1236 minUne Sacrée Paire d\'OvairesUne Sacrée Paire d'OvairesKathleen Collins, cinéaste à l’origine de la célèbre phrase « I have a dream »?Dans ce 141 ème épisode, Marie Bongars te raconte la vie de Kathleen Collins, poétesse, dramaturge, autrice, militante pour les droits civiques, elle fut l’un des premières cinéastes Afro Américaine.Bonne écoute!Si vous souhaitez nous contacter, n’hésitez pas à le faire…Par mail : unesacreepairedovaires@gmail.comPar instagram : https://www.instagram.com/unesacreepairedovaires/?hl=frSi vous souhaitez recevoir les transcriptions de ce podcast, vous pouvez me contacter via l’une de ces deux adresses.Vous pouvez con...2021-04-0605 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesIlluminating the activism of Black women: Yoruba Richen and Jeanne TheoharisJeanne Theoharis (Distinguished Professor of Political Science at Brooklyn College) and Yoruba Richen (Directory of the Documentary Program at Newmark Graduate School of Journalism) discuss Yoruba's recent film, How it Feels to Be Free, a documentary about six iconic African American women entertainers who champion civil rights and challenge racists stereotypes. Jeanne is the author of the award-winning The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks. The two are collaborating on an upcoming project about Rosa Parks. Visit IndoorVoicesPodcast.com for more.2021-03-2839 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesAmy Adamczyk on Handing Down the FaithAmy Adamczyk, Professor of Sociology at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, talks with Indoor Voices about her latest book. She is co-author, along with University of Notre Dame Sociology Professor Christian Smith, of Handing Down the Faith: How Parents Pass Their Religion on to the Next Generation (Oxford University Press, 2021)2021-03-1548 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesFrom Rabbit Ears to the Rabbit Hole: A Life with TelevisionBeth Harpaz, editor of CUNY SUM, talks with Kathleen Collins, librarian and professor at John Jay College's Lloyd Sealy Library, about Kathleen's book, From Rabbit Ears to the Rabbit Hole: A Life with Television published by the University Press of Mississippi. 2021-03-0137 minTales of Our SistersTales of Our Sisters2. The Myth of Our Characters, a Kathleen Collins Masterclass“I am interested in how human beings evolve; a consciousness that is true to who they are in HERE. In the center of their being. I am interested in telling stories that give pleasure to the psyche.” —Kathleen Collins In this episode, I introduce to you all our monthly masterclass, where we visit key elements to telling a story from our ancestors of the arts. To kick it off, we study from the late filmmaker, playwright, poet, novelist, and professor Kathleen Collins, who passed way too soon but left behind bold work that explored the beauty of our Bl...2021-02-171h 00Indoor VoicesIndoor VoicesMary Gatta and Molly Vollman Makris: A beach-community ethnographyEdward Snadr and Shonna Trinch, John Jay College faculty and authors of What the Signs Say: Language, Gentrification, and Place-Making in Brooklyn, talk with Mary Gatta and Molly Vollman Makris, faculty members at Guttman Community College, about their book, Gentrification Down the Shore, published by Rutgers University Press.2021-02-151h 05Well BeingsWell BeingsWell Beings Ep 61 Feat Kathleen Collins PagelsWell Beings, a podcast that provides a platform for dedicated healthcare workers to tell stories of hope, inspiration, and humor. Tyler sits down with Kathleen Collins Pagels.2021-02-111h 10Indoor VoicesIndoor VoicesDavid Pearson on punk rock in the 1990s U.S. In this episode, two punk scholars - Raymond Patton and David Pearson - discuss how punk operates and frames itself in different contexts and time periods, including issues of diversity and multiculturalism and the experiences and participation of immigrants, women, people of color, and the continuum or rejection of politics and commercialism. The occasion is the recent publication of David's book, Rebel Music in the Triumphant Empire: Punk Rock in the 1990s United States (Oxford University Press). Visit indoorvoicespodcast.com for more info. 2021-02-0147 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesExperiential learning & Sopa de AlbóndigasCathy Davidson, Dree-el Simmons and Tatiana Ades share their experiences in creating We Eat: A Student-Centered Cookbook as part of the  “Introduction to Engaged Teaching and Transformative Learning in the Humanities and Social Sciences” class in Spring 2020 offered by The Futures Initiative at the CUNY Graduate Center.2021-01-1838 minBorn to LeadBorn to LeadFinding Her Destiny in the Senior Care Industry with Kathleen Collins PagelsIn this episode, I sit down with Kathleen Collins Pagels to discuss her journey to owning her own healthcare consulting business from majoring in gerontology in college. She has been an integral part of the senior care industry in Arizona for many years. She is an advocate for seniors in long term care facilities and wants our seniors to have the best care possible. She helps leaders in these long term care facilities be the best leaders they can be so quality of life for seniors is high.    Find more about Kathleen's company: ww...2020-11-2531 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesJ Journal Presents: Estha WeinerThe editors of J Journal: New Writing on Justice talk with contributor Estha Weiner about her poetry. The biannual literary journal, edited by English department faculty Jeffrey Heiman and Adam Berlin, is produced at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. Visit indoorvoicespocast.com.2020-11-1836 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesVictoria Bond on Zora & Me: The SummonerJohn Jay College English dept. colleagues Allison Pease and Victoria Bond discuss Bond's finale to the award-winning trilogy, Zora and Me: The Summoner, a fictional series based on the life and work of anthropologist and writer Zora Neale Hurston. 2020-10-2631 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesFrederick Wasser on Twentieth Century FoxFrederick Wasser, Professor in the Department of Television, Radio and Emerging Media at Brooklyn college, chronicles the sweeping account of the Twentieth Century Fox film studio. His book serves as a survey of American film history and “at times it becomes a history of the century itself.”2020-10-1240 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesChar Adams on amplifying COVID storiesChar Adams is a race and identity journalist whose work has appeared in The New York Times, The New Republic, Teen Vogue, People Magazine, and more. She is also the digital editor of CUNY SUM, the website for research, books, and creative works generated at CUNY. Char is also the co-creator of a new podcast, COVID University New York. Visit our blog at indoorvoicespodcast.com for more info about Char, her work, and the podcast.2020-09-1419 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesStorefront signs and place-making in BrooklynShonna Trinch is a sociolinguist and faculty member in the Department of Anthropology at John Jay College, and Edward Snajdr is a cultural anthropologist and faculty member in the Department of Anthropology at John Jay College. Their book, What the Signs Say: Language, Gentrification, and Place-Making in Brooklyn (Vanderbilt University Press), is the result of a decade of ethnographic research that deconstructs the public language of storefronts and the wide-ranging but often nuanced effects of these signs on a community’s inhabitants as well as on visitors, developers, and potential residents. While signage may seem like mere words, Trinch and...2020-08-1042 minOur Mothers OurselvesOur Mothers OurselvesKathleen Collins -- Lost Love Part 2. Critical edition.Part Two of the conversation with Nina Lorez Collins about her mother, the late filmmaker, playwright, and writer Kathleen Collins.Nina talks about THE TRUNK, what it was like to be the shepherd of the many works her mother left behind, and the instrumental role Nina played in seeing to it that her mother's big talent find its rightful place in modern American literature.Katie and Nina also play film and literary critics with a small selection of Collins's complex and highly autobiographical work. Nina runs TheWoolfer.com, a social...2020-08-0831 minOur Mothers OurselvesOur Mothers OurselvesKathleen Collins -- Lost Love. An Interview with Nina CollinsIn this, the first of two parts, Katie talks to Nina Lorez Collins about her mother, the groundbreaking filmmaker and writer, Kathleen Collins.Collins died of breast cancer in 1988, when she was just 46. She was one of the first Black women to direct a feature film. In this episode, Nina talks about her mother's childhood in New Jersey, her stormy relationship with Nina's father, a White man she met while studying French cinema in Paris in the 1960s.  And Nina talks about her mother's cancer, an illness she hid from her c...2020-08-0234 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesMargot Mifflin on Miss AmericaMargot Mifflin, Professor of English at Lehman College and the Newmark Journalism School  is the author of Looking for Miss America: A Pageant’s 100-Year Quest to Define Womanhood which will be released by Counterpoint Press on August 4. In this episode, she talks with Beth Harpaz, editor of CUNY SUM.2020-07-3033 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesJean Halley ReturnsJean Halley is Professor of Sociology at the College of Staten Island (CUNY). She discusses her memoir-in-progress that includes themes of the Western U.S., race, violence, and memory itself.2020-06-2241 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesStationery in the Time of...You Know...Kathleen and Steve catch up on stationery, online learning, and don't even get too into why video conferencing is a pain.2020-04-0657 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesLegacy of Blood: Jews, Pogroms, and Ritual Murder in the Lands of the SovietsIn her newest book, Legacy of Blood: Jews, Pogroms, and Ritual Murder in the Lands of the Soviets (Oxford University Press, 2019), Elissa Bemporad explores two extreme manifestations of tsarist antisemitism in the Soviet Union from 1917 to the early 1960s. Elissa is assistant professor of history at Queens College and the Graduate Center, where she specializes in Russian and Eastern European Jewish history, gender, and genocide studies. She is interviewed by Beth Harpaz. 2020-03-1630 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesSharon Zukin on the Innovation ComplexSharon Zukin, Professor Emerita of Sociology at Brooklyn College and the CUNY Graduate Center, discusses her book, The Innovation Complex: Cities, Tech, and the New Economy, with Richard Ocejo, Associate Professor of Sociology at John Jay College of Criminal Justice and the CUNY Graduate Center.2020-02-2656 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesTrópico en Manhattan: Rediscovering a story of Puerto Rican migrationBret Maney, assistant professor in the English department at CUNY’s Lehman College and Cristina Perez Jimenez, assistant professor in English at Manhattan College, talk about the English translation of Guillermo Cotto-Thorner’s 1951 novel, Manhattan Tropics (Trópico en Manhattan), published by Arte Público Press.2020-02-2058 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesPodcasts: Prose & pedagogyChristen Madrazo and Alan Winson, both faculty members in the English department at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, and Nora Almeida, a library faculty member at New York City College of Technology, talk about how they use podcasting in their work with students at CUNY.2020-01-0658 minBow Down: Women in ArtBow Down: Women in ArtZoe Whitley on Kathleen CollinsThe Hayward Gallery curator, and co-curator of the blockbuster touring exhibition ‘Soul of a Nation’ discusses the life and work of Kathleen Collins, the first African-American woman to write and direct a feature film. 2019-12-2320 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesTwelve years of creative writing on justice: Adam Berlin & Jeffrey HeimanAdam Berlin and Jeffrey Heiman are faculty members in the English department at John Jay College of Criminal Justice and are the editors of J Journal: New Writing on Justice. The biannual literary journal, which features fiction, poetry, and personal narrative about contemporary justice issues, has been published biannually since 2008. The 24th issue will be available later this month. Visit indoorvoicespodcast.com for more information on our guests.2019-12-0929 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesJulia Miele Rodas: Autistic DisturbancesJulia Miele Rodas is Professor in the English Department at Bronx Community College and the author of Autistic Disturbances: Theorizing Autism Poetics from the DSM to Robinson Crusoe. In this episode, she has a conversation with fellow disability studies scholar, Olivia Moy, Assistant Professor of English at Lehman College.2019-11-1851 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesMark Carpentieri on the flat tire shuffleMark Carpentieri teaches public speaking at Queensborough Community College and is the owner of M.C. Records, a blues/roots music label based on the South Shore of Long Island. Mark is also a graduate of Queens College. In this interview, Mark shows the connection between public speaking and running a label, talks about the need for online teaching and learning, and explains what makes a good blues drummer. Suffice it to say, this interview covers a lot of ground. As someone who loves music, talking to Mark about his life in the music industry was a...2019-11-0437 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesRay Patton on the contested story of punkIn this episode, you’ll hear David Pearson, adjunct faculty in the music and general studies departments at CUNY Lehman College, in conversation with Ray Patton, Associate Professor of History and Faculty Director of the Honors Program and Macaulay Honors College at CUNY John Jay College of Criminal Justice. They discuss Ray’s book, Punk Crisis: The Global Punk Rock Revolution (Oxford U. Press 2018). Visit indoorvoicespodcast.com for more information.2019-10-2846 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesDigital humanities with Matt GoldBeth Harpaz, editor of CUNY SUM, talks with Matthew K. Gold, associate professor of English and director of the  M.A. program in digital humanities at the CUNY Graduate Center and co-editor of Debates in the Digital Humanities 2019.  2019-10-2132 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesHeidi Diehl on writing, teaching, and zeitgleichHeidi Diehl, an adjunct lecturer and assistant director of the freshman composition program at Brooklyn College, discusses her new novel, Lifelines.2019-09-1733 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesJill Grose-Fifer: Teaching Psychology (and beyond)Dr. Jill Grose-Fifer is an associate professor in the psychology department at John Jay College. She thinks deeply about her teaching and works hard to keep it interesting, effective and relevant. She is thus far the only two time winner of John Jay's Distinguished Teaching Prize. Earlier this year, she co-authored a book with Patricia J. Brooks and Maureen O'Connor called Teaching Psychology: An Evidence-Based Approach. It’s a practical and scholarly guide for teachers whether they're new to the job or looking to shake things up. 2019-08-2147 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesDavid Puglia on the Baltimore "Hon"David Puglia explains the story and implications of "hon" in his book Tradition, Urban Identity, and the Baltimore Hon: The Folk in the City (Lexington Books 2018). David is a folklorist, an assistant professor in the English Dept of Bronx Community College and a native Bawlmorean.2019-05-1640 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesJean Halley: Horse CrazyJean Halley is a professor of Sociology at the College of Staten Island and she teaches in the Women’s and Gender Studies Masters Degree Program. She studies and writes about gender, sexuality, race and cultural normativity and many subsets therein. Her most recent book, and the one we really focus on in this episode, is Horse Crazy: Girls and the Lives of Horses, will be out in July and is published by the University of Georgia Press. To learn more about Jean’s work, visit indoorvoicespodcast.com.2019-04-1544 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesInterview with Nicole Bode: 'We Once Feared ATMs'Nicole Bode teaches at the Craig Newmark School of Journalism and is the head of Newsroom Sustainability for Civil. Civil is a fascinating project designed to help journalism, which, you may have heard, is going through a bit of a rough patch. Civil does interesting things, like using the blockchain to archive content. What that means for librarians is that content won't disappear. News content can disappear for a variety of reasons, both accidental and deliberate. Civil is working to make sure the historical record remains intact. Civil is also using cryptocurrency as a tool...2019-04-0836 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesGraduate fellows follow dreams, take on worldQuadira Coles, Vanessa Gutiérrez, Wilmarie Feliz and Akanksha Anand are graduate students at John Jay College and are recipients of the Tow Policy Advocacy Fellowship and the Pinkerton Community Graduate Fellowship, student development initiatives coordinated by the Prisoner Reentry Institute (PRI). 2019-03-311h 05Indoor VoicesIndoor VoicesMichael Rain, digital storytellerMichael Rain is a 2017 alumnus of the Tow-Knight Center for Entrepreneurial Journalism at CUNY’s Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism. He's the co-founder of ZNews Africa and founder of the Enodi project, a digital gallery that highlights the stories of first-generation black immigrants of African, Caribbean and Latin descent. This episode was recorded at the Made In NY Media Center, a collaborative workspace in Brooklyn where Michael recently completed a podcast certificate program produced through a partnership between the Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment and the Made in NY Media Center. Visit indoorvoicespodcast.com where you can...2019-03-2542 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesBalis and Levy Revive WatergateAndrea Balis, a faculty member in history at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, and Elizabeth Levy, a children’s book author, have marshaled their experience working in theater, politics, writing and historical research to produce a book for middle-grade students about the Watergate scandal. Their book is Bringing Down a President: The Watergate Scandal and will be published by Macmillan’s Roaring Brook Press in August of 2019.2019-03-1855 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesNancy K. Miller and the "pals of her desk"Nancy K. Miller is a Distinguished Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the CUNY Graduate Center. She talks about her latest book, My Brilliant Friends: Our Lives in Feminism (Columbia University Press), with Jason Tougaw, professor of English at Queens College.2019-02-141h 11Indoor VoicesIndoor VoicesThe Group That Won't Quit: CUNY Faculty Fellowship Publication ProgramRia Banerjee (Guttman Community College), Megan Behrent (NYC College of Tech), Allison Better (Kingsborough Community College), Sarah Hoiland (Hostos Community College), and Maria Julia Rossi (John Jay College of Criminal Justice) discuss their participation with the CUNY Faculty Fellowship Publication Program and the continuation of their active writing group that came about as a result.2019-02-0448 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesElizabeth Alsop: Making Conversation (about TV and the other arts)Elizabeth Alsop is an assistant professor and academic director of Communication & Media and Liberal Studies at CUNY's School of Professional Studies and the author of the forthcoming book, Making Conversation in Modernist Fiction (Ohio State U. Press, 2019). Read more about Elizabeth’s work at indoorvoicespodcast.com.2019-01-2548 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesSarah Hoiland on bikers, women and mediaSarah Hoiland is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at Hostos Community College in the Behavioral & Social Sciences Department. As a feminist ethnographer, she is researching the historical and contemporary representations of women within the male dominated world of motorcycle club subculture. Visit indoorvoicespodcast.com for a link to her recent article “Impromptu Fiesta” or ‘Havoc in Hollister’: A Seventy-Year Retrospective” in the International Journal of Motorcycle Studies.2018-12-1639 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesEdgardo Sanabria-ValentinEdgardo Sanabria-Valentín, Ph.D. is the Associate Program Director for PRISM (Program for Research Initiatives in Science and Math) and also the Pre-Health Careers Advisor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. He is the recipient of the ESCMID Young Scientist Award (2007), a Leadership Alliance-Schering Plough Graduate Fellowship (2006), and the NBHS-Frank G. Brooks Award for Excellence in Student Research (2001). He is also a founding member of the NYC-Minority Graduate Student Network and The Leadership Alliance Alumni Association.2018-12-1037 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesDebra Caplan: Remembering and Visualizing Yiddish theaterDebra Caplan is an Assistant Professor of Theater in the Dept. of Fine and Performing Arts at Baruch College and the author of Yiddish Empire: The Vilna Troupe, Jewish Theater, and the Art of Itinerancy (U Michigan Press, 2018). She is interviewed by Beth Harpaz, editor of CUNY SUM.2018-11-1238 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesJason Tougaw: Touching BrainsJason Tougaw is an associate professor in the English department at Queens College and the author of two recent books: The Elusive Brain: Literary Experiments in the Age of Neuroscience (Yale UP 2018) and The One You Get: Portrait of a Family Organism (Dzanc 2017). This episode title comes from a 2015 journal article he published in Modern Fiction Studies.2018-10-2951 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesBeth Harpaz: From all 50 states to the CUNYverseBeth Harpaz is the content editor for SUM, a new website showcasing CUNY research. She’s also the author of three books and a #recoveringjournalist after 35 years in newsrooms. Her work as travel editor for The Associated Press earned her the 2018 bronze award for travel journalist of the year from the Society of American Travel Writers and another SATW award for a podcast about visiting all 50 states. Follow her on Twitter @literarydj2018-10-0150 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesEpisode 17: The World According to Fannie DavisBridgett Davis is a journalist, essayist, novelist, memoirist, filmmaker, teacher and director of the Sidney Harman Writer-in-Residence Program at Baruch College. Her newest book, The World According to Fannie Davis: My Mother's Life in the Detroit Numbers (Little, Brown in January 2019) is a compelling and touching tribute to her mother and to the business that supported her family for decades. 2018-09-0447 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesThe Things We All Do, part 2In part two of our exciting season finale, we continue our conversation with Stephanie and Jennifer, but allow the interview to degenerate into guilty TV pleasures and the addicting nature of social media.2018-08-2736 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesThe Things We All DoIn our exciting, surprise two-part season finale, we interview Professors Stephanie Margolin (Hunter) and Jennifer Poggiali (Lehman) about their workaround academic libraries and bathrooms. While the topic lends itself to fairly easy jokes, it’s fascinating and important, speaking to everything from student success to the human experience.2018-08-2147 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesAnna Gotlib: The pursuit of sadness Anna Gotlib is a faculty in the Brooklyn College philosophy department and editor of The Moral Psychology of Sadness (Rowman & Littlefield, 2017). The volume celebrates the rich opportunities for intellectual exploration within this complex and overlooked emotion. In this episode, Gotlib shares her reasons for choosing the topic and makes a strong case for allowing space – philosophical as well as social – for sadness, especially in American culture where frank discussions of sadness are generally frowned upon. Sadness can foster self-learning, give one’s life fuller meaning and quiet what Buddhists call the chattering monkey mind.2018-06-2228 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesBarbara Gray on news research and the Queen of the UnderworldBarbara Gray is writing a biography of 19th century grifter-turned-philanthropist, Sophie Lyons. She talks about the genesis of the project, her research process and gives us a sneak peak of Sophie's fascinating life. She also gives us a glimpse into her work with students in her role as the director of the Research Center at the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism.2018-06-0646 minIndoor VoicesIndoor VoicesEpisode 13: Dana Weinberg  I first met Dana Weinberg when I was a graduate student in the Queens College Applied Social Research program. She was, as you’ll soon hear for yourself, an incredible teacher. Her work at the time was around the sociology of nursing and we read Code Green: Money-Driven Hospitals and the Dismantling of Nursing, an amazing book which I often give to nursing students. It’s beautiful, both in terms of its prose and its ideas. I was very interested to learn Dana is now working on the sociology of digital publishing. Her article, “Comparing gender...2018-05-3040 minHer Head in FilmsHer Head in FilmsKathleen Collins's 'Losing Ground' (1982)For decades, the work of Kathleen Collins languished in obscurity. She was a writer, filmmaker, and professor who is considered one of the first black women to direct a feature-length film. That film is 'Losing Ground,' an extraordinary portrait of a marriage in turmoil and a complex representation of a deeply intellectual woman in search of ecstasy and magic. In this episode, I explore Collins's life, discuss the barriers that have made it difficult for black women to make films both in the past and today, and I provide an in-depth analysis of 'Losing Ground.' ...2018-04-151h 44GrantaGrantaMargo Jefferson reads Kathleen Collins: The Granta Podcast, Ep. 88In this episode of the Granta podcast, Margo Jefferson, author of Negroland, reads Kathleen Collins’s short story, ‘The Uncle’, taken from the collection Whatever Happened to Interracial Love? Kathleen Collins was a pioneer African-American playwright, film-maker, civil rights activist and educator. You can read more work by Kathleen Collins on our website: granta.com/whatever-happened-to-interracial-love/2017-07-1909 minWhere Free Audiobook Come to LifeWhere Free Audiobook Come to LifeWhatever Happened to Interracial Love?: Stories Audiobook by Kathleen CollinsListen to this audiobook in full for free onhttps://hotaudiobook.com/freeID: 279276 Title: Whatever Happened to Interracial Love?: Stories Author: Kathleen Collins Narrator: Adenrele Ojo, Cherise Boothe, Dan Woren, Desean Terry, Nina Lorez Collins, Paula J. Parker Format: Unabridged Length: 04:09:00 Language: English Release date: 12-06-16 Publisher: HarperAudio Genres: Fiction & Literature, Short Stories, Literary Fiction Summary: Now available in Eccos Art of the Story series: a never-before-published collection of stories from a brilliant yet little known African American artist and filmmakera contemporary of revered writers including Toni Cade Bambara, Laurie Colwin, Ann Beattie, Amy Hempel, and Grace Paleywhose prescient work...2016-12-074h 09How to Stream Full Audiobook in Fiction, African-AmericanHow to Stream Full Audiobook in Fiction, African-AmericanWhatever Happened to Interracial Love? by Kathleen Collins | Free AudiobookListen to full audiobooks for free on :https://hotaudiobook.com/freeTitle: Whatever Happened to Interracial Love? Author: Kathleen Collins Narrator: Nina Collins, Cherise Boothe, Adenrele Ojo, Paula J. Parker, Desean Terry, Dan Woren Format: Unabridged Length: 4 hrs and 8 mins Language: English Release date: 12-06-16 Publisher: HarperAudio Genres: Fiction, African-American Summary: Now available in Ecco's Art of the Story series: a never-before-published collection of stories from a brilliant yet little known African American artist and filmmaker - a contemporary of revered writers including Toni Cade Bambara, Laurie Colwin, Ann Beattie, Amy Hempel, and Grace Paley - whose prescient work has...2016-12-064h 08Grab the Top Full Audiobooks in Literature, Short StoriesGrab the Top Full Audiobooks in Literature, Short StoriesWhatever Happened to Interracial Love?: Stories by Kathleen CollinsPlease visithttps://thebookvoice.com/podcasts/1/audiobook/279276to listen full audiobooks. Title: Whatever Happened to Interracial Love?: Stories Author: Kathleen Collins Narrator: Desean Terry, Nina Lorez Collins, Paula J. Parker, Cherise Boothe, Adenrele Ojo, Dan Woren Format: Unabridged Audiobook Length: 4 hours 9 minutes Release date: December 6, 2016 Genres: Short Stories Publisher's Summary: Now available in Ecco’s Art of the Story series: a never-before-published collection of stories from a brilliant yet little known African American artist and filmmaker—a contemporary of revered writers including Toni Cade Bambara, Laurie Colwin, Ann Beattie, Amy Hempel, and Grace Paley—whose prescient work has recently resurfaced to wide a...2016-12-064h 09