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Think Pieces Podcast

Think Pieces Podcast

De: Institute of Advanced Studies UCL
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The Think Pieces Podcast is produced by the Institute of Advanced Studies at University College London.

It picks up themes from the Institute's online review Think Pieces engaging in conversations with authors, scholars and policy makers from inside and outside UCL.


The Think Pieces Podcast is succeeding Talk pieces, which was produced by Tamar Garb and Albert Brenchat-Aguilar in 2020 and 2021.


Note on the logo: the blue and green background is a detail of a banner (300x120cm; oil paint, oil pastel and compressed charcoal on canvas) that artist Lucile Haefflinger produced for and which is on display at the IAS.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Institute of Advanced Studies, UCL
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Episodios
  • The Feminism of Fools: When Real Feminists Do Fascism
    Apr 4 2025

    The UCL Gender and Feminism Research Network (GFRN) and qUCL present a conversation with ex-academic writer Sophie Lewis and Victoria Mangan, PhD student in the English Department at UCL.


    On 7 March 2025, Sophie Lewis gave the annual qUCL/GFRN lecture on 'The Feminism of Fools: When Real Feminists Do Fascism', which explored the imperial, racist, and otherwise exclusionary legacies of various kinds of feminism – varieties of feminism that have not just been taken up by the regressive right, but have participated enthusiastically and feministly in these movements.


    In advance of her talk, Victoria Mangan met with Sophie to ask her a few questions about her new book, 'Enemy Feminisms,' and especially to ask her: why this book, and why now? They went on to discuss the relationship between Sophie's current work and her previous books on family abolition, why it is that we are so attached to feminism as a unilateral 'good' despite evidence to the contrary, and the particular Englishness of certain feminist activism in the 21st century.


    ***


    Sophie Lewis, an ex-academic writer, lives in Philadelphia and is the author of 'Full Surrogacy Now, Abolish the Family,' and 'Enemy Feminisms.' Her essays appear everywhere from n+1 to the LRB. She is working on an essay collection, 'Femmephilia,' and a book, 'The Liberation of Children' (forthcoming from Penguin, 2027).


    Victoria Mangan is a PhD student researching transgender literatures and theories. Her thesis enquires into how we read and interpret trans literature and what this growing body of work might offer literary criticism as a discipline. She is a Wolfson scholar in the humanities and has taught across several departments at UCL.



    Lewis and Mangan are introduced by Alex Hyde, Associate Professor in Gender Studies and Co-Director of the Gender and Feminism Research Network at UCL.


    The episode was produced by Marthe Lisson, Editor of Think Pieces.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    31 m
  • The Lives of Statues: Adored, Ignored, Abhorred?
    Jun 5 2024

    The UCL Gender and Feminism Research Network (GFRN) and qUCL present a conversation with Rahul Rao, Reader in International Political Thought at the University of St Andrews, and inclusive heritage specialist Sean Curran.


    On 14 May 2024, Rao gave the GFRN and qUCL joint annual lecture titled 'The Libidinal Lives of Statues'. In this episode, Rao and Curran expand on the central question of the lecture: what is it about statues that has spooked people in the past enough to arouse in them the impulse to destroy.


    Standing in front of the Gandhi statue in Tavistock Square, Bloomsbury, London they reflect on why statues have become the ground on which struggles around caste and race are played out and why Gandhi statues in particular have become objects of contestation despite the common association of Gandhi as an anti-colonial figure. They move on to talk about statues as gifts from one country to another and whether it is violence to damage, deface or removing a statue. Above the whole conversation lingers the question: what is the future of statues - have they become obsolete?


    ****


    Rahul Rao is Reader in International Political Thought in the School of International Relations at the University of St Andrews and the author of Out of Time: The Queer Politics of Postcoloniality (2020) and Third World Protest: Between Home and the World (2010). He is currently writing a book about statues.


    Sean Curran is an inclusive heritage specialist with 17 years of experience working in historic houses, libraries, archives and museums. Their PhD at UCL Institute of Education was about LGBTQ+ heritage, and they curated the first ever LGBT History Month exhibition at a National Trust property.


    Rao and Curran are introduced by Alex Hyde, Associate Professor in Gender Studies and Co-Director of the Gender and Feminism Research Network at UCL.


    The episode was produced by Marthe Lisson, Editor of Think Pieces.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    26 m
  • Books on Indigenous Ecologies
    Apr 26 2024

    In this second episode on Indigenous Ecologies, IAS postdoctoral fellows Olivia Arigho-Stiles and Adriana Suarez Delucchi are in conversation with Nayanika Mathur, Professor of Anthropology and South Asian Studies at Wolfson College, Oxford University.


    Mathur's research is interested in the anthropology of politics, development, environment, law, human-animal studies, and research methods. She is the author of Paper Tiger: Law Bureaucracy and the Developmental State in Himalayan India, which addresses everyday bureaucratic life on the Himalayan borderland.


    Her second book, Crooked Cats: Beastly Encounters in the Anthropocene (University of Chicago Press, 2021) is the starting point for this episode’s conversation. Arigho-Stiles, Suarez and Mathur embark on a discuss the term 'anthropocene', conservation practices and its bureaucratic challanges, including the impossibility of applying Western conservation practices to Indian species (and for that matter, non-Western natural environments more broadly).


    ******


    Olivia Arigho-Stiles and Adriana Suarez were postdoctoral research fellows at the Institute of Advanced Studies in 2023.


    Arigho-Stiles is an interdisciplinary researcher of Indigenous histories and the rural world in Bolivia, focussing on Bolivian Indigenous-campesino movements. She is a lecturer in Latin American studies at the University of Essex.


    Suarez Delucchi is a geographer working on natural resource management institutions at different scales in contested environments. Her work seeks to identify, address and challenge the marginalisation of rural and Indigenous groups from dominant management arrangements.


    Together, they co-edited a special issue of the IAS online review Think Pieces which you can read here: INDIGENOUS ECOLOGIES & ENVIRONMENTAL CRISIS - Think Pieces (thinkpieces-review.co.uk)



    The episode was produced by Marthe Lisson, editor of Think Pieces.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    43 m
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