Episodios

  • Black in Appalachia: Tennessee Humanities in Action
    Mar 1 2025

    Reshared episode from Host and Historian Brigette Jones discussing Belonging in Tennessee with Black in Appalachia director William Isom. This interview was recorded as part of Humanities Tennessee's United We Stand Project funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities.

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    19 m
  • Black in Appalachia: Power, Light & Outmigration
    Feb 16 2025

    Power, Light & Outmigration

    This episode is a special live recorded production hosted at the National Archives Museum in Washington DC with Ron Carson and Dr. Karida Brown. Participants discussed Black life in Appalachian coal camps, mass outmigration & the return one generation later. Event was held in conjunction with the exhibition, 'Power & Light: Russell Lee’s Coal Survey'.

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    57 m
  • Black in Appalachia: Researching Black Businesses
    Jan 20 2025

    Researching Black Businesses

    Co-hosted by Precious Brown, in this episode we're learning about her research on Black businesses in her homeplace, McMinn County, Tennessee. Sourced from historical records, interviews, and community connections, we'll get some highlights from that research and the importance of Black-owned businesses in preserving cultural heritage in today's Southeast Tennessee.

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    32 m
  • Black In Appalachia: Meals, Health & Habits
    Dec 31 2024

    We are talking about food with Femeika Elliot, a food policy advocate. She discusses food insecurity, food apartheid, policy and zoning decisions that limit access to nutritious food as well as the social determinants of health, employment, income, and transportation & her community-led innovation and education in addressing these issues.

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    32 m
  • Black in Appalachia: Bessie Woodson Yancey
    Dec 16 2024

    We explore the life and work of Bessie Woodson Yancey, a prolific Black Appalachian poet and writer and sister of Carter G. Woodson. Dr. Enkeshi El-Amin teams up with Courtney Shimek & Jennifer Sano-Franchini from West Virginia University's National Writers Project to discuss Woodson-Yancey's 1939 poetry collection "Echoes from the Hills" and her themes of nature, childhood, imperialism and Black identity.

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    28 m
  • Black in Appalachia: Marcus Garvey Revisited: Eugenics
    Dec 9 2024

    In this episode we delve into the short, but complex relationship between Marcus Garvey and Virginia eugenicists during the 1920s. These strange bedfellows' brief alliance formed around the infamous Racial Integrity Act of 1924 & Garvey's imprisonment, exposing the gendered and classist aspects of racial purity movements.

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    37 m
  • Black in Appalachia: What's in a Name
    Nov 5 2024

    This episode we explore the history and significance of racially charged place names in Appalachia. From Ann Miller Woodford in Far Western North Carolina, SW Virginia's Great Stone Face to poet Cecil Giscombe's reflection on the absurdity of "Negro Mountain" in Appalachian Pennsylvania, this discussion underscores the importance of addressing these place names and the work toward respectful historical narratives.

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    27 m
  • Black in Appalachia: Immigrant Independence
    Aug 22 2023

    On this episode of the Black in Appalachia podcast, West Virginia University Sociology Major, Suraya Boggs, shares her experience of growing up in Appalachia as a second generation immigrant with a West Indian parent. She is particularly concerned with the codependent relationships between immigrant parents and American-born children. Boggs found many similarities among herself and other second generation peers and also compared their codependent familiar relationships to their more independent non-immigrant peers.

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    29 m
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