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At the Edge: Think Culture

At the Edge: Think Culture

By At the Edge An Afrofuturist Salon

An award-winning show bringing knowledge to the digital community! I am an award-winning podcaster and English professor who discusses culture and ideas about art, writing, and knowledge while contending with challenges about access, and virtual space.
Currently playing episode

Black Women and Body Autonomy: An Intersectional Dialogue

At the Edge: Think CultureMar 20, 2023

00:00
54:43
Reverend Jeanie Turpin and Carolyn Thomas (Mom and Auntie)

Reverend Jeanie Turpin and Carolyn Thomas (Mom and Auntie)

This week I dive into family history and chat with my Mom and my Aunt Carolyn, aka "Auntie," as we discuss our family history, how we became the Williams and Thomases, how our family grew, how our extended family migrated from Southern Georgia to Cleveland, Ohio, how my grandparents met, how my great-aunts and great-uncles built their wealth, how my Mom and Auntie helped me become a strong, educated, Black woman in the 21st century.

Sep 27, 202354:27
A.I. and Creative Energy Implications

A.I. and Creative Energy Implications

Thaddeus Howse and I discuss A.I. and creative labor implications in the wake of recent strikes (WGA and SAG-AFTRA), as well as the growth of A.I. instruction and organization tools in classrooms.

Thaddeus Howze is an award-winning writer, editor, and podcaster creating speculative fiction, scientific, political, and cultural commentary from his office in Hayward, California. He is currently a video game writer at the transmedia company, DJ2 Entertainment. Thaddeus' speculative fiction has appeared in numerous anthologies and literary journals. He has published two books, 'Hayward's Reach' (2011), a collection of short stories, and 'Broken Glass' (2013), an urban fantasy novella starring his favorite paranormal investigator, Clifford Engram. He is also the creator of a series of articles called Writing Craft: Mastering the Urge to Write. Thaddeus works as a writer and editor for two magazines, the Good Men Project, a men's magazine challenging social norms for men in modern society. He also writes for Krypton Radio, a media station, and online magazine, writing articles on popular culture, science, technology, and superheroes. He has also appeared in numerous publications including Black Enterprise, Gizmodo, Huffington Post, Polygon, Panel and Frame, and the BBC. Thaddeus supports his vision of writing-as-a-lifestyle working as the Vice President of the California Writers Club, focusing on writing advocacy and support for new talent. He is one of the founding members of the Afrosurreal Writers Workshop in Oakland. He was also a Teaching Fellow at Chapter 510: Department of Make Believe (2019-2020) teaching young writers how to create spectacular speculative fiction. Before his career as a writer, Thaddeus was a technology executive who worked in the Bay Area as the Chief Information Officer and Vice President of Information Services for John F. Kennedy University. He was also an adjunct instructor of Computer Science and the technology manager of the Computer Science department at Laney College. Thaddeus's career in information technology spanned two decades and included network design, desktop publishing, educational curriculum design, and industry-related coaching.

Aug 27, 202301:20:23
Stephanie Dickerson and William Dalessio: Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion

Stephanie Dickerson and William Dalessio: Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion

Drs. Dickerson and Dalessio from Rhode Island Community College join me for a lovely chat about being scholars in the humanities and encouraging diversity, equity, and inclusion in higher education while surviving the current political environment.


Stephanie Dickerson earned a Ph.D. in English Education from the University at Buffalo in Upstate, New York.  She holds an MA in English from Bowling Green State University, an MA in Students with Disabilities from St. John Fisher University, and an MA in Pan-African Studies from Syracuse University. Dickerson’s research interests are in educational reform, film, issues of race and gender, and the identity of Black women as it continues to relate to a culture of dissemblance.  Currently, Dickerson is an Assistant Professor in the English Department at the Community College of Rhode Island and serves on the Literature Committee. 

William Dalessio earned a Ph.D. and MA, both in English, from the University of Connecticut.  His book Are We What We Eat? Food and Identity in Late Twentieth-Century American Ethnic Literature explores how food, cooking, and eating can signify one’s identity in literature and, more broadly, the culture that produces it.   Besides his book, Dalessio has published several articles on race, gender, and class in peer-reviewed journals such as a/b: auto/biography studies, The Southern Quarterly, and Studies in the Humanities.  Currently, Dalessio is an Associate Professor of English and the Literature Coordinator at the Community College of Rhode Island. 

Apr 10, 202350:03
Black Women and Body Autonomy: An Intersectional Dialogue

Black Women and Body Autonomy: An Intersectional Dialogue

In this episode, Angel Fall and I talk about Washington, DC, plus Cleveland and Hartford when it comes to the politics of healthcare and education for Black folk--especially Black women in 2023.

Angel Fall began her radio career at age 14 for WCLV as a reader on a piggyback signal. The CRRS system was designed for the visually impaired. For years, Angel Fall produced "Health Shots," for WHUS, the UCONN affiliate.

Her podcast, Victims to Victorious, which airs on the Black Talk Radio Network, will resume in April.

https://www.vox.com/2022/6/29/23187002/black-women-abortion-access-roe

Mar 20, 202354:43
Thaddeus Howze and Cherie Ann Turpin chatting about Writing, Social Justice, and Afrofuturism in 2023 and beyond

Thaddeus Howze and Cherie Ann Turpin chatting about Writing, Social Justice, and Afrofuturism in 2023 and beyond

Thaddeus Howze is an award-winning writer, editor, and podcaster creating speculative fiction, scientific, political and cultural commentary from his office in Hayward, California. He is currently a video game writer at the transmedia company, DJ2 Entertainment. Thaddeus' speculative fiction has appeared in numerous anthologies and literary journals. He has published two books, 'Hayward's Reach' (2011), a collection of short stories, and 'Broken Glass' (2013) an urban fantasy novella starring his favorite paranormal investigator, Clifford Engram. He is also the creator of a series of articles called Writing Craft: Mastering the Urge to Write.   Thaddeus works as a writer and editor for two magazines, the Good Men Project, a men's magazine challenging social norms for men in modern society. He also writes for Krypton Radio, a media station, and online magazine, writing articles on popular culture, science, technology, and superheroes. He has also appeared in numerous publications including Black Enterprise, Gizmodo, Huffington Post, Polygon, Panel and Frame, and the BBC. Thaddeus supports his vision of writing-as-a-lifestyle working as the Vice President of the California Writers Club, focusing on writing advocacy and support for new talent. He is one of the founding members of the Afrosurreal Writers Workshop in Oakland. He was also a Teaching Fellow at Chapter 510: Department of Make Believe (2019-2020) teaching young writers how to create spectacular speculative fiction.

https://thowze.carrd.co/?fbclid=IwAR0JkyVYlixV5JUN6CQPgwYEcQZ0fa06k4ROTIKI7BlCSApQ0I8msfoFfCM

https://www.patreon.com/ebonstorm?fbclid=IwAR27xGzKPEEfLob9_1RuxRy58rRT7f1fyDfJgRZLCtgYRbO6pLx07ErZQfQ

 

Feb 16, 202302:13:20
Black Militant: My Father--Strong Black Man

Black Militant: My Father--Strong Black Man

This is a Happy Father’s Day episode starring my Dad, Marvin D Turpin Sr, who is 83, and a wonderful, beautiful, loving Father who taught me Black History while working as a mechanic and working for social justice through the Black Church when I was a child. He is a hero to me. Love you Dad! This will be one of many episodes that will become my Dad's memoir and in many ways a significant voice to consider when looking back at the 20th-century movements that transformed the lives of African Americans who lived in the North and the South.

Jun 20, 202201:34:51
LGBTQ history at HBCUs

LGBTQ history at HBCUs

This LGBTQ history month, Social Justice Ambassador fellow Shabre West is launching the LGBTQ Advisory Board Council. “It’s important than ever for the LGBTQ community to be centered in higher education”. West created this podcast episode with Trinice McNally, founding director of the Center for Diversity, Inclusion & Multicultural Affairs at the University of the District of Columbia (UDC), to hone down on her experience at an HBCU. 

Oct 11, 202150:56
Dr. Anthea Butler (University of Penn) Discusses Her Latest Book White Evangelical Racism (UNC Press)

Dr. Anthea Butler (University of Penn) Discusses Her Latest Book White Evangelical Racism (UNC Press)

Dr. Anthea Butler is Associate Professor of Religious Studies and Africana  Studies at the University of Pennsylvania.  A sought-after commentator on the BBC, MSNBC, CNN, The History Channel, and PBS, Professor Butler regularly writes opinion pieces covering religion, race, politics, and popular culture for NBC Think, Religion News Service, The Washington  Post, and CNN. Dr. Anthea Butler joins me in my latest episode of At the Edge to discuss history, religion, and politics in her latest and very timely book White Evangelical Racism (UNC Press).


Apr 11, 202151:29
Dr. Nelda Ormond, UDC Music Dept:  The Spiritual

Dr. Nelda Ormond, UDC Music Dept: The Spiritual

It was from, and because of the hard living conditions of slavery, the spiritual was born. The spiritual was the creation of the American slaves brought from Africa. Spirituals expressed the history, treatment, and thoughts of Black people in the United States. The combined experiences of Africa and America served to produce the spirituals. They served the propose of religious expression to communication, often by code. They possessed a folk literature that was varied and rich. They had their native musical endowment to begin with, and the Spirituals possessed the fundamental characteristics of African Music, rhythmic qualities, form and intervallic structure.
Mar 20, 202155:46
Arts and Sciences Education Now:  Context for responsible revolution

Arts and Sciences Education Now: Context for responsible revolution

Dr. April Massey, Ph.D.–my Dean at UDC is coming on again and we are going to talk about building bridges across disciplines, across humanities and STEM, gender, race, and more. Please join us–she is doing what many wish they could do in higher ed!!!!!
Mar 15, 202101:16:32
Congo Square: Afrofuturism as a Space of Confrontation

Congo Square: Afrofuturism as a Space of Confrontation

In Professor Jameel Paulin's 2020 MFA project "Congo Square", an audio-visual album produced and developed for virtual reality, Paulin situates Afrofuturism and hip-hop within the long history of Afrocentric aesthetic and spiritual practices; examining vodun and Congo Square as moments where African ancestors transformed the way that their descendants could exist in and re-shape the modern world by maintaining African centered worldviews. Jameel Paulin is currently a Visiting Assistant Professor of Art at Colorado College.
Feb 27, 202138:44
Dr. Olive Vassell:  Black British Women - the Power of the Pen

Dr. Olive Vassell: Black British Women - the Power of the Pen

Three Black British women from different centuries who are pioneers in using the power of the pen and in doing so have highlighted the Black experience in Britain:

Mary Seacole 19th century - First Black woman to publish an autobiography

Claudia Jones 20th century - founder and publisher of the first Black commercial newspaper

Bernadette Evaristo 20/21st century - first Black winner of the Booker prize

Olive Vassell was born and raised in London. Her research interests focus on the African Diaspora, especially Black Europe and the Black British media. A journalist for more than two decades, Olive has worked both in the UK and the US. In 2009, she founded euromight.com, the first Black pan-European news site. Most recently she authored a chapter on the Black British and Irish Press for the pioneering, three-volume, Edinburgh History of the British and Irish Press, 1641-2017 (published November 2020). She is currently writing and editing a book, Mapping Black Europe: Monuments, Markers, Memories. In 2020, she was awarded a Fulbright Specialist award during which she will partner with the Namibia University of Science and Technology. Olive is an associate professor at the University of the District of Columbia where she heads its Digital Media program.
Feb 26, 202142:06
Activist-Icon Stormé Delarverie:  Into the Light, Where She Belongs!

Activist-Icon Stormé Delarverie: Into the Light, Where She Belongs!

Black queerness has long been absent from the adoration of black histories. The stories of black queer women -- their courage, creativity, and audacity -- are hidden beneath even deeper shadows of history, of memory. Queerness is understood as a fluidity of gender expression and sexuality expanded conceptions of Black liberation.

Dr. Monique A. Gamble, Assistant Professor of Political Science, specializes in U.S. Government and political behavior. Specifically, her interests focus on race, Black LGBTQ culture, and U.S. politics. Her academic vision is inspired by Black feminist scholars’ intersectional work and a lifetime of Black cultural events -- from growing up watching the HBCU-based television show, A Different World, to live-tweeting Beyoncé’s groundbreaking visual album, Lemonade. Dr. Gamble uses storytelling as a pedagogical tool to empower students to be civic leaders and inspire their political engagement. Her approach to teaching and practicing Political Science bridges traditional theoretical perspectives with contemporary voices that are accessible and compelling to 21st-century audiences. With a finger on the pulse of pop culture and scholarship that utilizes new media platforms like podcasts and filmmaking, Dr. Gamble highlights the links between visibility and representation, politics, and power.
Feb 26, 202146:01
“Where and How Science and the Arts Meet” by Dr. Rosie Sneed

“Where and How Science and the Arts Meet” by Dr. Rosie Sneed

Dr. Rosie Sneed is currently an associate professor in the Biology Program, Division of Science and Mathematics at the University of the District of Columbia, Washington DC. Dr. Sneed’s current research centers on planarian regeneration. There are two major branches to this research. The first involves the role of cannabinoids on regeneration, gene expression, and cellular proliferation in both Girardia dorotocephala and Phagocata gracilis. The second branch deals with the role of regeneration in the life cycle of the two species mentioned above. Girardia dorotocephala has a much higher regenerative capacity than Phagocata gracilis.
Feb 23, 202132:06
Vanessa Maddox CEO of  V.R. Maddox Consulting LLC

Vanessa Maddox CEO of V.R. Maddox Consulting LLC

Vanessa Maddox

CEO of V.R. Maddox Consulting LLC

Founder, #BlackWallStreet: Loudoun

Community Think Tank

Vee Maddox

CEO, V.R. Maddox Consulting LLC

Founder, #GetHired Employment Community

Founder, Black Wall Street: Loudoun

Member, Loudoun County Chamber of Commerce

Co-Chair, BBEC

202-607-4402



Connect with me on LinkedIn
Jan 30, 202101:11:17
Professors’ Lounge: An Afrofuturism-Scholar Production.  This is Episode Two.

Professors’ Lounge: An Afrofuturism-Scholar Production. This is Episode Two.

Eileen James teaches literature, composition, and public speaking at the Community College of RI. Cherie Ann Turpin, Ph.D. is an Associate Professor in the English Program at the University of the District of Columbia, an HBCU. Together, we are the hosts for the newest academic podcast on the block: Professors’ Lounge: An Afrofuturism-Scholar Production. This is Episode Two. Welcome aboard!
Jan 29, 202101:18:05
Professors’ Lounge: An Afrofuturism-Scholar Production Episode One
Jan 14, 202101:00:44
Ajeune Lynch:  Black Feminism-Intersectionality and 2020

Ajeune Lynch: Black Feminism-Intersectionality and 2020

Ajeune Lynch is a black feminist committed to improving the lives of black queer people and femmes. She is a graduating senior at UDC. Ajeune currently serves as a housing advocacy specialist for a local non-profit. She is also a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc.
Dec 13, 202001:51:45
The Rise of Black Glory:  Jamila A. Stone, the Rising Literary Star from UDC

The Rise of Black Glory: Jamila A. Stone, the Rising Literary Star from UDC

Jamila A Stone, a recent alum of the English Program at UDC, not only successfully published a Urban Fantasy/Paranormal/LGBTQ book series and a murder mystery/crime series but created her own publishing company here in Washington, D.C.    Driven to write without fear of censorship while facing the lack of opportunity for POC to publish on viable, equal platforms, Jamila created her own publishing company called Black Glory Publishing House. Jamila A Stone lives in Washington, D.C. with her two dogs. https://www.amazon.com/Jamila-A-Stone/e/B07ZFV2354/ref=dp_byline_cont_pop_book_1 https://www.amazon.com/s?i=stripbooks&rh=p_27%3AJamila+A+Stone https://readersfavorite.com/rfreviews/search?search=Jamila+A.+Stone&by=authorname https://jamilastone.com/
Dec 12, 202030:20
Chase Duffy, UDC English Major: Future Teacher and Poet

Chase Duffy, UDC English Major: Future Teacher and Poet

Born and raised in South Dakota, Chase Duffy has been studying in DC for the past four years and UDC for the last two. He has been working on a collection of poetry over this time. He intends to go into teaching high school English in the DC area after graduation.
Dec 10, 202044:58
Dr. Craig Wynne:  The Language of Singlehood
Nov 21, 202042:43
Lawrence T. Potter, Jr., Ph.D. Chief Academic Officer/Provost UDC

Lawrence T. Potter, Jr., Ph.D. Chief Academic Officer/Provost UDC

Dr. Lawrence T. Potter, Jr., was appointed UDC’s Chief Academic Officer/Provost in February 2019. With

more than two decades in higher education, Dr. Potter has moved through the professorial ranks as an

assistant, associate, and full tenured professor. On the higher education leadership front, he has served

as a department chair, associate dean of the faculty, two-time chief diversity officer (CDO),

Director/Principal Investigator of a McNair Scholars Program, and Dean of Arts and Sciences for eight

years, at two Minority-Serving Institutions.
Nov 11, 202030:10
Opening Your Fourth Eye: Libraries, Digital Humanities, and Diversity
Oct 29, 202058:43
No Rest For Poets:  Songs of Planets Aligning

No Rest For Poets: Songs of Planets Aligning

Even scholars take notice of the silence. Listen to Dr. Carl Moore and Dr. Cherie Ann Turpin talk poetry, the mind, the spirit, the self and the collective in the midst of a pandemic moment in human history
Apr 10, 202001:25:40
Corona Virus:  History  and Prevention

Corona Virus: History and Prevention

Corona Virus:  History and Prevention In the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, I am hosting a show where you can listen to Lisa Rose Rodriguez, Mph. (University of Connecticut Health) talk about how we got to this place where we are in collective quarantine, as well as using the ordinary to survive and come out on the other side with a better sense of what it means to sustain a society that engages in health as a communal effort.  Please calll in and join  us  today at 5 pm! https://www.google.com/search?q=lisa+rose-rodriguez+linkedin&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&hl=en-us&client=safari lrrodriguez_mph@yahoo.com
Mar 30, 202001:29:27
Pathways to Equity in Higher Education: Humanities and More  #equalfundingudc

Pathways to Equity in Higher Education: Humanities and More #equalfundingudc

Words like equity and humanities, as well as phrases like "pathways for a better life" are skeletons of concepts we will unpack and discuss as part of a larger conversation about changes coming to the University of the District of Columbia (UDC) that will help faculty, students and administrative leaders bring fairness and success to every community and collective in the DC metropolitan area. This will be a roundtable discussion with UDC's President Ronald Mason, Jr., Dr. Aparajita De, Associate Professor in the English Program, Chenequa Holland, student and blogger, and your host, Dr. Cherie Ann Turpin, Associate Professor. Join us as we discuss challenges and visions for a regenerated and renewed UDC. #equalfundingudc
Oct 18, 201901:04:25
Quantum Flow of the Poet's Voice:  Ronald Mason
Jun 12, 201957:56
Advancing Women's Leadership and Higher Education:  Dr. April Massey, Dean

Advancing Women's Leadership and Higher Education: Dr. April Massey, Dean

April Massey, Ph.D., Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at the University

of the District of Columbia, has earned degrees from The Ohio State University, the

University of Cincinnati, and Howard University. A speech-language pathologist by

profession, she has nearly 20 years of administrative experience and has served in the

capacity of dean for five years.

Dr. Massey uses her disciplinary training to consider the liberal arts and

careerist needs of students and the research, teaching, and leadership interests of

faculty. With newly launched initiatives in signature work, women’s leadership,

faculty development, STEM pipeline, faculty learning hubs, and scholarship of

practice, her work emphasizes learning by doing and lived experience as content and

context for teaching and learning.

Her recent projects include leading the University’s General Education reform

effort in 2009, partnering with the American Association of University Women through

a Campus Action Project grant in 2016 to build a leadership development opportunity

for women students at UDC, shepherding a faculty study team in signature work in the

summer of 2017 under the umbrella of the Association of American Colleges and

Universities, and launching Dialogues in Leadership — an on campus faculty leadership

development program in the fall of 2017.
Mar 28, 201959:14
Adapting the Interpersonal:  Reducing Gun Violence in Black Communities

Adapting the Interpersonal: Reducing Gun Violence in Black Communities

How many leaders who shape policy in American institutions believe in the racist myth that African-Americans accept gun violence in our communities as a norm? Dehumanizing African-Americans in the justice system and in mainstream media has kept victims from receiving needed treatment and remedies in medical settings such as emergency rooms, as well as receiving needed counseling. Racial bias may have also blinded us to possible preventative solutions beyond criminalization. Epidemiologist Lisa Rose-Rodriguez discusses her work to decrease mortality rates for African American men and boys through counseling and improvement of interpersonal connections. As a board member of Connecticut's Mothers United Against Violence, Lisa has worked with victims, and has advocated for a reinterpretation of gun violence as a public health issue that must be remedied by preventative counseling and treatment through local/state institutions, as well as nonprofit and grassroot organizations.

Lisa Rose-Rodriguez was born in Cleveland, Ohio. After graduating from Shaker Heights High School, she matriculated at Howard University in Washington, DC. There she upheld the tradition of attending an HBCU for three generations. She received a Masters of Public Health at the University of Connecticut and is completing a Ph.D. in Media Philosophy at the European Graduate School.

See "Chicago’s New Prohibition Era: Bottling Homicides," and "Reducing Gun Violence Morbidity and Mortality in African-American Males by Applying Interpersonal Communication Skills."
Jan 05, 201901:30:39
Soulful Visions of the Speaking Self:  Ronald Mason
Dec 13, 201801:09:50
Amanda Huron - Carving Out the Commons

Amanda Huron - Carving Out the Commons

Provoked by mass evictions and the onset of gentrification in the 1970s, tenants in Washington, D.C. began forming cooperative organizations to collectively purchase and manage their apartment buildings. These tenants were creating a commons, taking a resource—housing—that had been used to extract profit from them, and reshaping it as a resource that was collectively owned and governed by them. In Carving Out the Commons, Amanda Huron theorizes the practice of urban commoning through a close investigation of the city’s limited-equity housing cooperatives. Drawing on feminist and anticapitalist perspectives, Huron asks whether a commons can work in a city where land and other resources are scarce, and how strangers who may not share a past or future come together to create and maintain commonly-held spaces in the midst of capitalism. Arguing against the romanticization of the commons, she instead positions the urban commons as a pragmatic practice. Through the practice of commoning, she contends, we can learn to build communities to challenge capitalism’s totalizing claims over life. Go get her book on Amazon:  https://www.amazon.com/Carving-Out-Commons-Organizing-Cooperatives-ebook/dp/B07B46FS9H/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1544020183&sr=1-1&keywords=amanda+huron Author Bio Amanda Huron is an associate professor of interdisciplinary social sciences at the University of the District of Columbia, in Washington, D.C. She is an urban geographer with a particular interest in housing, gentrification, the decommodification of land, and the history of Washington, D.C. Amanda serves on the board of Empower D.C., a citywide community organizing group that works to empower low- and moderate-income District residents, with a particular focus on anti-displacement work. She is a native of Washington, D.C.'s Ward One.
Dec 05, 201801:12:37
Culture Makers: Ronald Mason and Spoken Word

Culture Makers: Ronald Mason and Spoken Word

President Ronald Mason, who originally hails from New Orleans, Louisiana, came to Washington DC to be the current president of my university, University of the District of Columbia in 2015. Besides his decades of experience as an educational leader, he also came to D.C. with a gift for spoken word, a gift that puts him in that space between poetic form, song, and rap. As I am also a poet and short story writer, as well as a literature professor, it occurred to me we have not had a chance to hear more about Mason's story and work as a spoken word artist and poet. Tonight's show will walk us through that journey as At the Edge returns after five years with a new set of podcasts called Thinking Culture. Join us and call in for a special conversation about language,
Jun 22, 201845:11
Artists at Work: Peter Quinn

Artists at Work: Peter Quinn

My next guest is Peter Quinn, who joined Time Inc. as the chief speechwriter in 1985 & retired as corporate editorial director for Time Warner in 2007. He received a BA from Manhattan College (1969), an MA in history from Fordham Univ (1974) and was ABD.. He was awarded a Ph.D., honoris causa by Manhattan College  (2002). In 1979, he was Governor Carey's chief speechwriter, continuing under Governor Mario Cuomo;  he helped craft the Governor’s 1984 Democratic Convention speech & his address at Notre Dame University. His 1994 novel Banished Children of Eve won a 1995 American Book Award. Looking for Jimmy: In Search of Irish America was published in 2007. Colum McCann summed up Quinn's historical detective novels -- Hour of the Cat (2005), The Man Who Never Returned (2010), and Dry Bones (2013) -- as "generous and agile and profound." He co-wrote the 1987 television doc "McSorley’s New York," (NY Emmy for “Outstanding Historical Programming”). He was a commentator in PBS documentaries “The Irish in America;” “New York: A Documentary Film;” “The Life and Times of Stephen Foster,” s the Academy Award-nominated film, “The Passion of Sister Rose.” He was an advisor on Martin Scorcese’s  “Gangs of New York.” He helped conceive/script the 6-part doc “The Road to the White House,” which aired on TG4 in Ireland (2009). Quinn was editor of The Recorder: The Journal of the American Irish Historical Society (1986 to 1993). He has articles/reviews in The NY Times, Commonweal, America, American Heritage, Catholic Historical Review, Philadelphia Enquirer, L.A. Times, Eiré-Ireland. He is on the advisory boards of the American Irish Historical Society, NYU's Gluckman Ireland House, and the Tenement Museum. He is a co-founder of Irish American Writers & Artists. http://www.newyorkpaddy.com
Nov 02, 201301:11:28
Artists and Writers at Work: TJ English

Artists and Writers at Work: TJ English

This episode features Thomas Joseph "T.J." English, "Author of The Savage City (2011), a NY Times best-selling account of racial turmoil between the NYPD and the Black Liberation Movement in the 60s and early 70s. Other best-sellers include The Westies, an account of the last of the Irish Mob in the infamous Manhattan neighborhood "Hell’s Kitchen"; Born to Kill (1995), an account of a violent Vietnamese gang based in New York’s Chinatown; Paddy Whacked (2005), a history of the Irish American gangster in New York, Chicago, Boston, New Orleans, and other U.S. cities; the NYT bestseller Havana Nocturne (2008), about U.S. mobster infiltration of Havana, Cuba before Fidel Castro (currently in film development); his most recent book, Whitey's Payback (2013), which combines first-rate reporting and storytelling techniques into 16 true-crime stories.

As a journalist, English has written for many publications including: Esquire, Playboy, NY Magazine, The Village Voice, LA Times Magazine, and the NY Times. In the mid-1990s, he wrote a 3-part series for Playboy, "The New Mob"; in 2011 he wrote "Narco Americano," for Playboy; in 2010, his article for Playboy about a DEA agent who allegedly framed innocent people on bogus narcotics charges won the NY Press Club Award for Best Crime Reporting. He published interviews with Bill Murray, former Chicago mayor Richard J. Daley, Martin Scorsese, and George Carlin. As a screenwriter, English wrote episodes for "NYPD Blue" and "Homicide," for which he was awarded the Humanitas Prize.
www.tj-english.com/
Jun 04, 201301:21:58
Artists and Writers at Work: Interview with S Torriano Berry

Artists and Writers at Work: Interview with S Torriano Berry

This episode features Professor S. Torriano Berry, an associate professor at Howard University’s Department of Radio, Television, and Film.  We will discuss his self-published novel TEARS, a study on racism and its indoctrination into children;  "Hellbound Train," 1929, James & Eloyce Gist's historic cinematic sermon that was rediscovered in fragments in a vault at the LOA that Berry resurrected; and "RICH" his UCLA project 2 film-part of the L.A. Rebellion Traveling Film Series. Professor Berry is an award-winning independent filmmaker who  created and executive produced the anthology series Black Independent Showcase & Black Visions/Silver Screen: Howard University Student Film Showcase for WHUT-TV 32, in DC. His two half-hour television movies The Light & When It’s Your Turn were produced through the Minority Advisory Board of WPVI-TV 6, in Philadelphia, PA. Berry created the science fiction anthology series The Black Beyond, and his feature-length horror film EMBALMER is available on dvd. A 30-minute version of EMBALMER was a 1998 finalist in Showtime’s Black Filmmaker’s Short Film Showcase. In 2005, he spent a year in Belize, Central America, directing & editing Noh Matta Wat, Belize’s first dramatic television series, completing 4 seasons by 2010. Berry co-authored the film resource book, The 50 Most Influential Black Films (Citadel Press 2001). He has also written two fiction novels: Tears, based on his feature length screenplay addressing the roots of racism in America, and The Honeyman’s Son, a coming of age adventure set in the early 1940s. Berry received his BA in Art/Photography from Arizona State University, and earned his MFA in Motion Picture Production from UCLA. He lives in Washington, DC.
Jan 19, 201301:54:44
Talking Erotics & Afrofuturism with AfroerotiK: Part Two

Talking Erotics & Afrofuturism with AfroerotiK: Part Two

At the Edge presents Part Two of my discussion with Scottie Lowe, also known as AfroerotiK, who will be discussing her new erotic videos and new collection of erotic short stories, as well as continuing our discussion on Black women, the erotic, spiritual communion, and self-empowerment. Erotic provocateur, humanist, relentless champion for the oppressed, and facilitator for social change, Scottie Lowe is the brain child, creative genius and the blood, sweat, and tears behind AfroerotiK, the website and the company to provide people of African descent a place to escape the narrow-mined, stereotypical, limiting and oft-times degrading beliefs that abound about our sexuality.  While being the first to admit that there are issues surrounding collective Black sexuality, Scottie is putting everything on the table to discuss, debate, and dismantle stereotypes in a healthy exchange of ideas.  She hopes to provide a more holistic, informed, and enlightened discussion of Black sexuality so that people of color have alternatives to the one-dimensional caricatures society and the media force-feed us down our throats and she dreams of helping couples become more open, honest, and adventurous in their relationships.     For more information about Scottie Lowe and AfroerotiK, do check out her website http://afroerotik.com/ She is on Twitter https://twitter.com/afroerotik & on Facebook  https://www.facebook.com/scottie.lowe.afro
Nov 03, 201202:03:35
Mannix Flynn: Trafficked-Bought & Sold/(Un)Gathering Ireland

Mannix Flynn: Trafficked-Bought & Sold/(Un)Gathering Ireland

This episode features Irish actor/performer/novelist Gerald Mannix Flynn (Born in Dublin 1957). He has performed in film for over 25 years. In 1983 he published the novel Nothing To Say. His plays: The Liberty Suite (1977);  He who laughs wins (1981); Inside for RTÉ (1986); Hunger and Thirst (1989); Talking to the Wall performed by Flynn @ Edinburgh Festival (1997); Screenplays Twist of Fate (Trisquare Films 1998) & Alma Mater (2001); James X (2003), performed in Dublin, Berkeley, Cincinnati, the Venice Biennale, London, & New York. Irish Times reviewer Fintan O'Toole on James X:  "It is about us collectively, the things done in our name by the bodies that are supposed to represent us. It is our secret history offered to us to pour over and consume, to acknowledge and own." His documentary 'Way Out' deals w/multi-generational issues surrounding institutional control over families, performance of inclusion, & owning ones own history and destiny. He serves as Councillor to Dublin City Council for the SE Inner City Area.  He is a member of Aosdána & on the board of the Toscaireacht. This summer he ran the Marathon Irish festival to coincide with London 2012 Olympics at Dialogue Space. He will perform James X in Krakow, part of the Conrad Festival; both James X & Nothing to Say have been published in Polish (10/24/12).  He will be in Waterford, Ireland (Imagine Festival); Magdalene Laundry exhibition (London 11/01/12), Dialogue Space (2013) bringing groups & speakers to address Slave labour, trafficked children, the rights of the mothers and children, and how the State and Church controls large swathes of society.  His current project "Trafficked: Bought & Sold/The Gathering Ireland: Bringing home the Irish citizens that were sold abroad," seeks justice for Irish children who were sold/transported abroad by the Irish State and the Catholic Church.
Oct 17, 201202:34:00
The Black Church-Practical Theology: Rev Dr Gregory E Thomas

The Black Church-Practical Theology: Rev Dr Gregory E Thomas

This week I interview my uncle, the Reverend Dr. Gregory E. Thomas has pastored the historic, Calvary Baptist Church of Haverhill, MA for 22 years. Since coming to the predominately African-American 140-year-old church, he has grown the membership, acquired new property, revamped Christian education and initiated ministries of spirituality. He initiated a revamped scholarship program for high school graduates pursuing higher education; instituted food ministries to combat hunger throughout the Merrimac Valley; started a nonprofit development corporation dedicated to taking the mission of the church outside of its walls, and created the Reverend Dr. Gregory E. Thomas African American Church Lecture Series. A native of Cleveland, OH, he entered the preaching ministry in 1980 in Elizabeth, NJ. Dr. Thomas completed his undergraduate study in history in 1970 from Baldwin Wallace College in Berea, OH, where he was a star football player. He received his master's degree in theological studies in 1989 from Harvard Divinity School and his doctorate of ministry in 2001 from Boston University School of Theology. He is a doctoral candidate at Goethe University in Frankfurt, Germany, where he is pursuing a Ph.D. in practical theology.   Dr. Thomas has taught at Goethe University, Harvard Divinity School, Gordon Conwell Seminary and Leslie College. He has written for the American Baptist Quarterly, the National Baptist Voice and has contributed to several books. He is married to the former Janie R. McMillian & has two adult children, Staff Sgt. Eli D. Lavelanet & Jennifer L. Thomas.  Dr. Thomas has served on many boards, including the Haverhill Housing Partnership, the former Bradford College, Habitat for Humanity in Greater Lawrence, the United Baptist Convention of MA, RI and NH and as Advisor to The Center for Practical Theology, Boston University School of Theology.
Sep 28, 201202:00:20
At the Edge: Dr. Randall Horton, Poet and Scholar

At the Edge: Dr. Randall Horton, Poet and Scholar

Dr. Randall Horton, Assistant Professor of English at University of New Haven, hails from Birmingham, AL, and is a former recipient of the Gwendolyn Brooks Poetry Prize. His first book The Definition of Place was a finalist for the Main Street Rag Book Award and was published in their Editor's Select Series in 2006. Dr. Horton is the current poetry editor of Reverie: Midwest African American Literature and co-editor of Fingernails Across the ChalkboardPoetry and Prose on HIV/AIDs from the Black Diaspora(Third World Press, 2007). He is also the editor of four children's anthologies. He received his undergraduate education at both Howard Univ and Univ of DC (B.A. English). He has a MFA in Creative Writing with an emphasis in Poetry from Chicago State Univ and a PhD in Creative Writing from SUNY Albany. He is a Cave Canem fellow and his poems, fiction and nonfiction appear in Motif: Writing by Ear, Mosaic, Black Renaissance, Crab Orchard Review and The Red Clay Review. He is currently working on critical essays that explore the impact of cultural memory and trauma-poetry and poetics. He is on a Poetry Panel at the CBC Conference-WEWCC, Sept 21.
Sep 21, 201201:17:00
At the Edge-Dr. Anthea Butler: Religion, Politics, Gender

At the Edge-Dr. Anthea Butler: Religion, Politics, Gender

In this episode I interview Dr. Anthea Butler, Associate Professor of Religious Studies and Graduate Chair of Religion at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, PA. We will discuss Religion and the 2012 Elections, Sarah Palin; Republican party and Religion; Catholic Church Sex abuse scandals; Women's reproductive rights and political action; 2012 and Mayan Calendar. A Contributing Editor and Blogger at Religion Dispatches, Dr. Butler's research include Religion and Politics, Religion and Popular Culture, Women and Religion, Pentecostalism, sexuality, and African American Religion. She is author of Women in the Church of God in Christ: Making a Sanctified World (UNC Press), and most recently The Gospel According To Sarah: How Sarah Palin's Tea Party Angels Are Galvanizing The Religious Right (The New Press). Dr. Butler can be heard on NPR, Interfaith Voices, and she can be seen on MSNBC as a contributing commentator on Melissa Harris-Perry and other MSNBC features.
Sep 10, 201248:55
At the Edge-African Traditional Religions: Madrina Angelique
Aug 30, 201201:03:09
At the Edge: Tzynya L. Pinchback, Poet and Visionary
Aug 09, 201259:56
At the Edge: Dr. Alondra Nelson, Scholar & Author

At the Edge: Dr. Alondra Nelson, Scholar & Author

In this episode, Dr. Cherie Ann Turpin interviews Dr. Alondra Nelson, Associate Professor of Sociology at Columbia University, whose latest work Body and Soul: The Black Panther Party and the Fight Against Medical Discrimination brings to light the significance of the Black Panther Party's role in challenging mainstream medicine's mistreatment of and discrimination against poor people of African descent in the United States. Dr. Nelson, whose groundbreaking work on theorization of Afrofuturism continues to inspire scholars, will discuss her book, as well as other aspects of her research.
Jul 26, 201201:02:15
At the Edge: Interview with Corset Mag Editor Arielle Loren

At the Edge: Interview with Corset Mag Editor Arielle Loren

Dr. Cherie Ann Turpin interviews Founder and Editor-in-Chief of Corset MagazineArielle Loren about her ground-breaking magazine, her work towards building healthy conversations about female sexuality, and her fascinating documentary Bideology, a feature-length film exploring sexualities.
The latest issue of Corset Magazine is due to be out in August, by the way but do make sure you check out Issues #1 and #2, because your host is a contributor in all three!
Jul 19, 201259:57
Afrofuturist Visions: Interview with Author Thaddeus Howze

Afrofuturist Visions: Interview with Author Thaddeus Howze

Dr. Cherie Ann Turpin interviews up and coming speculative/science fiction author Thaddeus Howze about his novel Hayward's Reach, his collection of short fiction on his website Hubcity Blues, and the growth of cyberpunk and futurism among writers of the African Diaspora.
Jul 11, 201201:01:43
At the Edge: Talking Erotics & Afrofuturism with AfroerotiK
Jun 20, 201229:52