Skip to main content
You Kant Say That!

You Kant Say That!

By Na'ama Carlin and Melanie White

Do you get excited by questions more than answers? Do you like showing off at parties with random knowledge? In this podcast, sociologists and social theorists Drs Melanie White and Na’ama Carlin take everyday ideas and explore them through different sociological and philosophical perspectives. Season 1 focuses on the notion of the 'self' as explored in common sociological texts. Join us, in our mission to make the familiar unfamiliar!
Available on
Apple Podcasts Logo
Spotify Logo
Currently playing episode

Who are we?

You Kant Say That!Jul 16, 2019

00:00
19:11
Answers!

Answers!

If you love reading fiction, and you LOVE closure, you're going to mildly like today's episode! In the final episode of season 1, Na'ama and Melanie conclude this season on 'the self' by talking about animals and plants. What are the limits of selfhood? Do plants have selves? How is fiction helpful in thinking about these existential questions? Spoiler: we do not have answers.

What should I read?
This week, we're reading J M Coetzee's The Lives of Animals and Han Kang's The Vegetarian.

Jan 15, 202032:03
The cat has no clothes
Dec 17, 201940:00
Blowing bubbles

Blowing bubbles

Jakob von Uexküll (1864–1944) is a founder of the field of behavioural physiology. He explored what makes ticks... tick. But how does Uexküll's work shed light on what makes us tick? For that and more, join Melanie and Na'ama in a soap bubble and go on a stroll. Bonus: Melanie's first ever introduction to Aussie icons Kath & Kim, and a dramatic reading of a tick sniffing out blood. 

Nov 10, 201932:32
Life finds a way
Oct 21, 201937:50
Bad to the core - a moral (r)evolution
Oct 07, 201938:34
Who's hungry?
Sep 24, 201946:14
Labour pains
Sep 11, 201939:36
Are you feeling discontent?
Aug 26, 201942:60
I am, I exist  so long as  I am...
Aug 13, 201925:38
Ah ha! At last, I have discovered it
Jul 30, 201926:21
Who are we?

Who are we?

What is the self, and why is it interesting? How can sociology help us think about who we are in the world? This episode, get to know Melanie and Na'ama and find out what's in store for the series!

What should I read?
Our discussion this week is general, but we really love:
Game, A, and Metcalfe, A.W. (1996), 'Knowing', in Passionate Sociology, SAGE Publications, London

Jul 16, 201919:11