Ethnic minority Leave voters: Neema talks us through her PhD research where she breaks down the reasons why approximately a third of ethnic minorities in the UK voted to Leave the European Union in 2016. Special thanks to Aaron Winter, Nasar Meer and the BSA for the support and funding that made our trip to Glasgow possible!
Jun 20, 2019•17 min•Transcript available on Metacast Teaching the sociology of education in Bangalore: Reva reflects on teaching sociology in post-independence India with discussion on class, caste, gender and the state. Special thanks to Aaron Winter, Nasar Meer and the BSA for the support and funding that made our trip to Glasgow possible!
Jun 18, 2019•19 min•Transcript available on Metacast Stigma machines: Imogen talks us through the way the state continues to use stigmatisation to justify harmful policies like austerity. Go to the Sociological Review website to read more about Imogen's work on stigma: https://www.thesociologicalreview.com/blog/from-stigma-power-to-black-power-a-graphic-essay.html Special thanks to Aaron Winter, Nasar Meer and the BSA for the support and funding that made our trip to Glasgow possible!
Jun 11, 2019•31 min•Transcript available on Metacast Justice for Sheku: Smina talks us through what we know (and don't know) about the death of Sheku Bayo in police custody and the justice campaign that continues to take on the Scottish state. Special thanks to Aaron Winter, Nasar Meer and the BSA for the support and funding that made our trip to Glasgow possible!
Jun 06, 2019•21 min•Transcript available on Metacast The Racial politics of cultural capital: Derron recalls his journey through academia and what it was like being Black and from a working class background at University of Cambridge. We discuss Derron's reflections and research on Bourdieu and the racial politics of cultural capital. You can read more on this in his latest publication here - https://journals.sagepub.com/eprint/C4PMMSQZSV7CCWVPUTUA/full Special thanks to Aaron Winter, Nasar Meer and the BSA for the support and funding that made ou...
Jun 04, 2019•26 min•Transcript available on Metacast Researching the far right: Aaron joins us to discuss the mainstream nature of far right politics in the UK and beyond. Special thanks to Aaron Winter, Nasar Meer and the BSA for the support and funding that made our trip to Glasgow possible!
May 28, 2019•23 min•Transcript available on Metacast Mixedness in Birmingham: Karis Campion joined us to discuss her PhD on mixed race identities which sort to situate place, space and time as integral to our analysis of mixedness in the U.K. Special thanks to Aaron Winter, Nasar Meer and the BSA for the support and funding that made our trip to Glasgow possible!
May 23, 2019•20 min•Transcript available on Metacast Darts & line dancing: Mark Ball tells us about his PhD research focused on the sociology of darts and line dancing in Stoke-on-Trent. Special thanks to Aaron Winter, Nasar Meer and the BSA for the support and funding that made our trip to Glasgow possible!
May 21, 2019•24 min•Transcript available on Metacast Long-term Caribbean migrants: Elsa Oommen discusses her current research on long-term Caribbean migrants, citizenship and state violence. Special thanks to Aaron Winter, Nasar Meer and the BSA for the support and funding that made our trip to Glasgow possible!
May 14, 2019•16 min•Transcript available on Metacast Racism in Scotland: Nasar Meer talks us through new quantitative research on experiences of racism for Black and minority ethnic populations living in Scotland. Special thanks to Aaron Winter, Nasar Meer and the BSA for the support and funding that made our trip to Glasgow possible!
May 09, 2019•15 min•Transcript available on Metacast Marcus Garvey, Rastafarianism and the United Negro Improvement Association: in the first of our conversations at the British Sociological Association (BSA) Annual Conference in Glasgow, we talk to the wonderful Shey Fyffe about her research on histories of Black thought. Special thanks to Aaron Winter, Nasar Meer and the BSA for the support and funding that made our trip to Glasgow possible!
May 07, 2019•12 min•Transcript available on Metacast In this bonus episode we are joined by Jason Arday to relay our experiences of growing up Black in the 1990s, our relationships with popular culture and contemplate whether much has changed in terms of racialisation and racism in the UK. We share some cultural analysis through music, raving, gigging and finish with a little bit of academic fashion tips!
Apr 23, 2019•1 hr 12 min•Transcript available on Metacast What are the links between ecological crisis, capitalism and racism? How has racism in the UK changed since the '70s? And why do celebrities suddenly feel they need to come out as TERFs*? Chantelle and Saskia revel in a bit of Marxism with Gargi Bhattacharyya, who talks to us about her new book Rethinking Racial Capitalism, and we have a think about why the idea of racial capitalism offers more questions than answers. The usual disclaimers about ranting, swearing and laughing apply ;) *Trans-Exc...
Apr 12, 2019•58 min•Transcript available on Metacast We talk to Adam Elliott-Cooper about why we should abolish the police, the long history of criminalising Black music, and why we may as well vote Labour. Ranting, swearing and laughter abound.
Mar 05, 2019•1 hr 3 min•Transcript available on Metacast Welcome to Season 3 of Surviving Society! This week we talk about what we've been reading; how our sociological imagination has changed since beginning the podcast and we discuss how we are individually coming to terms/coping with the current political mess. Expect the usual laughter and swearing throughout.
Feb 20, 2019•1 hr 5 min•Transcript available on Metacast In this episode we are lucky enough to be talking to Professor Ben Rogaly, human geographer at the University of Sussex, activist, and one of Saskia's PhD supervisors. Ben tells us about his work with residents of Peterborough, what 'gangmastering' is, and why Peterborough is an important place when it comes to thinking about Englishness, migration and racisms. As well as talking about whiteness in rural England, we ask Ben to help us out in thinking about the debate around anti-semitism in the ...
Dec 11, 2018•54 min•Transcript available on Metacast This week we are back with an Alternative to Woman's Hour featuring actor and activist Rebecca Scroggs! Rebecca shares her experiences in the acting world as a mixed-race Black woman, we talk #MeToo, #TimesUp and #ShutUp (disclaimer: not a real movement…yet), and we have a think about how complicated social class can be. The chair of a housing cooperative, we also talk to Rebecca about the current political climate in relation to social housing, and why squatting is a radical act. Expect lots of...
Nov 27, 2018•1 hr 16 min•Transcript available on Metacast This week we travel to Sussex to speak to Dr Joe Kennedy of the University of Gothenburg about his new book Authentocrats and as per we get SUPER POLITICAL. Discussing the policies and legacies of centre-ground political parties, Joe explains how he wants to show that Labour is just as guilty as the Tories and UKIP when it comes to using the 'authentic' views of stereotypical small-town voters as an excuse for racist policies. In a conversation that ranges from crime dramas to Game of Thrones to...
Nov 13, 2018•55 min•Transcript available on Metacast What's with all these BME/BAME acronyms, and are they actually useful? Is white genocide a thing? And how can the government claim austerity is over if they aren't increasing public spending? In this episode we grapple with how to talk about people who are racialised, far-right ideals of racial purity, and the deceptions of our government, with a little help from our friends Avtar Brah and Kalwant Bhopal. We get ranty, we get sweary, and we have a wry chuckle about all the nonsense that the worl...
Nov 06, 2018•1 hr 5 min•Transcript available on Metacast This week we are super excited to be joined by one of our favourite sociologists and teachers Professor Les Back to talk about his latest book, Migrant City, which he has co-written with Dr Shamser Sinha. After an introduction from Les and Charlynne Bryan, who contributed to Migrant City, Les tells us about the ten-year project in which he and Shamser have followed the lives of 30 migrants, some of whom are refugees and asylum seekers, as they seek to establish their lives in London in the face ...
Oct 30, 2018•1 hr 10 min•Transcript available on Metacast When Saskia started her PhD in the Geography Department at Royal Holloway, one of the first things she noticed was the absence of people of colour in her research group. Given the numbers of students of colour at undergraduate level in the UK, why are the academic staff and PhD students she works with almost all white? Along with special guest Dom Jackson-Cole from the University of East London, Chantelle and Tissot visited Saskia's research group to talk about the ways in which universities exc...
Oct 23, 2018•1 hr 13 min•Transcript available on Metacast Welcome to another *live* episode of Surviving Society! In our third and final collaboration with The Sociological Review, our #1 fan Dr Michaela Benson interviews Saskia, Chantelle and Tissot about podcasting, public sociology, and how we've helped each other to survive our PhDs. With our lovely audience of fellow PhD students and early career researchers, we discuss why we see sociology as an activist discipline, and the importance of harnessing your rage when you're doing social research. Tha...
Oct 16, 2018•1 hr 2 min•Transcript available on Metacast What do people mean when they talk about the 'smart city', and can the smart city ever be inclusive? In our second episode recorded in collaboration with The Sociological Review, Chantelle, Tissot and Saskia talk to Dr Ayona Datta about her work on urban transformations in Indian cities. Ayona argues that we need to be skeptical about whether smart cities can really address deep-rooted inequalities - smart water meters are useless if there's no infrastructure for clean running water. Tissot tell...
Oct 09, 2018•15 min•Transcript available on Metacast In the first of our collaborations with The Sociological Review, Professor Satnam Virdee talks to Tissot, Chantelle and Saskia about the importance of ‘race’ when it comes to understanding class and capitalism. Satnam argues that, looking at the last three centuries of capitalism in Britain and its empire, we can see that ‘‘race’ and nation, when it comes to thinking about Britain, run hand in hand’. As informative about the current political moment as he is about histories of capitalism, we esp...
Oct 02, 2018•31 min•Transcript available on Metacast As we celebrate one year of Surviving Society, we treat you to a bonus episode in which Tissot reflects on Europe’s post-Brexit shift to the right, Saskia gets to grips with being a person of colour, and Chantelle reminds us of austerity’s death toll. The political picture hasn’t improved much since we started last September, but by thinking and raging and taking action together, we can have some hope that we will survive society. Thank you so much for being with us for our first birthday, and h...
Sep 25, 2018•30 min•Transcript available on Metacast Why does culture matter when it comes to racism? Does having people of colour on TV make a difference to people’s lives? This week, we talk to Goldsmiths’ very own Dr Anamik Saha about his book, Race and the Cultural Industries, which deals with these very questions and much more. Anamik gives us his theory on the representation of people of colour in pop culture, we discuss what we all thought of Spike Lee’s BlacKKKlansman, and Anamik brilliantly breaks down the relationship between culture, ra...
Sep 25, 2018•1 hr•Transcript available on Metacast We’re back! In our first episode of the academic year and third Alternative to Woman’s Hour, Chantelle discusses her experiences of partial privilege whilst her partner was receiving cancer treatment in private hospitals, Saskia shares some questionable fashion finds during her trip to Paris, and we end with a good old rant about the state of UK TV dramas and their obsession with white middle-class women with short brown hair and weird families. Ranting, swearing and laughing, we’re ready for an...
Sep 18, 2018•55 min•Transcript available on Metacast What does it mean to be a Black woman in the English education system? Special guest April-Louise Pennant talks about why she is researching the educational experiences of Black women, how those women have negotiated racism and sexism in schools and universities, and why it is important that those experiences are heard. Chantelle tells us about her activist work on getting more Black students to do PhDs, and we pull apart the reasons behind the media obsession with 'grade inflation'. As usual, w...
Jul 21, 2018•49 min•Transcript available on Metacast In the lead-up to the World Cup, Chantelle is pissed off with the constant stream of racism directed at Raheem Sterling, and Tissot talks about the white supremacist Tommy Robinson, and why locking him up could turn him into a martyr for the far-right. Fresh from her holiday in Finland, Saskia tells us about her experiences of the country, perceptions of Brexit from the Eastern border of Europe, and whether it’s a safe place to visit if you’re a person of colour. As usual, you can expect us to b...
Jul 05, 2018•1 hr 5 min•Transcript available on Metacast In this very special episode, Chantelle and Tissot chat to Dr Priyamvada Gopal, English lecturer at the University of Cambridge and brilliant anti-racist activist. Between the three of us, we pull apart racism and representation in universities, colonialism and its collaborators and the abuse that comes with anti-racist activism. There might be a few swear words in there, but mainly it's an essential conversation that gives context to the struggles people of colour continue to face in UK higher ...
Jun 21, 2018•1 hr 3 min•Transcript available on Metacast