Episodes
Co-host Karyn introduces herself to the listeners and talks about the challenges of tackling classical Chinese philosophical texts.
Published 04/07/24
Early Chinese philosophers were deeply aware of a world that is constantly changing: we look at how Confucians, Legalists, and Daoists responded to this challenge.
Published 03/24/24
Introducing Chinese philosophy through the concept of "dao," a fundamental word in classical Chinese philosophy, with a range of meanings across its different traditions.
Published 03/10/24
How Africana philosophy looked to a young Chike Jeffers, coming into the field in the early 21st century.
Published 02/25/24
The key events and figures in philosophy as an academic discipline, in both Africa and the diaspora.
Published 02/11/24
Cornel West joins us to look back on the development of his thought and the many authors who have inspired him.
Published 01/28/24
An introduction to Cornel West, focusing on his early essay “Philosophy and the Afro-American Experience.”
Published 01/15/24
A movement of legal scholars diagnoses the limitations of merely “formal” measures against discrimination, a point they connect to issues like affirmative action, democratic process, and intersectionality.
Published 12/31/23
What inspired Asante's controversial philosophy of Afrocentricity, and its relationship to religion, nationalism, and feminism.
Published 12/17/23
How writers like George G.M. James, John Henrik Clarke, Cheikh Anta Diop, Yosef ben-Jochannan, and Chancellor Williams prepared the way for the Afrocentricity of Molefi Asante and captured the imaginations of hip hop artists and intellectuals like Ta-Nehisi Coates.
Published 12/11/23
Sylvia Wynter offers a bold and provocative assessment of the role of the humanities in understanding humankind.
Published 11/19/23
Cedric J. Robinson reflects on the power and limitations of Marxism while charting the past and prospects of black radical thought.
Published 11/05/23
The author of an important book on Glissant joins us to talk about his approach to this major Caribbean thinker.
Published 10/22/23
Poet, novelist, playwright and philosopher Edouard Glissant, his theory of "creolization", and the Creolists who were influence by him. 
Published 10/16/23
Stuart Hall pioneers “cultural studies,” offering tools for analysis of films, television, fiction and music that were put to use by followers like Paul Gilroy and Hazel Carby.
Published 09/24/23
The great Kenyan writer Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o joins us to speak about his career, his influences, and the power and politics of language.
Published 09/10/23
How one of Kenya's greatest writers came to argue that African literature should be written in African languages.
Published 08/05/23
We bring the story of black feminism up to the turn of the century with the incisive works of bell hooks and Patricia Hill Collins.
Published 07/16/23
In poetry and prose, especially her collection "Sister Outsider," Audre Lorde explores ideas of difference, eroticism, and feminist theory.
Published 07/03/23
The eventful life and penetrating philosophy of Angela Davis, an icon of resistance deeply informed by Marxism and influential on black feminist thought.
Published 06/18/23
Toni Morrison, Maya Angelou and Alice Walker explore the themes of black feminism (or “womanism”) in their fiction. Warning: this episode contains discussion of sexual violence and suicide.
Published 06/05/23
1970s black feminists like Toni Cade Bambara, the Combahee River Collective, and Awa Thiam critique white feminist and black nationalist failures to recognize the unique struggle of the black woman.
Published 05/21/23
Another Caribbean thinker, Walter Rodney of Guyana, explores Africana history from a Marxist perspective. 
Published 04/30/23
Famous for his killing at the hands of the Apartheid government in South Africa, Steve Biko was also a deep thinker, who introduced the notion of Black Consciousness.
Published 04/16/23