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    Race Talk

    Race Talk is the podcast where race is front and center. We will be interviewing sociologists, demographers, activists, marketers, and historians about race and racism in order to garner a clearer understanding of where we've been, where we are, and where we are going.
    enDavid Morse25 Episodes

    Episodes (25)

    Power Networking and Institutional Racism

    Power Networking and Institutional Racism

    In this episode, our guest is Valerie J. Lyons, founder of Valerie J. Lyons Enterprises, and author of the book, “Power Networking from the Inside Out: Where Your Career and Your Well Being Meet”.  Valerie discusses institutional racism and how networking can help to dismantle systematic oppression.

    Race Talk
    enDecember 18, 2020

    Urban Trauma: A Legacy of Racism

    Urban Trauma: A Legacy of Racism

    In this episode, clinical psychologist, Dr. Maysa Akbar, discusses the human, intergenerational effects of racism and urban trauma, and her book, “Urban Trauma: A Legacy of Racism.”   Additionally, Dr. Akbar offers a sneak preview into her newly released book, “Beyond Ally: The Pursuit of Racial Justice.”   

    Whiteness, White Privilege, and Dismantling Structural Racism

    Whiteness, White Privilege, and Dismantling Structural Racism

    In this very personal episode, multicultural marketing pioneer and thought leader, Rochelle Newman-Carrasco, discusses her growing commitment to confront whiteness and privilege, at an industry and at an individual level, starting with herself. From growing up Jewish on New York City's Lower East Side; to her agency beginnings in 1980 as the first employee of a pioneering Hispanic ad agency; to the present, Rochelle combines candor and comedy into this unforgettable conversation.   

    COVID-19 and Racial Disparities

    COVID-19 and Racial Disparities

    Race Talk host, David Morse, discusses how people of color, particularly African Americans, are suffering and dying from Coronavirus in much higher numbers.  Morse examines some of the causes, as well as how the current situation fits into a much larger historical pattern of healthcare disparities and  medical racism. 

    Medical Bondage: Race, Gender, and the Origins of American Gynecology

    Medical Bondage:  Race, Gender, and the Origins of American Gynecology

    In her book, Medical Bondage, Queens College, CUNY professor Deidre Cooper Owens moves between southern plantations and northern urban centers to reveal how nineteenth-century American ideas about race, health, and status influenced doctor-patient relationships in sites of healing like slave cabins, medical colleges, and hospitals. It also retells the story of black enslaved women and of Irish immigrant women from the perspective of these exploited groups and thus restores for us a picture of their lives.