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    black and abroad

    Explore " black and abroad" with insightful episodes like "EP 59: Courtney Anderson and Zenani Fogg | Baecation Chronicles Abroad", "EP 58: Juanita Ingram | Redefining Trailing Spouse Syndrome to Graceful Companionship", "EP 52: Juanita Ingram | The Expats | International Ingrams", "EP 51: Dr. Elizabeth Stordeur Pryor | Colored Travelers | Book on Mobility and the Fight for Citizenship before the Civil War" and "EP 40: Carl Hill | A Rap on Race | Blue Passport Privilege" from podcasts like ""(A)Broad in Education", "(A)Broad in Education", "(A)Broad in Education", "(A)Broad in Education" and "(A)Broad in Education"" and more!

    Episodes (7)

    EP 59: Courtney Anderson and Zenani Fogg | Baecation Chronicles Abroad

    EP 59: Courtney Anderson and Zenani Fogg | Baecation Chronicles Abroad

    SHOW NOTES:
    Tiffany Lachelle chats with Courtney Anderson and Zenani Fogg about their life-changing trip to South Africa and Kenya. While living their entire single girl lives, a winter break trip turns into life-long connections. Dive into this fairytale alongside your host Tiffany Smith!

    Listener Discretion Advised*: This episode makes references to sensitive topics that might be triggering for some listeners.

    SOCIAL MEDIA HANDLES:
    Courtney Anderson on Facebook, @coco.ngindu (Twitter)
    Zenani Fogg on Facebook, @missfog (Twitter)

    If you like what you’re hearing be sure to support the show!

    1. Share the episode: It literally takes a click to send it and it’s off. Listenership helps with sponsorship and with sponsorship, we all win!

    2. Leave a Review: Right on your podcast app or go over to Twitter or Instagram and tell me what you think. What’s on your mind?

    (A)Broad in Education is produced by Tiffany Lachelle Smith, Music by Reallionaire Jream. You can access Lady Justice on his Post Cards Album on Sound Cloud. Music by Epedimic Sound.

    Want to continue this conversation with other EDpats? Subscribe to the podcast and subscribe to the newsletter

    EP 58: Juanita Ingram | Redefining Trailing Spouse Syndrome to Graceful Companionship

    EP 58: Juanita Ingram | Redefining Trailing Spouse Syndrome to Graceful Companionship

    SHOW NOTES:
    In this week's episode, Tiffany Lachelle is joined by attorney, author, and actress Juanita Ingram. Juanita left everything she knew behind when her husband got a job overseas. In this episode, they discuss Juanita’s experience as a Black woman in the legal profession, not trailing but, traveling spouse syndrome, and family life in London and Taiwan. If you want to hear more from Juanita and her show The Expats International Ingrams, check out episode 52 of (A)broad in Education!

    RESOURCES:
    Watch The Expats International Ingrams on Amazon Prime! Juanita’s Website

    SOCIAL MEDIA HANDLES: 
    @iamjuanitaingram

    If you like what you’re hearing be sure to support the show!

    1. Share the episode: It literally takes a click to send it and it’s off. Listenership helps with sponsorship and with sponsorship, we all win!

    2. Leave a Review: Right on your podcast app or go over to Twitter or Instagram and tell me what you think. What’s on your mind?
     
    (A)Broad in Education is produced by Tiffany Lachelle Smith, Music by Reallionaire Jream. You can access Lady Justice on his Post Cards Album on Sound Cloud. Music by Epedimic Sound.

    Want to continue this conversation with other EDpats? Subscribe to the podcast and subscribe to the newsletter

    EP 52: Juanita Ingram | The Expats | International Ingrams

    EP 52: Juanita Ingram | The Expats | International Ingrams

    SHOW NOTES:
    After you subscribe to Amazon Prime, search The Expats: International Ingrams. According to the Amazon snippet, It’s time to “Say goodbye to old-school reality TV and hello to the refreshingly new “smart-reality docu-series” that is taking viewers into the exclusive adventurous world of expats! Follow this adventurous family as they tackle a new world during a global pandemic. The Expats: International Ingrams showcases the life and drama of being black and abroad." Be sure to watch, share, and leave a review of the docu-series!

    In this week’s episode, you’ll hear my discussion with Juanita Ingram, creator, funder, director, and expert of all things docu-series. She discusses this new genre of edutainment that incorporates a family focus on smart reality TV.   

    RESOURCES:
    Website: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08NPX64MH/ref=mp_s_a_1_10_nodl?dchild=1&keywords=the+expats&qid=1605775872&sr=8-10

    Website: http://www.iamjuanitaingram.com

    SOCIAL MEDIA HANDLES:
    Instagram:
    @Iamjuanitaingram
    @theexpatsshow

    (A)Broad in Education is produced by Tiffany Lachelle Smith, Music by Reallionaire Jream. You can access Lady Justice on his Post Cards Album on Sound Cloud. Music by Pixabay. 
     
    Want to continue this conversation with other EDpats? Search (A)Broad in Education on Facebook and join us in the EDpat Lounge.the 

    EP 51: Dr. Elizabeth Stordeur Pryor | Colored Travelers | Book on Mobility and the Fight for Citizenship before the Civil War

    EP 51: Dr. Elizabeth Stordeur Pryor | Colored Travelers | Book on Mobility and the Fight for Citizenship before the Civil War

    SHOW NOTES:
    This week on (A)Broad in Education is Dr. Elizabeth Stordeur Pryor, associate professor at Smith College. In this episode, we discuss her current book, Colored Travelers: Mobility and the Fight for Citizenship before the Civil War, and her upcoming book, a memoir that focuses on unpacking the “N-word.”

    RESOURCES:
    Flourish in the Foreign with Christine Job: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X-2BEuY2EoU&t=4s
    Access your Linear Life Timeline here: http://eepurl.com/hkD3H9
    Dr. Elizabeth Pryor's Selected Publications: Colored Travelers: Mobility and the Fight for Citizenship before the Civil War (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2016).

    “The Etymology of [the N-word]: Resistance, Language and the Politics of Freedom in the Antebellum North” in the Journal of the Early Republic, 36 (Summer 2016), pp. 203-245.
    Presentations: “Why It’s So Hard To Talk About the N-Word,” Ted.com, March 12, 2020.
    Richard Pryor on the Sunset Strip: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-u5mwcMgh0Q

    SOCIAL MEDIA:
    Facebook: Elizabeth Stordeur Pryor
    IG and Twitter: @pryorhistories

    BIOGRAPHY:
    Elizabeth Stordeur Pryor specializes in 19th-century U.S. history and race. Her first book, Colored Travelers: Mobility and the Fight for Citizenship before the Civil War, is a social history of black activists who, long before Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a Montgomery bus, fought against segregation on public vehicles. Pryor argues that their protest elevated the cars, compartments and cabins of public transportation to the frontlines for the battle over equal rights in the 19th century. Her essay, “The Etymology of [the N-word]: Resistance, Language, and the Politics of Freedom in the Antebellum North,” won the Ralph D. Gray Prize for the best article of 2016 in the Journal of the Early Republic. Her next project, inspired by the article as well as her teaching at Smith College, is a historical and pedagogical study of the n-word framed, in part, by her experience as a biracial woman in the United States.

    In the classroom, Pryor is interested in questions of citizenship, race and racism and the history of U.S. slavery, looking carefully at how enslaved people's histories are remembered and who remembers them. Her classes are designed to help students make connections between the anti-blackness of the past and in the present. She is a recipient of a 2011 student-government teaching award and, in 2016, the Sherrerd Prize for Distinguished Teaching at Smith.

    (A)Broad in Education is produced by Tiffany Lachelle Smith, Music by Reallionaire Jream. You can access Lady Justice on his Post Cards Album on Sound Cloud. Music by Pixabay 
     
    Want to continue this conversation with other EDpats? Search (A)Broad in Education on Facebook and join us in the EDpat Lounge. 

    EP 40: Carl Hill | A Rap on Race | Blue Passport Privilege

    EP 40: Carl Hill | A Rap on Race | Blue Passport Privilege

    SHOW NOTES:
    This week’s episode is an episode swap with Carl Hill, the host of The Black Expat Podcast, along with his business partner Patrick, co-host of Six-Packs with Expats. In this episode, we mimicked somewhat of a modern-day version of James Baldwin and Margarette Mead’s discussion called A Rap on Race, which I briefly shared a snippet of in Episode 5 with Brian Cadogan. Rather than discussing race generally, we hone in on the notion of the blue passport privilege and our own interpretations of what it means to be Black and Abroad specifically from Carl and Patrick’s Taiwanese perspectives, and in the UAE, from my perspective. Without further delay, please enjoy my conversation with Carl and Patrick.

    RESOURCES:
    Margaret Mead and James Baldwin, A Rap on Race 1971 Youtube: https://youtu.be/3WNO6f7rjE0
    Travel Noire: Here’s Why You Should Be Following These 5 Black Expat Podcasts. https://travelnoire.com/follow-these-5-black-expat-podcasts
    The Black Expat: Apple Podcasts https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-black-expat/id1273596975
    The Unexpected Perspective (Novel) http://store.bookbaby.com/book/The-Unexpected-Perspective
    Haven Fundraiser - http://bit.ly/2ZcPycN

    BRIEF BIO:
    Carl (he, his) is a Chicago native whose passion for travel and new experiences began in college while studying abroad in Beijing. After graduation and with a degree in Chinese and Sociology from DePauw University, Carl moved to Taipei, Taiwan and has been living, working, and traveling since. During his ten years in Taiwan he visited more than 50 countries and is now the owner of the first and only Black-owned bar and art studio in Taichung, Taiwan.

    SOCIAL MEDIA HANDLES:
    www.facebook.com/ArtsAndCraftsBar
    IG: @artsandcraftsbar and @theblack_expat
    Twitter: @TheBlack_Expat

    (A)Broad in Education is produced by Tiffany Lachelle Smith, Music by Reallionaire Jream. You can access Lady Justice on his Post Cards Album on Sound Cloud. Music from Pixabay.com.
     
    Want to continue this conversation with other EDpats? Search (A)Broad in Education on Facebook and join us in the EDpat Lounge.

    EP 18: Amanda Bates | The Black Expat

    EP 18: Amanda Bates | The Black Expat

    If one more person mentions Amanda Bates, I’m going to social media stalk her and reach out to her myself… which is exactly what I did for this episode! Amanda is an amazing and intelligent woman who identifies as a Third Culture Kid. Growing up in both Cameroon and the United States, she discovered many internal gems, which impacted her career. Her love for cross-cultural encounters inspired her strong interest to "blacken up" study abroad resources. Seeing that there were few to none, she developed The Black Expat- an online platform that centers conversations, resources, and real life experiences from Black Expats that engage globally. You do not want to miss this episode!

    SHOW NOTES: The Black Expat: https://www.theblackexpat.com
    The Black Expat Hub: https://www.theblackexpat.com/join-us/
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theblackexpat/
    Twitter: https://twitter.com/theblackexpat?lang=en

    EP 15: Mugged In Morocco

    EP 15: Mugged In Morocco

    In this solo mini episode, Tiffany travels back to Morocco to reflect on two experiences which she defines as “attempted muggery.” Describing Morocco as a “silent” country because she did not understand French or Arabic, she found herself policing her movement and paying close attention to how she navigated the space.

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