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DialoguePerspectives | Podcast

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“DialoguePerspectives | Podcast” ist eine Plattform für europäische Diskurse an den Schnittstellen von Religion, Weltanschauung, Politik und Gesellschaft. Hören Sie hier die vielfältigen Stimmen und Perspektiven aus ganz Europa von diskursbestimmenden Intellektuellen, Künstler*innen, Wissenschaftler*innen und Aktivist*innen unterschiedlichster Hintergründe. Ein Podcast von “Dialogperspektiven. Religionen und Weltanschauungen im Gespräch”. "DialoguePerspectives | Podcast" is a platform for European discourse at the intersections of religion, worldview, politics and society. Tune in to the diverse voices and perspectives of discourse-shaping intellectuals, artists, academics and activists of manifold backgrounds from across Europe. A podcast of "DialoguePerspectives. Discussing Religions and Worldviews". www.dialogueperspectives.org | © 2022 DialoguePerspectives
51 Episodes
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The latest podcast episode looks at mobility in Europe from different perspectives, from the right to free movement between national borders to free public transport and the options for people with different backgrounds to move around Europe safely – or not. Neta-Paulina shares her knowledge as a critical geographer: "Critical geography approaches mobility as a socially constructed and contested process, shaped by power relations, inequalities and spatial structures." And Whitney, who is a human rights lawyer, explains the situation from a legal point of view: "A right to mobility is not really recognised as a fundamental right in most legal systems, but it is often considered a component of other recognised rights, such as the right to liberty, the right to freedom of movement." Now that we've barely scratched the surface, we'd like to delve deeper into this topic in the future. If you want to join the conversation and share your thoughts, write us an email info@dialogueperspectives.com and share your thoughts with us! Intro: Carleigh Garcia| Speakers: Whitney Nosakhare, Neta-Pauline Wagner, Henri Vogel | Audio-Edit: Kevin Nagel | Music: Viktor Rosengrün | Editor: Katja Sigutina | ©2023 DialoguePerspectives
TW: violence, sexual violence, abuseThis episode focusues on feminism, storytelling, the current revolution in Iran and the shrinking space for women's rights. To bring in more perspectives on these issues, our hosts invited our DialoguePerspectives alumna Ladan and her friend Nilou to talk about their book project, which brings together different perspectives, experiences and multi-voiced narratives about feminism, everyday experiences of sexism, misogyny or discussions about the concepts of equality, feminism or the gender pay gap. Neta-Paulina also contributed to this book, and took the opportunity to share her text in the episode.If you want to join the conversation, write us an email info@dialogueperspectives.com and share your thoughts with us! Intro: Carleigh Garcia| Speakers: Ladan, Nilou, Whitney Nosakhare, Neta-Pauline Wagner, Henri Vogel | Audio-Edit: Kevin Nagel | Music: Viktor Rosengrün | Editor: Katja Sigutina | ©2023 DialoguePerspectives 
TW: migration, asylum seeking, boarders, death For this episode, our hosts invited DialoguePerspectives alumna Dr. Hannah Pool to discuss the issues of migration, refugees and illegal pushbacks at the EU's external borders. Dr. Hannah Pool is a senior researcher at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies. Her research focuses on the intersection of mobilities, money, and borders.In this episode, Hannah shares her insights about her multifarious experience i.a. working in the Mória Refugee Camp on the Greek island of Lesbos and the current death toll at the EU’s external borders. Furthermore, they address the discrepancy between the actual living conditions of people before or during flight and the way these conditions are debated on the political level.If you want to join the conversation, write us an email info@dialogueperspectives.com and share your thoughts with us!Intro: Carleigh Garcia| Speakers: Hannah Pool, Whitney Nosakhare, Neta-Pauline Wagner,Henri Vogel | Audio-Edit: Kevin Nagel | Music: Viktor Rosengrün | Editor: Katja Sigutina | ©2023 DialoguePerspectives 
David is not only a participant of DialoguePerspectives, but also a fellow of the Young Islam Conference, a board member of Keshet Germany, pre-viewer at the Giornate degli Autori (Mostra del Cinema di Venezia), an activist and filmmaker.In our latest podcast episode, our hosts Whitney, Neta-Paulina and Henri talked to David about his passion for film and learned a lot about his approach to this specific art and media form. David is currently writing his bachelor's thesis on the "queer gaze" in film, in which he is developing his own definition of the term. In this context, they also talked about queer and trans identities, the chances and risks of "queer trends" and mainstream media. Write us an email to info@dialogueperspectives.com and join the conversation!Intro: Carleigh Garcia| Speakers: David Bakum, Whitney Nosakhare, Neta-Pauline Wagner, Henri Vogel | Audio-Edit: Kevin Nagel | Music: Viktor Rosengrün | Editor: Katja Sigutina | © 2023 DialoguePerspectivesShownotes: RuPaul's Drag Racehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RuPaul%27s_Drag_RacePose https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pose_(TV_series)Céline Sciamma https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C%C3%A9line_Sciamma 
Neta-Paulina, who has just returned from our Spring Seminar in Kraków, talks to Whitney about her impressions and also lets some of our participants speak about their previous knowledge and impressions of Poland. Inspired by the participants' responses and the diversity of the group, the two co-hosts recall their own memories of DialoguePerspectives seminars, as both have been attending our seminars for years, and share some highlights from their personal experiences. Write us an email to info@dialogueperspectives.com and join the conversation!Intro: Carleigh Garcia | Speakers: Whitney Nosakhare, Neta-Pauline Wagner | Audio-Edit: Kevin Nagel | Music: Viktor Rosengrün | Editor: Katja Sigutina | © 2023 DialoguePerspectives
#BlackLivesMatter, #JinJiyanAzadi, #StandWithUkraine, #MeToo, #JeSuisCharlie - These hashtags have gone viral in recent years, supporting a range of political campaigns on social media. In the latest episode of our podcast, our co-hosts Neta-Paulina and Whitney discuss and analyse online activism from different perspectives. The main question on their minds is: How can social media campaigns have an impact on political decision making and what examples of successful campaigns do we already know? In addition, the two discuss the moral boundaries of hackerism, the responsibility of politics and the state, and Whitney, who works as a human rights lawyer, explains how online petitions work and their function in politics. The two experts end the episode with a small pro & cons debate on opportunities and risks of online activism. Intro: Carleigh Garcia| Speakers: Whitney Nosakhare, Neta-Paulina Wagner | Audio-Edit: Kevin Nagel | Music: Viktor Rosengrün | Editor: Katja Sigutina | © 2023 DialoguePerspectives
We have been tweaking our podcast "(Re-) Shaping Europe" over the last few weeks and are thrilled to finally share the new format with you!DialoguePerspectives project manager Henri Vogel has invited two of our alumnae, Neta-Paulina Wagner and Whitney Nosakhare, to co-host the podcast to facilitate a pluralistic, discursive and critical thinking conversation. Whitney is a Black human rights lawyer who works on international criminal justice and how to hold human rights violators accountable. She has been associated with the DialoguePerspectives programme for many years and was a workshop leader at our Autumn Seminar last October. Neta-Paulina is a critical geographer concerned with the intersections of identity and human territoriality, and with questions of social order and borders beyond the idea of the nation-state. Like Whitney, she has worked with us for years and will lead a workshop at our next Spring Seminar in March. Together, the three of them will discuss various issues around racism, discrimination against minorities and refugees, pluralism in practice, and many other topics at the intersection between religions, worldviews, politics, and society. So if you want to learn about a wide range of socio-political, interreligious-worldview and pluralistic issues that also transcend European borders, we invite you to listen to our podcast and be part of this conversation! Intro: Carleigh Garcia| Speakers: Henri Vogel, Whitney Nosakhare, Neta-Paulina Wagner | Audio-Edit: Kevin Nagel | Music: Viktor Rosengrün | Editor: Henri Vogel | © 2023 DialoguePerspectives
Episode 17 of (Re-)Shaping Europe is out now! We spoke with our participant Sophie Schmalenberger about far-right parties and actors in Europe, about why they are successful, about normality, why it is desirable to be “normal” but also why it can be a very harmful concept. Ultimately, we tried to find coping mechanisms for researchers and activists in this field and what we as scientists and active members of society can do.Sophie is a participant at DialoguePerspectives since 2021. She holds a Master in European Studies from the University of Aarhus where she is living and working on her PhD today. Sophie researches on far-right actors in Europe, with a particular focus on the German party AfD and how they strategically try to influence German and European memory culture and mobilize nationalist emotions. Sophie is also a Volunteer at Aarhus for Solidarity where she advocates for rejected asylum seekers and people who are threatened by deportation from Denmark. This is her personal reaction to the mainstreaming of right-wing nationalism in Danish politics, to inhuman asylum policies, a lack of solidarity and racist and anti-Muslim stereotypes within the wider Danish population.You can listen to the podcast episode via all relevant podcast outlets.Intro: Carleigh Garcia| Speakers: Henri Vogel, Sophie Schmalenberger | Audio-Edit: Gal Yaron Mayersohn | Music: Viktor Rosengrün | Editor: Henri Vogel | © 2023 DialoguePerspectivesIntro: Carleigh Garcia| Speakers: Henri Vogel, Sophie Schmalenberger | Audio-Edit: Gal Yaron Mayersohn | Music: Viktor Rosengrün | Editor: Henri Vogel | © 2023 DialoguePerspectives
We spoke with Jochen Schlenk about religious freedom in the EU and the process of negotiation between European law, national law and religious law. Also about what a constitutional identity actually is, what the term world-view means - and what it is like to participate in interreligious-worldview dialogue as a non-religious person. Jochen Schlenk is an editor for “Verfassungsblog” — an academic and journalistic open access platform for constitutional law. There, he produces the podcast “VerfassungsPod”. In the 2021/22 programme year, Jochen has joined our team as one of our religious-worldview advisors.Intro: Carleigh Garcia; Speakers: Iman Al Nassre; Jochen Schlenk; Audio-Edit: Gal Yaron Mayersohn; Music: Viktor Rosengrün; Project Leadership: Jo Frank, Johanna Korneli; | © 2022 DialoguePerspectives | www.dialogueperspectives.org
In the 14th episode of our series (Re-)Shaping Europe, Gil Shohat talks to two participants from our current program year: Pauline Pautz, who is participating in our programme for the first time, and Lena Salewski, who has already been a participant in DialoguePerspectives since 2019.In the conversation, our two participants share their experiences of working in different interreligious-worldview contexts and talk about the different visibility of religious life in France and Germany. The main focus will be on the two programmes in which Lena and Pauline have participated: the French initiative Coexister, and the European programme DialoguePerspectives, with the focus on interreligious-worldview dialogue.The podcast episode was recorded on February 10, 2022, hence no mention of the current war in Ukraine.In dieser Folge von (Re-)Shaping Europe sprechen wir mit Dialogperspektiven-Teilnehmer*innen Lena Salewski und Pauline Pautz unter anderem über die Unterschiede zwischen Deutschland und Frankreich im Umgang mit Religion- und Weltanschauungsfreiheit und der Sichtbarkeit von Religionspraxis.  Beide schildern Erfahrungen auf der alltäglichen sowie diskursiven Ebene des interreligiös-weltanschaulichen Dialogs, sowohl bei unserem Programm, den Dialogperspektiven, wie auch bei der französischen Initiative Coexister, die sich vor allem auf niedrigschwellige, praktische Aktionen konzentriert. Wie viel kann der interreligiöse Dialog bewirken, wenn er nicht die strukturelle Ebene von Macht- und Ressourcenverteilung in den Blick nimmt?Intro: Carleigh Garcia; Speakers: Gil Shohat; Pauline Pautz; Lena Salewski; Audio-Edit: Gal Yaron Mayersohn; Music: Viktor Rosengrün; Project Leadership: Jo Frank, Johanna Korneli; | © 2022 DialoguePerspectives | www.dialogueperspectives.org
In this 13th episode of our series (Re-)Shaping Europe, Gil Shohat speaks with our current participant Akhmadshokh Sharifov. Akhmadshokh was born and raised in the Central Asian Republic of Tajikistan and has been living in Germany for five years now. He is currently studying for a Master's degree in "Theory and Comparison of Political Systems in Transition" at the University of Duisburg-Essen. His main areas of interest are European politics, peace and conflict studies and political culture in Europe. Akhmadshokh is also a co-founder of the student initiative "Tajiks without Borders", which brings together students from Tajikistan in Germany. We spoke with him about his experiences with the different ways of commemorating the Second World War in Tajikistan - a former part of the Soviet Union - and in Germany, as well as about the potential of interreligious-worldview dialogue when it comes to mutual, unconditional solidarity in a pluralistic society.In dieser Folge stellen wir Ihnen unseren diesjährigen Teilnehmer Akhmadshokh Sharifov vor. Er ist in der zentralasiatischen Republik Tadschikistan geboren und aufgewachsen - in der Hauptstadt Duschanbe – und lebt seit nunmehr fünf Jahren in Deutschland. Akhmadshokh ist Mitbegründer der studentischen Inititiative Tadschiken ohne Grenzen, die Studierende von dort in Deutschland vernetzt und zusammenbringt. Wir sprachen in dieser Folge unter anderem über seine Erfahrungen mit dem unterschiedlichen Gedenken an den Zweiten Weltkrieg in Tadschikistan – ehemaliger Teil der Sowjetunion – und in Deutschland, darüber, wie sich seine Selbst-und Fremdwahrnehmung in Bezug auf Diskriminierungserfahrungen verändete, als er vom Teil einer Mehrheit in Tadschikistan zum Teil einer Minderheit Deutschland wurde, sowie über das Potenzial von interreligiös-weltanschaulichem Dialog wenn es um gegenseitige, bedingungslose Solidarität in einer pluralen Gesellschaft geht .Intro: Carleigh Garcia; Speakers: Gil Shohat; Akhmadshokh Sharifov; Audio-Edit: Gal Yaron Mayersohn; Music: Viktor Rosengrün; Project Leadership: Jo Frank, Johanna Korneli; | © 2022 DialoguePerspectives | www.dialogueperspectives.org
"Now we speak for ourselves." These words start the #OutInChurch manifesto, with which over one hundred full-time, voluntary and former employees of the Roman Catholic Church in Germany have publicly come out as queer today (24 January 2022). The activists demand an end to the manifold discrimination against queer Catholics in all fields of activity and occupation of the church, as well as the acceptance of responsibility for the institutional history of queer hostility by the Catholic bishops. One of the campaign-initiators is DialoguePerspectives participant Thomas Spinrath. He joined our programme in 2019 and discusses the aims of the campaign, as well as his personal navigation of the tension between Catholic socialisation and queerness, in this (German language) conversation with our Programme Manager, Gil Shohat, for our series (Re-)Shaping Europe.„Nun sprechen wir selbst.“ Diese Worte stehen am Anfang des Manifests von #OutInChurch, mit welchem sich heute über einhundert hauptamtliche, ehrenamtliche und ehemalige Mitarbeitende der römisch-katholischen Kirche in Deutschland öffentlich als queer geoutet haben. Die Aktivist*innen fordern unter anderem ein Ende der Diskriminierung queerer Katholikinnen und Katholiken in allen Handlungs- und Berufsfeldern der Kirche, die Möglichkeit zur kirchlichen Segnung sowie den Zugang zu Sakramenten für LGBTIQ+ - Personen und Paaren, sowie die Übernahme von Verantwortung für die, so schreiben es die Initiatorinnen und Initiatoren der Kampagne, „institutionelle Schuldgeschichte“ der Queerfeindlichkeit durch die katholischen Bischöfe. Einer, der die Kampagne mit initiiert hat, ist Dialogperspektiven-Teilnehmer Thomas Spinrath. Er ist seit 2019 bei unserem Programm dabei und hat mit uns in dieser Podcast-Folge über die Ziele der Kampagne sowie sein persönliches Spannungsverhältnis von katholischer Sozialisation und Queerness erläutert. Wir diskutierten weiterhin die Aussichten dieser Kampagne sowie darüber, was es bedeutet, als queere Person Mitglied einer strukturell queerfeindlichen Institution zu sein. Intro: Carleigh Garcia; Speakers: Gil Shohat; Thomas Spinrath; Audio-Edit: Gal Yaron Mayersohn; Music: Viktor Rosengrün; Project Leadership: Jo Frank, Johanna Korneli; | © 2022 DialoguePerspectives | www.dialogueperspectives.org
In this episode, our participant Fatima Akbar Jiwani joins our DialoguePerspectives podcast series (Re-)Shaping Europe to discuss her interfaith and religious education work in Mumbai, India. We furthermore spoke the situation of  her Shia Ismaili Nizari Muslim community in India and the world, as well as about differences and similarities when it comes to memory culture and pluralism in India and Europe. Fatima is currently pursuing a professional doctorate in Interfaith Studies at the University of Wales Trinity Saint David. Among others, she obtained a master’s in teaching (MTeach) and Master of Arts (M.A) in ‘Muslim Societies and Civilization’; both from University College London (UCL), Institute of Education, (IOE) and from ‘Institute of Ismaili Studies’ (IIS), London, between 2009- 2011. Intro: Carleigh Garcia; Speakers: Gil Shohat; Fatima Akbar Jiwani; Audio-Edit: Gal Yaron Mayersohn; Music: Viktor Rosengrün; Project Leadership: Jo Frank, Johanna Korneli; | © 2022 DialoguePerspectives | www.dialogueperspectives.org
New year, new DialoguePerspectives podcast-episodes! In our first episode in 2022, Gil Shohat speaks to our participant Henri Vogel, who is currently taking part in our DialoguePerspectives-programme for the first time. In their discussion, Henri reflected his experiences as a trans-man in our interreligious-worldview programme as well as how he navigates his manifold identity-markers derived from his personal history in this context. The two furthermore discussed the necessity for the visibility of a queer memory culture, which, as opposed to many other memory cultures, cannot draw from vertical, thus intergenerational and familial memory transmissions, but rather solely from a so-called horizontal memory transmission amongst the communities.Intro: Carleigh Garcia; Speakers: Gil Shohat; Henri Vogel; Audio-Edit: Gal Yaron Mayersohn; Music: Viktor Rosengrün; Project Leadership: Jo Frank, Johanna Korneli; | © 2022 DialoguePerspectives | www.dialogueperspectives.org
Revolution, Hitlerputsch, Pogromnacht, Mauerfall: Kaum ein Datum in der deutschen Geschichte ist historisch, emotional und symbolisch so aufgeladen wie der 9. November. Insbesondere die Pogromnacht und der Fall der Mauer werden heute mit dem Datum in Verbindung gebracht. Diese starke Inbezugsetzung spielt für das Narrativ von der Wiedergutwerdung Deutschlands eine wichtige Rolle: Die Friedliche Revolution der DDR-Bürger*innen und die Wiedervereinigung werden nur zu oft zum symbolischen Abschluss mit der Vergangenheit und einem historischem Neubeginn stilisiert. Aber ließen sich die Ereignisse, die auf den 9. November fallen, nicht anders erzählen? Welche Perspektiven kommen bei der Betrachtung dieses »Schicksalstag der Deutschen« zu kurz? Und kann die Vielfalt und Unterschiedlichkeit dieser Perspektiven, ein gemeinsames Erzählen und Erinnern von Geschichte ermöglichen?An die Stelle kompakter Antworten auf all diese Fragen tritt in der 5. Folge von ERINNERUNGSFUTUR pluralistisches Erinnern in der Praxis: Die CPPD-Mitglieder Jonas Fegert, Sarah Grandke, Peggy Piesche, Gianni Jovanovic, Stephanie Kuhnen und Melina Borčak sprechen über den 9. November und lassen dabei ein Netzwerk von Konsonanzen und Dissonanzen, von Verdichtungen und Verknotungen, von Ver- und Entflechtungen zwischen verschiedensten Erinnerungsmomenten entstehen. Diese Podcastfolge ist ein Mitschnitt der Veranstaltung »Erinnern in Relation. Perspektiven auf den 9. November«, die anlässlich des Gedenkens zum 9. November im Garten des Alexander Haus in Groß Glienicke, Potsdam stattfand. Eine Veranstaltung der Dialogperspektiven und des Ernst Ludwig Ehrlich Studienwerks in Kooperation mit dem Alexander Haus. ***ERINNERUNGSFUTUR ist die Podcastreihe der Coalition for Pluralistic Public Discourse und gehört zum Podcast der Dialogperspektiven. Die 2021 gegründete CPPD versteht sich als ein Netzwerk aus diskursbestimmenden Menschen vielfältigster Hintergründe, die zu Themen von pluralistischer Erinnerungskultur und Vielfalt arbeiten und forschen. Die CPPD ist ein Projekt der Dialogperspektiven. Religionen und Weltanschauungen im Gespräch. ***Speakers: Jonas Fegert, Sarah Grandke, Peggy Piesche, Gianni Jovanovic, Stephanie Kuhnen, Melina Borčak, Amanda Harding Moderation: Jo Frank Audio-Edit: Gal Yaron Mayersohn; Music: Film Glitch by Snowflake © 2017 Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial (3.0) license; Illustration: Rosa Viktoria Ahlers; Projektleitung: Jo Frank, Johanna Korneli © 2021 DialoguePerspectives | www.dialogueperspectives.org
»Erinnerungskultur ist das unangenehmste Thema, das sparen die Leute gerne aus«, erzählt der Journalist und Autor Mohamed Amjahid in der neuen Folge der CPPD-Podcastreihe ERINNERUNGSFUTUR. Auch für die Journalistin und Autorin Alice Hasters ist Erinnerungskultur ein Thema, mit dem viele gesellschaftliche Tabus verbunden sind. Für die 4. Folge von »Erinnerungsfutur« traf Max Czollek die CPPD-Mitglieder zum Gespräch über ein Kapitel, das für die Mehrheit der Menschen in Deutschland und Europa längst abgeschlossen ist. Warum löst das Thema Erinnerungskultur so heftige Reaktionen aus? Wie kann man diesen Reaktionen, die von Gegenwehr bis zu Überforderung reichen, begegnen?  Und was kann und muss man der Mehrheitsgesellschaft angesichts sich pluralisierender Diskurse abverlangen? Um diese und weitere Fragen geht es in der neuen Folge von ERINNERUNGSFUTUR.Alice Hasters ist Autorin und Podcasterin. Sie arbeitet u.a. für Deutschlandfunk Nova und den rbb. Mit Maxi Häcke spricht sie in ihrem monatlichen Podcast Feuer&Brot über Feminismus und Popkultur. 2019 erschien ihr Buch »Was weiße Menschen nicht über Rassismus hören wollen aber wissen sollten« bei Hanser.Mohamed Amjahid ist Journalist und Autor der Bücher »Unter Weißen – Was es heißt privilegiert zu sein« (Hanser Berlin/2017) und »Der weiße Fleck: Eine Anleitung zu antirassistischem Denken« (Piper Verlag/2021). In seiner taz-Kolumne »Die Nafrichten« schreibt er u.a. über Rassismus und europäische Einwanderungspolitiken.***In der CPPD-Podcastreihe ERINNERUNGSFUTUR berichten Wissenschaftler*innen, Künstler*innen und Intellektuelle über ihre Arbeiten zu und Perspektiven auf Erinnerungskulturen in Deutschland und Europa. Was muss sich an deutschen und europäischen Erinnerungskulturen ändern, damit nicht nur ein Teil der Gesellschaft seine Geschichte dort wiederfindet, sondern alle? Wie könnte so ein pluralistisches Erinnern konkret aussehen? Und auf welche gesellschaftlichen Konflikte müssen wir uns in diesen Prozessen einstellen? Über diese und andere Fragen kommen wir in ERINNERUNGSFUTUR gemeinsam ins Gespräch. Die Reihe ist Teil des Podcasts der Dialogperspektiven,#cppd #cppdpodcast #anderserinnern #erinnernpluralisieren  #antisemitismus #rassismus #erinnerungskultur #erinnerungsfutur  #untröstlichSpeakers: Alice Hasters, Mohamed Amjahid; Moderation: Max Czollek Audio-Edit: Gal Yaron Mayersohn; Music: Film Glitch by Snowflake © 2017 Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial (3.0) license; Illustration: Rosa Viktoria Ahlers; Projektleitung: Jo Frank, Johanna Korneli © 2021 DialoguePerspectives | www.dialogueperspectives.org
In this episode, Gil Shohat spoke to our participant Svea M. Schnaars, a third-time participant in the DialoguePerspectives programme. We discussed her experiences as a self-proclaimed atheist in our interreligious-worldview programme as well as the necessary boundaries for conducting respectful and forward-oriented dialogue between participants of manifold backgrounds. Svea also shared some insights from her research in the last years, examining the relationship between Scientism, Critical Theory, as well as Poststructuralism in the context of the debate surrounding the "New Atheism" movement in the early 2000s. In this context, Svea explicitly underscored the importance of interreligious-worldview dialogue for non-believers like herself. Intro: Carleigh Garcia; Speakers: Gil Shohat; Svea M. Schnaars; Audio-Edit: Gal Yaron Mayersohn; Music: Viktor Rosengrün; Project Leadership: Jo Frank, Johanna Korneli; | © 2021 DialoguePerspectives | www.dialogueperspectives.org
In the seventh episode of our podcast series (Re-)Shaping Europe, our programme manager Gil Shohat spoke with our participant and interfaith activist Josephine Davidoff. Born and raised in London, she self-identifies as a British Progressive Jew, specializing in the fields of interfaith and community cohesion. She works as a Project Coordinator and Communications Professional dedicated to empowering marginalised faith and non-faith communities to strengthen social cohesion and understanding in the British capital. She recently accepted a position as Donor Relations Assistant at the Faith and Belief Forum, an interfaith charity based in the UK seeking good relations between people of all faiths and beliefs, reaching over 16 000 people a year.Gil and Josephine talked about the importance of remembrance and memory culture for interfaith work, her Jewish perspective on the differences between Germany and the UK when it comes to living diversity, as well as about her impressions from our recent autumn seminar. In a public posting summarizing our days in Potsdam she wrote, among others: “Despite many challenging themes and topics, I felt a real tangible sense of collective allyship across the cohort, with participants reaching out to one another for support, which, for me, made the whole experience ever more meaningful and significant.” Intro: Carleigh Garcia; Speakers: Gil Shohat; Josephine Davidoff; Audio-Edit: Gal Yaron Mayersohn; Music: Viktor Rosengrün; Project Leadership: Jo Frank, Johanna Korneli; | © 2021 DialoguePerspectives | www.dialogueperspectives.org
Was genau ist postkoloniale Stadtforschung und in welchem Verhältnis steht sie zu einer pluralistischen Erinnerungskultur? Inwiefern prägt Deutschlands koloniale Vergangenheit das Berliner Stadtbild bis heute? Welche Alternativen gibt es für die Gestaltung von Architektur und öffentlichen Plätzen schon heute und warum ist es so schwer, diese umzusetzen? Über diese Fragen und das Potential dezentraler Formen der Erinnerungskultur spricht Jo Frank mit Noa K. Ha in der 3. Folge von ERINNERUNGSFUTUR.Noa K. Ha ist Urbanistin, kommissarische wissenschaftliche Geschäftsführerin am Deutschen Zentrum für Integrations- und Migrationsforschung (DeZIM) und CPPD-Mitglied. Sie arbeitet und forscht zu den Schwerpunkten postkoloniale Stadtforschung, migrantisch-diasporische Erinnerungspolitik, kritische Integrationsforschung und Rassismuskritik.ERINNERUNGSFUTUR – der Podcast zu pluralistischen Erinnerungskulturen.Wie erzählen Gesellschaften sich selbst? Wer erinnert wann, wo, wie und an wen? Wessen Erinnerung wird sichtbar gemacht – durch staatliche Förderung, durch Ausstellungen, Denkmale, Gedenktage – wessen nicht? Erinnerungskultur ist dynamisch und politisch. Sie enthält eine Deutung von Geschichte, eine Interpretation von Gegenwart, Visionen von Zukunft, Identitätsangebote. Deswegen muss Erinnerungskultur immer wieder neu verhandelt werden. ERINNERUNGSFUTUR ist die Podcastreihe der Coalition for Pluralistic Public Discourse. Die 2021 gegründete CPPD versteht sich als ein Netzwerk aus diskursbestimmenden Menschen vielfältigster Hintergründe, die zu Themen von pluralistischer Erinnerungskultur und Vielfalt arbeiten und forschen. Die CPPD ist ein Projekt der Dialogperspektiven. Religionen und Weltanschauungen im Gespräch.In ERINNERUNGSFUTUR berichten Wissenschaftler*innen, Künstler*innen und Intellektuelle über ihre Arbeiten zu und Perspektiven auf Erinnerungskulturen in Deutschland und Europa.Was muss sich an deutschen und europäischen Erinnerungskulturen ändern, damit nicht nur ein Teil der Gesellschaft seine Geschichte dort wiederfindet, sondern alle? Wie könnte so ein pluralistisches Erinnern konkret aussehen? Und auf welche gesellschaftlichen Konflikte müssen wir uns in diesen Prozessen einstellen? Über diese und andere Fragen kommen wir in ERINNERUNGSFUTUR gemeinsam ins Gespräch. Speakers: Dr. Noa K. Ha; Moderation: Jo Frank Audio-Edit: Gal Yaron Mayersohn; Music: Film Glitch by Snowflake © 2017 Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial (3.0) license; Illustration: Rosa Viktoria Ahlers; Projektleitung: Jo Frank, Johanna Korneli | © 2021 DialoguePerspectives | www.dialogueperspectives.org
In this fascinating bi-lateral exploration, Jessica Jung and Nurenisa Reichling discuss their approaches to the complex relationship between the topics of mental health and religious practice. Their two respective viewpoints on the issue, underscored by their academic, religious and private engagements, yield an intriguing interplay that gives us some clarity on the how these two spheres intermingle with each other – in positive as well as in negative ways.  Nurenisa Reichling is a recent graduate in languages and economics, and a Master’s student in Global Studies at the University of Graz. She has developed an interest in the intersection of Mental Health and Islam from personal encounters as well as through her volunteer work. Jessica Jung is currently studying for her Masters degree in Intercultural psychology at the University of Osnabrück. She has developed a long standing interest in the ways religion and spirituality shape the human psyche and how this essential part of life can be addressed in the context of psychotherapy. Intro: Carleigh Garcia; Speakers: Gil Shohat; Jessica Jung; Nurenisa Reichling; Audio-Edit: Gal Yaron Mayersohn;  Music: Viktor Rosengrün; Project Leadership: Jo Frank, Johanna Korneli; | © 2021 DialoguePerspectives | www.dialogueperspectives.org
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