This week, we're exploring the built environments around us by investigating the tensions between city-planning and the organic, unplanned life of their inhabitants. With us on this episode is Witold Rybczynski, Professor Emeritus of Urbanism at the University of Pennsylvania. For more exciting content and ideas, please subscribe to our podcast, follow us on Instagram (@seasoned.migrant) and check out our website, www.seasonedmigrant.com. New episodes out every Wednesday!
This week, we're looking at science-fiction, its intersections with colonialism, and the exciting ways in which the genre is being pushed forward by Afrofuturists. With us on this episode is John Rieder (Author, ‘Colonialism and the Emergence of Science Fiction’) and Ytasha Womack (Filmmaker, novelist and the author behind ‘Afrofuturism: The World of Black Sci-Fi and Fantasy Culture’). For more exciting content and ideas, please subscribe to our podcast, follow us on Instagram (@seasoned.migrant) and check out our website, www.seasonedmigrant.com. New episodes out every Wednesday!
In this episode, we look at the restaurant culture of 18th Century China, how Chinese-American cuisine has developed over time, and how this has been interwoven with the politics of migration in America. With us on this episode is Andrew Coe, scholar of culinary history and author of ‘Chop Suey: a Cultural History of Chinese Food in the United States’ For more exciting content and ideas, please subscribe to our podcast, follow us on Instagram (@seasoned.migrant) and check out our website, www.seasonedmigrant.com. New episodes out every Wednesday!
In this episode, we unpack the ways in which beauty pageants in the United States and Nigeria have been sites for contesting ideas of womanhood and national identity. With us on this episode are Margot Mifflin (Professor of English at Lehman College - CUNY), Kemi Balogun (Associate Professor of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies and Sociology, University of Oregon) and Zehra Abukar (Miss Muslimah 2020). For more exciting content and ideas, please subscribe to our podcast, follow us on Instagram (@seasoned.migrant) and check out our website, www.seasonedmigrant.com. New episodes out every Wednesday!
In this episode, we talk about the foreign influences that shaped Korean popular music and how the scene evolved into the global phenomenon of K-Pop. To round it all off, we look at what this all means for the way cultural power is mapped between countries. With us on this episode is Dr. Hyeri Jung, Assistant Professor of Communication Studies at Eastern University. For more exciting content and ideas, please subscribe to our podcast, follow us on Instagram (@seasoned.migrant) and check out our website, www.seasonedmigrant.com. New episodes out every Wednesday!
Welcome back to Season Two of the Seasoned Migrant podcast! In this episode, we look at the origins of the study of English literature and it’s strong and unexpected connections to the colonial agenda of British India. With us on this episode is Gauri Viswanathan, Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University and author of ‘Masks of Conquest’. For more exciting content and ideas, please subscribe to our podcast and follow us on Instagram (@seasoned.migrant). New episodes out every Wednesday!
In this episode, we look at the impact Muhammad Ali had on shaping the course of social history: from his conversion to Islam and changing his name, to refusing to fight in the Vietnam War, Ali stood against an oppressive and racist status quo in each one of these actions. We look at the impact his life had on not just America, but on people all around the world. For more exciting content and ideas, please subscribe to our podcast and follow us on Instagram (@seasoned.migrant). New episodes out every Wednesday!
In this episode, we look at memes as a cultural phenomenon. We look at their origins, what makes them so special, and chat with Gabriele de Seta about the different meanings memes take on as they move from country to country. For more exciting content and ideas, please subscribe to our podcast and follow us on Instagram (@seasoned.migrant). New episodes out every Wednesday!
In this episode, we talk about the global story of South Asian food. Its ingredients and recipes traveled far and wide to make the cuisine what it is today -- join us as we discuss the origins of various dishes, how the first Indian restaurants in the West came to be, and how this journey changed migrants’ relationship to food. For more exciting content and ideas, please subscribe to our podcast and follow us on Instagram (@seasoned.migrant). New episodes out every Wednesday!
In our first-ever triple-bill episode, we chat with Kevin Dunn, Raymond Patton, and Theresa Steward and take a deep dive into the punk movement, investigating the impact it had on world culture. First, we look at what punk stood for and how it was able to connect with people in many different and personal ways. Then, we look at the spread of punk around the world. Despite originating in the UK and the US, punk was just as successful on the other side of the Cold War. We look at the reasons why punk appealed across such different and divided political landscapes and what features of the movement made the spread possible. Finally, we look at the underground scene beyond this Cold War divide. We discuss the emergence of the underground scene in Iran following the 1979 Revolution and look at the motivations of the musicians involved - and how, often, these motivations have differed from how they have been portrayed as by Western media. A special thanks goes to our guests, and to Kevin’s band, the Sriracha-chas, for allowing us to use their music for the episode. For more exciting content and ideas, please subscribe to our podcast and follow us on Instagram (@seasoned.migrant). New episodes out every Wednesday!
In this episode, we sit down with Rini Bhattacharya Mehta and look at how Bollywood, and Indian Cinema as a whole, has shaped and been shaped by the Indian identities portrayed in film. The cultural output of Indian cinema produced in Mumbai was itself a unifying force for a nation that was otherwise split into various linguistic and cultural regions. The movies produced in Mumbai were watched on screens across the country and so Mumbai had an influential stake in shaping the messages that would contribute to a shared Indian identity. This identity has changed over time along with India’s position in the global context: from colonial subject, to an East-West binary during the Cold War, to now a nation intimately involved with globalisation. All of these narratives extended onto the portrayal of the Indian diaspora abroad, which had a special and contested status in narratives of the Indian homeland. For more exciting content and ideas, please subscribe to our podcast and follow us on Instagram (@seasoned.migrant). New episodes out every Wednesday!
In this episode, we explore the ways in which national heroes have been used in school history curriculums to create a sense of nationhood, to confer legitimacy to the state, and to contribute towards systems of oppression. We first look at the way Hong Kong created a separate school subject, Chinese History, which emphasised the character traits of important historical figures and the dynastic history of the country to protect and retain a sense of Chinese identity in the Islands. We then interview Musty Kamal on Muhammad Ali Jinnah and how his place as a national hero and the way Pakistan remembers him changes from person to person, particularly among those in power, to fit a certain narrative of the day. And finally, we delve into how the national story of the Voortrekkers and The Great Trek was taught in South African schools to uphold oppressive value systems in the era of apartheid. For more exciting content and ideas, please subscribe to our podcast and follow us on Instagram (@seasoned.migrant). New episodes out every Wednesday!
In this episode, we explore the origins and impact of the telenovela. We first look at how these shows were inspired by workers in Cuban cigar factories reading stories out loud to one another, before spreading throughout Latin America following Cuba’s 1959 Revolution. We then dive into the Brazilian telenovelas industry with Taina Silva, who shares her research on how telenovelas have incorporated social issues of the day into their scripts and how stirring subjects like abortion, sex, and cloning have been received by viewers. From there, we look at the popularity of telenovelas beyond Latin America. We explore how they made their way to Eastern Europe and beyond, dominating screens and becoming part and parcel of people’s lives across the world. Now, countries in Latin America are not just exporting their shows, they are themselves importing shows from around the globe as production companies outside the region take the unique storytelling of telenovelas and adapt them to their own, local stories. For more exciting content and ideas, please subscribe to our podcast and follow us on Instagram (@seasoned.migrant). New episodes out every Wednesday!
In this episode, we follow the trajectory of Elvis’s life, untangling the complex factors that contributed to his success and the impact he had on American culture. First, we look at how Elvis redefined stardom — prim and proper movie stars went out, and the American, counter-culture rebel replaced them. However, Elvis's life wasn’t just about redefining what it meant to be an American icon. His career became the first successful bridge between white and black culture in 20th century America — as such, his life was deeply intertwined with race relations in the country. We discuss these important conversations about Elvis and race, as well as Elvis and changing gender norms in mid-20th century America. Elvis really was cause and consequence of social change in the country. For more exciting content and ideas, please subscribe to our podcast and follow us on Instagram (@seasoned.migrant). New episode out every Wednesday!
We’re looking at the global story of chocolate. First, we discuss how the idea of chocolate changed through the centuries — what it meant for Aztecs, how the Europeans intentionally moved away from these origins, and how this story draws parallels to the introduction of chocolate in China in 1978. Then, we discuss the two titans of America’s chocolate industry: Hershey’s and Mars. We follow their origins, their joint projects, and the better missteps that led to one of the fiercest rivalries in the business world. For more exciting content and ideas, please subscribe to our podcast and follow us on Instagram (@seasoned.migrant). New episodes out every Wednesday!
Welcome to the Seasoned Migrant Podcast! In this episode, we’re diving deep into the politics of national museums. We often visit museums without realizing the intentions of those standing behind the scenes. These buildings aim to capture the most important moments in a nation’s history, but who gets to decide what these moments and how to portray them? Perhaps most importantly, why do we accept the fact that the nation needs to have a single voice and a single national story? We discuss the origins of the national museum, its original class tensions, and we look at the ideological challenges of museums in China, Iran, and Peru. For more exciting content and ideas, please subscribe to our podcast and follow us on Instagram (@seasoned.migrant). New episodes out every Wednesday!
This week, we look at the worldwide popularity of Turkish television dramas, and the way they have interacted with the geopolitics of the Middle East. With us on this episode is Yasemin Celikkol, researcher at the University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg School for Communication. For more exciting content and ideas, please subscribe to our podcast, follow us on Instagram (@seasoned.migrant) and check out our website, www.seasonedmigrant.com. New episodes out every Wednesday!
Welcome to The Seasoned Migrant Podcast! Over the next ten weeks, we’ll be exploring the intersections between culture, history and society. We want to unpack the big ideas that influenced the way we think and the moments which set our world on new trajectories. Every Wednesday we’ll be releasing a new episode and you can expect to hear about: the bittersweet story of chocolate, the politics of national museums, the soap opera as an icon in the developing world, school history curriculums and national heroes, and so much more. To hear about these exciting perspectives, subscribe to our podcast and follow us on Instagram (@seasoned.migrant).