DiscoverGrow Dialogue PodcastAnansi Wilson on Abolishing Gender Politics While Cultivating Equity & Visibility for Black Queers
Anansi Wilson on Abolishing Gender Politics While Cultivating Equity & Visibility for Black Queers

Anansi Wilson on Abolishing Gender Politics While Cultivating Equity & Visibility for Black Queers

Update: 2022-09-01
Share

Description

Tune into another powerful interview that shines a light on emerging voices in #PopularCulture spaces. 

Sundiata chats with Dr. T. Anansi Wilson (he/they) to reveal their vision of what’s next in pop culture as it relates to Black Queerness.

Dr. Wilson is an associate professor of law and the founding director of the forthcoming Center for the Study of Black Life and The Law at Mitchell Hamline School of law. They are an award-winning scholar of law, literary and cultural studies, a racial-and gender justice consultant, and an author of creative nonfiction. They received their law degree from Howard Law School and their PhD in African & African Diaspora Studies from UT Austin.

Dr. Wilson employs Critical Race, Black Feminist, Performance and Women & Gender Studies and legal methodologies to examine how instances and (extra) legal precedents of anti-Black violence and racial-sexual terror continue to frame and impact notions of Black being and citizenship.

You don’t want to miss this one! Listen, reflect, and share this episode with your people!

See Dr. Anansi Wilson’s full bio plus ways to connect with them below. 

Continue the conversation by joining our community.

Episode Credits: 

Show notes:



Get full access to Sustainable Solutions Media at sustainablesolutionsmedia.substack.com/subscribe
Comments 
In Channel
00:00
00:00
x

0.5x

0.8x

1.0x

1.25x

1.5x

2.0x

3.0x

Sleep Timer

Off

End of Episode

5 Minutes

10 Minutes

15 Minutes

30 Minutes

45 Minutes

60 Minutes

120 Minutes

Anansi Wilson on Abolishing Gender Politics While Cultivating Equity & Visibility for Black Queers

Anansi Wilson on Abolishing Gender Politics While Cultivating Equity & Visibility for Black Queers

Sundiata Soon-Jahta