I feel for you! I'll be honest I do a lot less actual 'reading' these days since discovering audiobooks
-
-
W odpowiedzi do to @DrMaterialsMum@drhannahrobbins i jeszcze
Unless I'm doing something else, like cooking or sewing, I have a terrible tendency to nod off whilst listening to audio books! I end up listening to things I've already read so that it doesn't matter so much if I snooze through important bits!
2 odpowiedzi 0 podanych dalej 3 polubione -
W odpowiedzi do to @ProfRachelGaN@drhannahrobbins i jeszcze
Same here, I usually listen when walking/running or pottering on my allotment. I can't listen at home as there are too many distraction/interruptions, or just a preference for sleeping!
1 odpowiedź 0 podanych dalej 2 polubione -
W odpowiedzi do to @DrMaterialsMum @ProfRachelGaN i jeszcze
@tanvir_h there’s a lot of good podcasts. Reni Eddo-Lodge is nice. Then@galdemzine also do a lot of interesting writings. (Zines have kind of been the progressive form of media for the past decade).@SistersUncut might do talks.https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/about-race-with-reni-eddo-lodge/id1353151856 …1 odpowiedź 0 podanych dalej 2 polubione -
W odpowiedzi do to @azhir_io @DrMaterialsMum i jeszcze
Academics circles aren’t at the forefront’s of EDI convos — makes sense, they’re not activists. (Tbh; I’ve assumed intersectional feminism was mainstream since 2012 — roughly when I first got involved). We’re almost a decade into fourth wave feminism.
2 odpowiedzi 0 podanych dalej 2 polubione -
W odpowiedzi do to @azhir_io @ProfRachelGaN i jeszcze
I agree, I just feel that those of us actively engaged in EDI work in academic spaces need to keep listening, & put in the time/effort to learn & to educate ourselves. There can often be a misconception that all that is needed to do this work is good intentions.
1 odpowiedź 0 podanych dalej 3 polubione -
W odpowiedzi do to @DrMaterialsMum @azhir_io i jeszcze
True. Although having good intentions is at least better than not having them. Or having actively exclusionary very bad intentions. And there's plenty of the latter left in academia, sadly.
1 odpowiedź 0 podanych dalej 1 polubiony -
W odpowiedzi do to @ProfRachelGaN @azhir_io i jeszcze
Indeed!
1 odpowiedź 0 podanych dalej 1 polubiony -
W odpowiedzi do to @DrMaterialsMum @ProfRachelGaN i jeszcze
I defo agree w/
@DrMaterialsMum. Many of these discussions were had a decade ago. Young activists and others like myself had already done the heavy lifting and made personal sacrifices. __ I’m also one of those people that believe “the road to hell is paved by good intentions”.1 odpowiedź 0 podanych dalej 1 polubiony -
W odpowiedzi do to @azhir_io @DrMaterialsMum i jeszcze
The thing is, if we stop at having good intentions. Nothing improves and things get worse. I have a lot of stories from my UG. How academics w/ good intentions didn’t understand how toxic the system was and thus allowed abuse to be perpetuated. Of course I did my UG at Cam
1 odpowiedź 0 podanych dalej 0 polubionych
Basically, you can have good intentions and perpetuate an actively exclusionary culture. We can feel good that we’re good people. While contributing to and maintaining an abusive oppressive systems. It can lead to cognitive dissonance.
Wydaje się, że ładowanie zajmuje dużo czasu.
Twitter jest przeciążony lub wystąpił chwilowy problem. Spróbuj ponownie lub sprawdź status Twittera, aby uzyskać więcej informacji.
to 
