In this episode, we break down the impact capitalism has on our relationships, minds, and bodies, and ask the question—why is it so hard to talk about a world without it? What’s at stake for our lives in the dismantling of capitalism, and how can we open up space to imagine other kinds of worlds? We begin to venture into naming what those worlds might look like. As we do, we also discuss the necessity of holding space for grief, the lies that fascism tells to people in crisis, the role of love and care in the dismantling of oppressive systems, and the importance of centering the dignity and worth of all people as foundational to our movement.
Our Instagram: @burnitdownpod
Our email: [email protected]
Blake's Instagram: @curiousstoryteller
Rachel's Instagram: @rebelleeepoque
Tricia Hersey: Instagram @thenapministry, check out her book Rest Is Resistance https://bookshop.org/p/books/rest-is-resistance-a-manifesto-tricia-hersey/18255493?ean=9780316365215
Sonya Renee Taylor: Instagram @sonyareneetaylor and @thebodyisnotanapology, check out her book The Body is Not an Apology https://bookshop.org/p/books/the-body-is-not-an-apology-the-power-of-radical-self-love-sonya-renee-taylor/7723432?ean=9781523090990)
bell hooks, All About Love: https://bookshop.org/p/books/all-about-love-new-visions-bell-hooks/8888106?ean=9780060959470
Sarah Ahmed, Blog @ http://feministkilljoys.com, check out her book The Cultural Politics of Emotion, https://bookshop.org/p/books/the-cultural-politics-of-emotion-sara-ahmed/14763649?ean=9781138805033
Alok Vaid-Menon, Instagram @alokvmenon, website www.alokvmenon.com/
Eleni Schirmer, “The Aging Student Debtors of America,” https://www.newyorker.com/news/us-journal/the-aging-student-debtors-of-america