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By Patricia Baker
The podcast currently has 32 episodes available.
Episode Four: Scott Holder, the founder of Los Chicanos Taquería, tells us about how he brought L.A.-inspired street tacos to Dublin through his travels to the United States and Mexico and his inspiration from Chicano food culture. His adventure in truck transportation and the challenges of making tacos in the rain are all part of the journey.
From Potatoes to Tacos: How Mexican Food is Making Waves in Ireland.
Through four episodes, this podcast takes us on a journey through the multicultural history of food in Ireland, with a special focus on the emerging Mexican food scene in Dublin and beyond. We journey from Dublin Castle in the 16th and 17th centuries, to Cal-Mex and Tex-Mex food in the United States, to the emergence of Mexican food in Dublin twenty years ago, to the current popularity of Mexican and Mexican-American street food. Your hosts Dr Catherine Leen, Associate Professor of Hispanic Studies at Trinity College Dublin and Dr Melissa Hidalgo, Lecturer in Women’s, Gender & Sexuality Studies at California State University, Long Beach, meet historians, food critics and food producers in this podcast generously funded by the Fulbright Commission in Ireland.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Episode Three: Lily Ramírez-Foran, the madrina of Mexican food in Ireland, shares her journey from Monterrey to Dublin and how her food pantry Picado draws on her family’s rich tradition of making tortillas. From adapting recipes to a rainy climate to sharing her love of Mexican food with Ireland, Lily explains the power of food to bring people together and enhance our lives.
From Potatoes to Tacos: How Mexican Food is Making Waves in Ireland.
Through four episodes, this podcast takes us on a journey through the multicultural history of food in Ireland, with a special focus on the emerging Mexican food scene in Dublin and beyond. We journey from Dublin Castle in the 16th and 17th centuries, to Cal-Mex and Tex-Mex food in the United States, to the emergence of Mexican food in Dublin twenty years ago, to the current popularity of Mexican and Mexican-American street food. Your hosts Dr Catherine Leen, Associate Professor of Hispanic Studies at Trinity College Dublin and Dr Melissa Hidalgo, Lecturer in Women’s, Gender & Sexuality Studies at California State University, Long Beach, meet historians, food critics and food producers in this podcast generously funded by the Fulbright Commission in Ireland.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Episode Two: We meet Daniel Hernández, the food critic of the Los Angeles Times. From Cal-Mex to Tex-Mex through Taco Bell and Baja fish tacos, Daniel tells us how Mexican food provides a window into Mexico’s multicultural past and dynamic present. He suggests how we can be open to transnational culinary experiments in Mexican cuisine while honoring the past.
From Potatoes to Tacos: How Mexican Food is Making Waves in Ireland.
Through four episodes, this podcast takes us on a journey through the multicultural history of food in Ireland, with a special focus on the emerging Mexican food scene in Dublin and beyond. We journey from Dublin Castle in the 16th and 17th centuries, to Cal-Mex and Tex-Mex food in the United States, to the emergence of Mexican food in Dublin twenty years ago, to the current popularity of Mexican and Mexican-American street food. Your hosts Dr Catherine Leen, Associate Professor of Hispanic Studies at Trinity College Dublin and Dr Melissa Hidalgo, Lecturer in Women’s, Gender & Sexuality Studies at California State University, Long Beach, meet historians, food critics and food producers in this podcast generously funded by the Fulbright Commission in Ireland.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Episode One: We speak to Dr Susan Flavin, Associate Professor of History at Trinity College Dublin. Susan takes us back in time to the 16th and 17th centuries in Ireland to reveal an unexpectedly diverse and multicultural food history, including turkeys, fancy vegetables but surprisingly little fish.
From Potatoes to Tacos: How Mexican Food is Making Waves in Ireland.
Through four episodes, this podcast takes us on a journey through the multicultural history of food in Ireland, with a special focus on the emerging Mexican food scene in Dublin and beyond. We journey from Dublin Castle in the 16th and 17th centuries, to Cal-Mex and Tex-Mex food in the United States, to the emergence of Mexican food in Dublin twenty years ago, to the current popularity of Mexican and Mexican-American street food. Your hosts Dr Catherine Leen, Associate Professor of Hispanic Studies at Trinity College Dublin and Dr Melissa Hidalgo, Lecturer in Women’s, Gender & Sexuality Studies at California State University, Long Beach, meet historians, food critics and food producers in this podcast generously funded by the Fulbright Commission in Ireland.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Ground Breaker Dervilla Donnelly is Emeritus Professor of Organic Chemistry at University College Dublin, founder member of WITS (Women in Technology and Science), and was the first female president of the Royal Dublin Society. She was awarded the Royal Irish academy's hides honour, the Cunningham Medal, in recognition for her outstanding contribution to scholarship, the first woman to receive this award. Driven by an insatiable curiosity and love of science she has mentored generations of academics and business leaders, creating international contacts and supports structures for the future generations of Irish scientists; mean and women.
Ground Breaker, Dervilla Donnelly, is a Curious Broadcast Production funded by the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland with the Television Licence Fee. Produced, edited and narrated by Patricia Baker. Final mix Domhnaill Corrigan, Contact Studio. Original music score by Gerry Horan.
First broadcast on Newstalk 106 - 108 FM
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Ground Breakers: Catherine McGuinness explores the life and work of Catherine McGuinness. A voce for women's issues and children's rights in Ireland, over the years Catherine has served as a Senator, a barrister, and a judge of the Circuit Court, High Court, Appeal, and Supreme Court. she has also chaired the Forum for Peace and Reconciliation the foundation stone of the Northern Ireland Peace Process and is a member of the Council of State.
Ground Breakers is a Curious Broadcast production funded by the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland with the Television Licence Fee. Produced and narrated by Patricia Baker. Final mix Domhnaill Corrigan. Choral music courtesy of the Culwick Choral Society. Original music score by Gerry Horan.
First broadcast on Newstalk 106 - 108 FM
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The Troublesome Nun is a new radio documentary on the life and times of Margaret Mac
Curtain, a Dominican Sister whose lifelong determination to write women into mainstream
Irish history changed the narrative of Irish history forever. Margaret was a historian, a
feminist, a teacher, a human rights activist, and a nun.
Diarmaid Ferriter, Professor of Modern Irish History, School of History, University College
Dublin said of Margaret. “She had established not only the need for women’s history to be
studied but also the sheer range and complexity of what could be covered. She had to try
and convince a sceptical male historical establishment that this needed to be done. She had
to navigate not just as a teacher and someone who wanted to promote women’s history, but
also as someone who was determined to challenge excepted wisdom and authorities at that
time… She did not shy away from those debates that were going on not just in Irish society
but within the church as well.”
Cork born Margaret MacCurtain began her remarkable career in UCC, where she graduated
in the 1950s with BA & HDip. She then went on to join the Dominican Order. She achieved
her PhD from UCD where she lectured until her retirement in 1994.
Within this outline sketch of her career, there is a life of an activist and a feminist whose
legacy has impacted generations of women and men. She thought a generation to question
more deeply, to remember more ethically; she worked all of her life to effect change in Irish
society and to write women into Irish history.
‘This documentary is an important way to capture the impact that Margaret had which was
quite a wide impact.’ said Mary Robinson, former President of Ireland. ‘It was as an historian,
as a feminist, long before people were calling themselves a feminist, as an educator, as a
Dominican nun, and as a women with such warmth and kindness and humour, that she made
everyone, male and female, love her for herself and what she gave of herself.
‘She actually had a great influence both on me and my whole generation. She was a very
active feminist even before the Irish Women’s Liberation Movement which started in Ireland in
1970.”
‘We all need to know that there are active minds in the universe and hers was one of them,’
said Theo Dorgan, Poet, Writer and Broadcaster of Margaret. ‘The joy of running into
Margaret was to run into her boundless curiosity you would have no idea what she would
come out with and she was fascinated by the variety of things.’
The Troublesome Nun is part of a forthcoming series of three documentaries, each one
charting the life and work of one extraordinary woman who broke the ground for the next
generation of women. These older women did not just witness a changing Ireland; they were
the change makers themselves.
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The Troublesome Nun is a Curious Broadcast production funded by the Broadcasting
Authority of Ireland with the Television Licence Fee, produced and narrated by Patricia Baker.
Final mix Gerry Horan Contact Studio. Original Music score Gerry Horan.
First Broadcast: Sunday October 3rd at 8am, on NEWSTALK 106-108FM
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Trafficking of human beings, referred to as modern-day slavery, is one of our largest humanitarian crises, with over 40 million adults and children enslaved worldwide. Half of these people are sold into the sex trade, the majority of whom are women and children.
Ireland is not immune to this global catastrophe. The annual Trafficking in Persons Report, published recently by the US Department of State, further downgraded Ireland to ‘Tier 2 – watch list”, criticising the country for major failings in its treatment of human trafficking victims. Human trafficking is a growing criminal activity and justice issue here in Ireland. The need for public awareness is paramount. The statistics are frightening and overwhelming.
How do we respond to such an issue? An Irish charity MECPATHS (Mercy Efforts for Child Protection Against Trafficking with the Hospitality Sector) took one small step. Hotels are known as one of the places where women and children are sex trafficked. MECPATHS is working with hotel groups to deliver training programmes for hotel staff on the indicators and protocol of reporting child sex trafficking. Do Disturb is about the importance of increasing public awareness and understanding that no matter how overwhelming this global issue is, there is something we can do to bring about change.
First Broadcast: Sunday 5th July 2020 at 7am and again on Saturday 11th July 2020 at 9pm.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Art/Rage is an audio journey through the streets of Dublin with artist and activist Will St. Leger and documentary maker Patricia Baker who explore the evolution of street art in Ireland. The programme is also a conversation with Ireland’s renowned artist on how they have utilised the city’s canvas to voice their loves and outrages.
Street art in Dublin has evolved over the last few years, and there is now a history of the work on our streets and buildings. Street art, once frowned upon, and seen as indistinguishable from graffiti, is now very much an established art form and means of artistic expression and has become increasingly more prevalent, in terms of scale and of the subject matter covered. Now more than ever our cities have become canvases that can testify to the changes in society’s norms, and acts as a revolving creative space for political and social commentary.
First Broadcast: Easter Monday 11th April 2020
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The podcast currently has 32 episodes available.