
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Diana Martha Louis is an assistant professor of women’s and gender studies at the University of Michigan. In her new book, Louis seeks to reframe some of the historical stories about Black people and mental health in the 19th century. The book is titled “Colored Insane: Slavery, Asylums, and the Politics of Mental Health in the 19th Century.” Combining literary and historical analysis, the book explores the asylum movement, slavery’s impact on the mental health of Black people, and how some historical beliefs about mental health still shape how some in the medical field view Black people’s mental disability in the present day.
Plus, the Working Families Party is an independent political organization focusing on making life better for working families. Recently, Fallon McClure, the deputy southeast regional director for WFP, joined a group of state legislators urging Governor Kemp to use the state’s surplus to cover the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. Fallon talks with “Closer Look” program host Rose Scott about her overall thoughts on how lawmakers responded to the federal shutdown, how other federal cuts are impacting the lives of families, as well as the recent political shifts happening within growing progressive movements.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
By WABE4.5
5050 ratings
Diana Martha Louis is an assistant professor of women’s and gender studies at the University of Michigan. In her new book, Louis seeks to reframe some of the historical stories about Black people and mental health in the 19th century. The book is titled “Colored Insane: Slavery, Asylums, and the Politics of Mental Health in the 19th Century.” Combining literary and historical analysis, the book explores the asylum movement, slavery’s impact on the mental health of Black people, and how some historical beliefs about mental health still shape how some in the medical field view Black people’s mental disability in the present day.
Plus, the Working Families Party is an independent political organization focusing on making life better for working families. Recently, Fallon McClure, the deputy southeast regional director for WFP, joined a group of state legislators urging Governor Kemp to use the state’s surplus to cover the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. Fallon talks with “Closer Look” program host Rose Scott about her overall thoughts on how lawmakers responded to the federal shutdown, how other federal cuts are impacting the lives of families, as well as the recent political shifts happening within growing progressive movements.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

6,794 Listeners

36,750 Listeners

3,966 Listeners

3,542 Listeners

14,625 Listeners

4,686 Listeners

87,738 Listeners

112,835 Listeners

2,335 Listeners

2,359 Listeners

150 Listeners

352 Listeners

7,199 Listeners

16,247 Listeners

175 Listeners

277 Listeners

16,096 Listeners

58 Listeners

10,894 Listeners

5 Listeners

14 Listeners

19 Listeners

19 Listeners

15 Listeners

6 Listeners

1,738 Listeners

27 Listeners

165 Listeners

6 Listeners

18 Listeners

9 Listeners

6 Listeners

5 Listeners

83 Listeners