
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


This week, Smithsonian Secretary Lonnie Bunch offered expansive public remarks that help reframe how we think about nationhood, identity, and responsibility to the group. While we often see ourselves bound by narratives tied to constructs like “nations,” Bunch’s assertion that there is no single U.S. narrative—that there are many stories—reminds us that our existence is both local and global, rooted in daily life yet connected to distant people and places. Our Africana Studies framework, grounded in deep listening and study, helps us engage a world where European expansion forged global contact that now erodes borders—even as politicians cling to them for control. Trade dissolves commercial lines while fear-based politics tries to reassert them. Are they incompatible? As migration, regionalism, and networks grow, so does fear among those defending an unequal global order. But through libraries, courts, classrooms, and culture, people resist. Stories expand. In the post-national world, power shifts. People think. They resist. They fight on, “‘til victory is won.”
JOIN KNARRATIVE: https://www.knarrative.com it's the only way to get into #Knubia, where these classes are
held live with a live chat.
To shop Go to:TheGlobalMajority
More from us:
Knarrative Twitter: https://twitter.com/knarrative_
Knarrative Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/knarrative/
In Class with Carr Twitter: https://twitter.com/inclasswithcarr
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
By Knarrative4.9
952952 ratings
This week, Smithsonian Secretary Lonnie Bunch offered expansive public remarks that help reframe how we think about nationhood, identity, and responsibility to the group. While we often see ourselves bound by narratives tied to constructs like “nations,” Bunch’s assertion that there is no single U.S. narrative—that there are many stories—reminds us that our existence is both local and global, rooted in daily life yet connected to distant people and places. Our Africana Studies framework, grounded in deep listening and study, helps us engage a world where European expansion forged global contact that now erodes borders—even as politicians cling to them for control. Trade dissolves commercial lines while fear-based politics tries to reassert them. Are they incompatible? As migration, regionalism, and networks grow, so does fear among those defending an unequal global order. But through libraries, courts, classrooms, and culture, people resist. Stories expand. In the post-national world, power shifts. People think. They resist. They fight on, “‘til victory is won.”
JOIN KNARRATIVE: https://www.knarrative.com it's the only way to get into #Knubia, where these classes are
held live with a live chat.
To shop Go to:TheGlobalMajority
More from us:
Knarrative Twitter: https://twitter.com/knarrative_
Knarrative Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/knarrative/
In Class with Carr Twitter: https://twitter.com/inclasswithcarr
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

2,523 Listeners

2,877 Listeners

14,241 Listeners

1,355 Listeners

3,228 Listeners

7,833 Listeners

11,444 Listeners

3,442 Listeners

268 Listeners

160 Listeners

1,848 Listeners

595 Listeners

526 Listeners

1,654 Listeners

562 Listeners