Three Sisters podcast

Diversity Club. (Or how showing up as yourself should not be seen as an act of political resistance.)

11.11.2020
0:00
45:58
15 Sekunden vorwärts
15 Sekunden vorwärts

The visual artist Titus Kaphar was asked at a talk in Cincinnati how long his work had been political. He told the audience that for some people -- people like him --  the work is always viewed as political.  

Recorded two days after the 2020 presidential election and two days before the race was called for Biden, the Beard sisters took a break from refreshing their news feeds to speak of this same idea and many riveting others in Episode 2 of Three Sisters. 

Even without direct conversations about race and politics in the Beard household, the young sisters were inspired by dogeared books including The Autobiography of Malcolm X, Kaffir Boy, Native Son, Invisible Man and Her Eyes Were Watching God (get these titles and more at DeAndra's Beyond Barcode Bookstore!) These books were often being read simultaneously, one sister waiting to pick up the book the second another put it down. When sister Devona began to eschew hair straighteners, it was clear to the younger sisters that an act of bravery was happening, even if they didn't have the words to explain it as anti-racist representation. 

The sisters also talk about the challenges of parenting and the need for new rituals -- ones that take rituals of oppression and turn them on their head.  As always, the conversation is deeply personal and beautifully, tenderly universal. 

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