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Page: New Voices In Fiction

Austin Flynn

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Page is a storytelling podcast designed to connect listeners to new and unique voices in the fiction world. Each month, Page takes original short fiction from emerging authors and produces it as audio dramas, complete with narration, voice acting, music, and sound effects. Enjoy author interviews, discussions, and publishing advice each month as well.
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New Voices

Montana Elder

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As teenagers, we may not seem like much, but let me tell you-- we know quite a lot. In this podcast, you will hear two teenagers sharing their thoughts, opinions, and even facts on widely known topics. Some episodes may have a guest speaker to share their experiences, but usually it's just us. Now, sit back, relax, and don't turn the other cheek before you get the chance to listen to New Voices. I hope you enjoy our podcast!
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New Visions, New Voices

New Visions, New Voices

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New Visions, New Voices brings to public radio some of the nation’s most important diverse and emerging voices, offering the rich and varied perspectives needed to reach an increasingly diverse audience. New Visions, New Voices will use multimedia formats and engage established and emerging talents to produce short-form segments including commentaries, vignettes, and features for public radio. Long-form productions will offer in-depth exploration of topics in education, technology, politics ...
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Education Matters: New Visions, New Voices

New Visions, New Voices

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Education has long been the foundation for America’s success. With a keen eye for the intricacies of the evolving needs of education in an increasingly global marketplace, internationally renowned Professor of Education Pedro Noguera, Ph.D. provides cogent, provocative analyses of the most pressing Education Matters. Both through commentaries and by means of weekly three-to-five-minute vignettes, Noguera engages parents, teachers, school administrators, policymakers and other education stake ...
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The New Voices Of The Black Media.

The New Voices Of The Black Media

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Black First, Black Empowerment this is the place for all intelligent black folk to listen on how we can gain and maintain true power. Our speakers are Professor Black Truth The Black Authority aka Jason Black Please subscribe to stay in the loop.
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New Voices in the History of Philosophy

Extending New Narratives in the History of Philosophy

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New Voices is a podcast from the Extending New Narratives in the History of Philosophy Partnership, funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. newnarrativesinphilosophy.net This podcast consists of conversations about philosophers from groups that have been underrepresented and excluded in the history of European and Western philosophy: their views, what is interesting and unique about them, and how they fit in to the periods that they were apart of. We also tal ...
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New Style Voices

New Style Voices

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Welcome to the New Style Voices Podcast, where we explore designing your own life and way of looking at creativity. New Style Voices is about unlearning whatever holds you back from expressing yourself fully and joyfully in the world. Laura Volpintesta, your host, is a singer, fashion designer, author, educator and unschooling single mom of 3. From resources and techniques to thoughts and perspectives, this is a safe and nourishing space for positive creative spirits to unfold, get inspired, ...
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Voices: New Media Fiction

Mur Lafferty (editor)

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Voices: New Media Fiction brings together the pioneer short fiction podcasters. Experimenting from putting short-short fiction to novellas over their podcasts, these writers were the first to test the new medium for storytelling. Some wrote specifically for podcasts, some read previously published fiction, and some read entirely new stories. Some listeners asked if they could get just the stories in audio form, and that request brought about this podiobook. Cory Doctorow tells us a story abo ...
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In this episode, Haley speaks with Shuchen Xiang, professor of philosophy at Xidian University, about her new book, “Chinese Cosmopolitanism: The History and Philosophy of an Idea”. In discussing the book, we talk about historical Chinese accounts of a metaphysics of harmony, and how that metaphysics of harmony informs thinking about social identit…
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In this episode, Haley speaks with Huaping Lu-Adler, associate professor of philosophy at Georgetown University, about her new book titled 'Kant, Race, and Racism: Views from Somewhere'. In the course of our conversation about the book, we discuss what it means to philosophize from a particular perspective, the compatibility of Kant's moral theory …
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In this episode, Olivia speaks with Allauren Samantha Forbes, an assistant professor in philosophy and gender and social justice at McMaster University. We discuss the thought of the French philosopher and novelist Madeleine de Scudéry, who lived from 1607 to 1701. Though historians of philosophy are most familiar with Scudéry for her later philoso…
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In this episode, Haley speaks with Dwight K. Lewis Jr., assistant professor in the philosophy department at the University of Minnesota. We talk about the life and works of the 18th century philosopher Anton Wilhelm Amo, including his account of kinds of prejudice, and his views on justice as a tool and paradigm for reasoning. We also talk about th…
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In this episode, Olivia speaks with Jorge Sanchez-Perez, a former postdoctoral researcher in the Extending New Narratives in the History of Philosophy project who is currently an assistant professor in philosophy at the University of Alberta. We discuss Jorge’s postdoctoral work on the Huarochirí manuscript – one of the few surviving records of ind…
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In this episode, Olivia Branscum speaks with Phil Yaure – assistant professor of philosophy at Virginia Tech – about the political philosophy of Frederick Douglass. Douglass was born into slavery, but eventually became one of the most influential black abolitionists of the 19th century after escaping his enslaved condition and learning to read and …
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In this special collaborative episode, Haley and Olivia speak with Élaina Gauthier-Mamaril, a philosopher and podcaster who produces and hosts the Philosophy Casting Call podcast. Philosophy Casting Call shines a spotlight on thinkers, topics, and themes that are underrepresented in academic philosophy, which listeners will recognize as a mission d…
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In this episode, Haley Brennan speaks with Elliott Chen, New Narratives Post-Doc and Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Xavier University starting Fall 2022, about his work on two early modern women philosophers of science: Émilie du Châtelet and Laura Bassi. We talk about du Châtelet’s arguments against essential gravity and Newtonian attraction…
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In this episode, Haley Brennan speaks with Dalitso Ruwe, Assistant Professor of Black Political Thought at Queen’s University, about his project of locating and understanding genealogies of Black and African philosophy. We talk about 18th century ontological and Biblical arguments against slavery, the relationship between practical and intellectual…
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In this episode, Haley Brennan talks with Kathryn Sophia Belle, Associate Professor of Philosophy at Penn State University and founder of the Collegium of Black Women Philosophers, about Black Feminist critiques of Simone de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex. We talk about her forthcoming book on the topic, with chapters on Claudia Jones, Lorraine Hansberr…
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In this episode, Olivia Branscum speaks with Nic Bommarito, Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Simon Fraser University. We discuss the French philosopher Simone Weil (1909-1943), focusing especially on what she has to teach us about the moral value of attention and the true uses of education. Nic and I also talk about his work in Tibetan Buddhist…
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In this episode, Olivia Branscum speaks with Nastassja Pugliese, Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. We talk about the life, work, and reception of the nineteenth-century Brazilian philosopher, Nísia Floresta Brasileira Augusta (born Dionísia Gonçalves Pinto in 1810). Nastassja and I talk about Nísia’s phi…
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In this episode, Haley Brennan talks with Alison Stone, professor in the Department of Politics, Philosophy and Religion at Lancaster University. We discuss the work of British women philosophers of the 19th century, including Frances Power Cobbe, Ada Lovelace, and Harriet Martineau. We cover a range of topics that these philosophers worked on, inc…
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In this episode, Olivia Branscum speaks with Professor Gary Ostertag, Affiliated Associate Professor at the City University of New York and Chair of the philosophy department at Nassau Community College. We discuss the life, context, and achievements of Emily Elizabeth Constance Jones, an early analytic philosopher who was working at the same time …
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In this episode, Haley Brennan talks with Chike Jeffers, Associate Professor of Philosophy at Dalhousie University and Canada Research Chair in Africana Philosophy, about the history of Africana Philosophy. We talk about the work of, and what it is like to work on, figures including Anna Julia Cooper, W.E.B Du Bois, Edward Blyden, and Léopold Sengh…
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In this episode, Haley Brennan talks with Dalia Nassar, senior lecturer in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Sydney. We discuss the works of several German women philosophers in the late 18th and 19th centuries, including Germaine de Staël, Rosa Luxemburg, and Karoline von Günderrode. The women we discuss wrote on a wide range of to…
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In this episode, Olivia Branscum talks with Christina Van Dyke, professor emerita of philosophy at Calvin University, about women philosophers in the medieval Latin west. We discuss the contemplative and mystical traditions of philosophy in the middle ages, which focused on an engaged, practical search for truth rather than the abstract arguments t…
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In this episode, Haley Brennan talks with Sergio Gallegos Ordorica, assistant professor at John Jay College, about the Mexican philosopher Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz. We talk about how Sergio became interested in studying Sor Juana as a philosopher, how that study can be complicated by a background in analytic philosophy, some of Sor Juana’s views o…
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Welcom to our first episode on New Voices! Today we will be discussing anxiety-- specifically, what kinds there are and what the actually mean. Anxiety is extremely common, statistically speaking, one out of every thirteen. That may not seem like much, but take a look at the big picture and you'll understand. YEET SINCERELY, Cole & Gerald…
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ON June 1, 2019 I was the featured speaker at @empowher_NY networking event. It was incredible to sit with such an amazing group of women and talk about the things closest to my heart.... my book, family, birth, new projects, online fashion school, art, music, and movement, and cross-cultural expreriences.--- Support this podcast: https://podcaster…
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We sit down to talk craft and life with Stephen Dudas, author of Ultrasound, In the Wake of Balderdash, and Simon and the Boogeyman. Steve's chapbook, An August Nightmare, is available from Prolific Press. Page intro music: “As Colorful As Ever” by Broke for Free Follow Page on Twitter and Instagram(@page_podcast) and Facebook (Page: New Voices In …
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In this first piece, Dudas explores the excitement, anxiety, and challenges of being a father-to-be. Written and performed by Stephen Dudas Page intro music: “As Colorful As Ever” by Broke for Free Soundtrack from freemusicarchive.com: “Somber Heart” by Lee Rosevere, “Rain Suite” by Livio Amato, “Meekness” by Kai Engel Sound effects from freesound.…
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The most whimsical apocalypse you’ll experience, In the Wake of Balderdash explores the end times from multiple perspectives, each grander and more imaginative than the last. Written and performed by Stephen Dudas Page intro music: “As Colorful As Ever” by Broke for Free Soundtrack from freemusicarchive.com: “Lean” by Adrianna Krikl, “Stepping Out …
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In this final piece, Dudas peers through the thin veil between humans and monsters, revealing the uncomfortable truth that the two are sometimes indistinguishable. Written and performed by Stephen Dudas Page intro music: “As Colorful As Ever” by Broke for Free Soundtrack from freemusicarchive.com: “The Conjuring” by Alex Mason, “Our Names Engraved”…
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On unlearning trauma and blocks, unschooling and homeschooling, self-educating and self directed learning. This is not familiar to us as “schooled” people..... but it IS familiar to us as self-motivated, curious, energetic and inspired creatives! Please pipe in to the conversation with your experiences orninsoghts on this topic: re-thinking Educati…
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It’s wonderful to study, or embark on creative pursuits like music, art, education, starting a business, a family, anything you want to bring i to the world. But CHECK IN WITH YOURSELF regularly along the way! The reasons you thought you wanted what you wanted are usually multifaceted and always evolving. Don’t be rigid in setting out on your path.…
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This month’s Epilogue features an interview with “Dust Boy” author Haley Malin, who discusses her writing influences, the importance of character in storytelling, and the impact of roleplaying games on her craft. You can connect with Haley on Twitter at @haleycmalin. Page: New Voices In Fiction intro theme: “As Colorful As Ever” by Broke for Free F…
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