Chalk Radio

Prof. Edoh Wants to Know What You Think

Episode Summary

Professor Amah Edoh invites you to contribute your ideas to Contemporary Movements for Justice, a course she's teaching right now.

Episode Notes

Contemporary Movements for Justice is an MIT course in which scholars and activists speak about pursuing justice for European colonialism in Africa and its contemporary legacies. 

Do you have ideas that could help shape these discussions? If so, please participate in this new OCW opportunity. Watch course lectures online at the same time as MIT students. No registration required, and it’s completely free. Then share your ideas by following the link below. Professor Edoh will incorporate your questions and comments into the offline discussions that happen in class.  After each class discussion she'll pin a summary comment on each video on YouTube so you can see how your contributions informed the conversation. 

The next course module is on the efforts of a group of Afro-descended Belgian activists to hold accountable a commission that was established to examine Belgium’s colonial past in Congo, Burundi, and Rwanda. Tune in to the OCW YouTube channel throughout November 2021 to watch videos from experts speaking about transitional and reparative justice in this context. You can find a complete schedule of the lectures for the course below. 

Amah Edoh is the Homer A. Burnell Assistant Professor of Anthropology and African Studies at MIT. Last year she was the winner of the Everett Moore Baker Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching. She has previously appeared on the Chalk Radio podcast (and been profiled in Open Matters) discussing her course 21G.026 Global Africa: Creative Cultures. In addition to that course, OCW also has published the materials from Professor Edoh’s 21G.025 Africa and the Politics of Knowledge.

 

Relevant Resources:

Contribute Your Ideas to Contemporary Movements for Justice

Contemporary Movements for Justice Video Playlist

MIT OpenCourseWare

Professor Edoh's Faculty Page

Music in this episode by Blue Dot Sessions

 

Lecture Schedule:

October

November

 

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Credits:

Sarah Hansen, host and producer

Brett Paci, producer  

Dave Lishansky, producer 

Show notes by Peter Chipman

Episode Transcription

Hi Chalk Radio listeners. My name is Amah Edoh and I’m a professor of Anthropology and African Studies at MIT. I’d like to invite you to take part in a course I’m teaching this semester that you can access... and participate in... in real-time on YouTube. Contemporary Movements for Justice - 21A.S01 - is a course, in which scholars and activists speak about pursuing justice for European colonialism in Africa and its contemporary legacies. 

Do you have ideas that could help shape these discussions? If so, please join us! You can watch the lectures at the same time as my MIT students. No registration required, and it’s completely free. You can then share your ideas by following the link in our show notes. I’ll incorporate your questions and comments into the discussions that happen in class.  After each class discussion I’ll pin a summary comment on each video on YouTube so you can see how your contributions informed the conversation. 

Our upcoming module is on the efforts of a group of Afro-descended Belgian activists to hold accountable a commission that was established to examine Belgium’s colonial past in Congo, Burundi, and Rwanda... Tune in to the OCW YouTube channel throughout November 2021 to watch videos from experts speaking about transitional and reparative justice in this context. You can find a complete schedule of lectures for the course in the show notes. 

I hope you participate each week and thank you so much for sharing your ideas and experiences!