Have you ever heard of Plato, Aristotle, Socrates? Well, this is not about them! Philosophy Casting Call is where Élaina Gauthier-Mamaril, your friendly neighbourhood philosopher, interviews professors, grad students, and non-academics to find out what philosophy looks like now and try to shine a spotlight on thinkers, topics, and themes that are historically marginalised in academic philosophy. This includes women, LGBTQIA, disabled, and BIPOC people who are out there, getting their philosophy on, and who deserved to be cast as philosophers in our culture.
Content note: Because of the topic, this episode will contain some mild swearing.
The end of season 3 has arrived! To go out with fanfare, Élaina interviews digital communications scholar Jess Rauchberg about the rhetoric act of sh*tposting on various social media platforms and how various hygiene policies change the ways in which a wide variety of people (from Nazis to disability activists) engage with culture. This is the perfect episode to listen to if you are curious about the philosophy of social media or if you want to know how in the world Lea Michele, the Succession fandom, and Olivia Rodrigo’s TikTok marketing campaign are linked to digital anti-ableism.
How to reach Jess
Website: https://www.jessrauchberg.com/
Twitter: @DisabledPhd
Texts mentioned in the episode (All links to books are affiliated to Bookshop.org UK and any purchases made through them will generate a small commission that helps to support the podcast):
“The Medium is the Message”, by Marshall McCluhan (PDF)
The work of Arseli Dokumaci
“‘Feenin’: Posthuman Voices in Contemporary Black Popular Music”, by Alexander G. Weheliye (PDF)
“History of Shit”, by Dominique Laporte
“No One Is Talking About This”, by Patricia Lockwood
Subscribe to Philosophy Casting Call and leave it a 5-star review wherever you can!
Follow Philosophy Casting Call on Twitter and Instagram @philoCCpod
Read the full episode transcripts at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com
Support the podcast by becoming a monthly donor on Ko-Fi.com
Email: philosophycastingcallpod@gmail.com
Follow Élaina on Twitter @ElainaGMamaril
What does interdisciplinarity mean when your discipline is interdisciplinary? In this episode, bioethicist and global health ethicist Agomoni Ganguli-Mitra talks about using philosophical theories alongside scientific epistemologies and feminist approaches to shape our understanding of ‘global health ethics’. Specifically, she gets into her critique of the popular model of distributive justice.
How to reach Agomoni
Website: https://www.law.ed.ac.uk/people/dr-agomoni-ganguli-mitra
Twitter: @GanguliMitra
Texts mentioned in the episode (All links are affiliated to Bookshop.org UK and any purchases made through them will generate a small commission that helps to support the podcast):
The School for Good Mothers, by Jessamine Chan
Subscribe to Philosophy Casting Call and leave it a 5-star review wherever you can!
Follow Philosophy Casting Call on Twitter and Instagram @philoCCpod
Read the full episode transcripts at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com
Support the podcast by becoming a monthly donor on Ko-Fi.com
Email: philosophycastingcallpod@gmail.com
Follow Élaina on Twitter @ElainaGMamaril
In this episode, Élaina talks about the ethical challenges of using AI tools in healthcare provision for transgender people with philosopher and bioethicist Rebecca Sanaeikia. They discuss the different versions of “top down” versus “bottom up” ethical strategies and the tension between needing more data on how trans people access healthcare and wanting to keep trans people safe.
How to reach Rebecca
https://beccasanaeikia.weebly.com/
Twitter: https://mobile.twitter.com/logavaguy
Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/beccasanaeikia/
And you can email her here: rebecca.sanaeikia@gmail.com
Texts mentioned in the episode (All links are affiliated to Bookshop.org UK and any purchases made through them will generate a small commission that helps to support the podcast):
This Arab is Queer: An Anthology by LGBTQ+ Arab Authors, ed. Elias Jahshan
Subscribe to Philosophy Casting Call and leave it a 5-star review wherever you can!
Follow Philosophy Casting Call on Twitter and Instagram @philoCCpod
Read the full episode transcripts at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com
Support the podcast by becoming a monthly donor on Ko-Fi.com
Follow Élaina on Twitter @ElainaGMamaril
In this episode, Élaina interviews medical and cultural anthropologist and practising birth doula, Andrea Ford. Andrea discusses her trajectory as an interdisciplinary scholar and the power of studying liminal spaces to better understand what different cultures value.
CW: This episode contains discussion of fertility, pregnancy, and childbirth.
You can find out more about Andrea’s work here: https://andrealillyford.com/ and https://www.research.ed.ac.uk/en/persons/andrea-ford
Texts mentioned in the episode (All links are affiliated to Bookshop.org UK and any purchases made through them will generate a small commission that helps to support the podcast):
Beyond Black, by Hilary Mantel
Subscribe to Philosophy Casting Call and leave it a 5-star review wherever you can!
Follow Philosophy Casting Call on Twitter and Instagram @philoCCpod
Read the full episode transcripts at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com
Support the podcast by becoming a monthly donor on Ko-Fi.com
Follow Élaina on Twitter @ElainaGMamaril
In this episode, Élaina interview Kristin Waters, the author of Maria W. Stewart and the Roots of Black Political Thought about combatting epistemicide and choosing to write on philosophy of race as a white woman in the US.
You can buy Kristin’s book and learn more about her work on her website: www.kristin-waters.com
Listen to the Gilmore Girls tie-in episode of Women of Questionable Morals: Race and Politics and GG, Oh My!
Texts mentioned in the episode (All links are affiliated to Bookshop.org UK and any purchases made through them will generate a small commission that helps to support the podcast):
Maria W. Stewart and the Roots of Black Political Thought, by Kristin Waters
Black Women’s Intellectual Traditions: Speaking Their Minds, ed. Kristin Waters and Carol b. Conaway
The History of Black Studies, by Abdul Alkalimat
Maria W. Stewart, America's First Black Woman Political Writer: Essays and Speeches, ed. Marilyn Richardson
Black Feminist Thought, by Patricia Hill Collins
Radical Theory, Caribbean Reality, by Charles W. Mills
The Case for Rage: Why Anger is Essential to Anti-racist Struggle, by Myisha Cherry
Decolonizing Feminism: Transnational Feminism and Globalization, ed. Margaret A. McLaren
Freedom Dreams: The Black Radical Imagination, by Robin D.G. Kelley
Barbaric Culture and Black Critique: Black Antislavery Writers, Religion, and the Slaveholding Atlantic, by Stefan M. Wheelock
Ethics and Insurrection: A Pragmatism for the Oppressed, by Lee A. McBride III
Association of Black Women Historians
Subscribe to Philosophy Casting Call and leave it a 5-star review wherever you can!
Follow Philosophy Casting Call on Twitter and Instagram @philoCCpod
Read the full episode transcripts at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com
Support the podcast by becoming a monthly donor on Ko-Fi.com
Follow Élaina on Twitter @ElainaGMamaril
In this episode, Élaina interviews fellow philosopher Matthew Cull about the difference between “ideal” and “non-ideal” ethical theories in relation to access to healthcare for transgender people in the UK.
You can read Matthew’s work here:
“Against Abolition”, Feminist Philosophy Quarterly, 2019
“Demarcating the Social World with Hume”, Philosophical Papers, 2022
Texts mentioned in the episode (All links are affiliated to Bookshop.org UK and any purchases made through them will generate a small commission that helps to support the podcast):
Sexual Hegemony: Statecraft, Sodomy, and Capital in the Rise of the World System, by Christopher Chitty
“Ideal Theory” as Ideology, by Charles W. Mills (PDF)
The Electronic Wireless Show (podcast)
Second Skins, by Jay Prosser
Invisible Lives, by Viviane Namaste
Subscribe to Philosophy Casting Call and leave it a 5-star review wherever you can!
Follow Philosophy Casting Call on Twitter and Instagram @philoCCpod
Read the full episode transcripts at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com
Support the podcast by becoming a monthly donor on Ko-Fi.com
Follow Élaina on Twitter @ElainaGMamaril
In this episode, Élaina interviews Danielle Spencer, the author of “Metagnosis: Revelatory Narratives of Health and Identity”. Danielle explains what she means by “narrative medicine” and what the COVID-19 pandemic and the genre of physician memoirs can tell us about what still needs to happen before we can achieve more holistic healthcare.
You can reach Danielle and find her work on her website: https://www.daniellespencer.com/
You can read my review of “Metagnosis” here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1DtWQScs-arO8Hd3T8BNVDpxFFEHgNjh4/view?usp=sharing
Texts mentioned in the episode (All links are affiliated to Bookshop.org UK and any purchases made through them will generate a small commission that helps to support the podcast):
Metagnosis: Revelatory Narratives of Health and Identity, by Danielle Spencer
Phenomenology of Illness, by Havi Carel
Recognitions, by Terence Cave
The Cancer Journals, by Audre Lorde
The Undying: A Meditation on Modern Illness, by Anne Boyer
Illness as Metaphor, by Sunsan Sontag
Subscribe to Philosophy Casting Call and leave it a 5-star review wherever you can!
Follow Philosophy Casting Call on Twitter and Instagram @philoCCpod
Read the full episode transcripts at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com
Support the podcast by becoming a monthly donor on Ko-Fi.com
Follow Élaina on Twitter @ElainaGMamaril
We are back for Season 3 and an exploration of interdisciplinarity with an interview with crip, mad, activist historian Hannah Sullivan-Facknitz. We talk about retraining ourselves to do anti-extractivist archival work and about how our disabled identities and kinships shape our scholarly work.
You can find out more about Hannah’s work on Twitter @hannahnthewolf and on their website: https://hannahandthewolf.wordpress.com/
Texts recommended in the episode (All links are affiliated to Bookshop.org UK and any purchases made through them will generate a small commission that helps to support the podcast):
Academic Ableism: Disability and Higher Education by Jay T. Dolmage
A Debt to the Dead? Ethics, Photography, History, and the Study of Freakery by Jane Nicholas (open access PDF)
Pollution is Colonialism by Max Liboiron
Texts mentioned in the episode:
“Tropics of Discourse” by Hayden White
Subscribe to Philosophy Casting Call and leave it a 5-star review wherever you can!
Follow Philosophy Casting Call on Twitter and Instagram @philoCCpod
Read the full episode transcripts at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com
Support the podcast by becoming a monthly donor on Ko-Fi.com
Follow Élaina on Twitter @ElainaGMamaril
Philosophy Casting Call is back with a brand new season! For season 3, I, Élaina, your favourite philosophy podcast host, am exploring the meaning of interdisciplinarity. Is it just a buzzword? Is it the future of scholarship? Have we been doing it all along?
To help me answer these metaphysical questions I opened the casting call to non-philosophers who use philosophical concepts or methodologies. So prepare yourself to experience the talents of historians, anthropologists, medical humanists, and new media scholars in addition to “official” philosophers.
I also got a sponsor! Thanks to the Centre for Biomedicine, Self and Society season 3 of Philosophy Casting Call will be weekly for the first time, so subscribe now on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Pocketcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts! All transcripts will continue to be available at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com.
Subscribe to Philosophy Casting Call and leave it a 5-star review wherever you can!
Follow Philosophy Casting Call on Twitter and Instagram @philoCCpod
Read the full episode transcripts at www.elainagauthiermamaril.com
Support the podcast by becoming a monthly donor on Ko-Fi.com
Follow Élaina on Twitter @ElainaGMamaril
In this season finale, Élaina interviews Jimena Solé, a professor of philosophy at the University of Buenos Aires. Jimena talks about her dislike of school growing up, her discovery of Spinoza, and why she believes that philosophising in Argentina and South America can be a transformative decolonial practice.
The first half of the episode focuses on Jimena’s personal link to philosophy and the second half covers her work on the reception of European theories in Argentina.
Read Jimena’s academic work: https://uba.academia.edu/MariaJimenaSole
Read the open access journal Ideas: http://revistaideas.com.ar/
Contact Jimena
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Jimena.Sole
Instagram: @m.jimena.sole
Book mentioned in this episode:
“Parmenides”, by César Aira
Rate and review the podcast wherever you listen!
Find Philosophy Casting Call on Twitter and Instagram @philoccpod
Find the transcripts at https://www.elainagauthiermamaril.com/philosophy-casting-call-podcast
You can support the podcast on Ko-Fi.com/philoccpod
Philosophy Casting Call is hosted, edited, and produced by Élaina Gauthier-Mamaril
Follow Élaina on Instagram @spinoodler and Twitter @ElainaGMamaril
Amanda is a wife. A mother. A blogger. A Christian.
A charming, beautiful, bubbly, young woman who lives life to the fullest.
But Amanda is dying, with a secret she doesn’t want anyone to know.
She starts a blog detailing her cancer journey, and becomes an inspiration, touching and
captivating her local community as well as followers all over the world.
Until one day investigative producer Nancy gets an anonymous tip telling her to look at Amanda’s
blog, setting Nancy on an unimaginable road to uncover Amanda’s secret.
Award winning journalist Charlie Webster explores this unbelievable and bizarre, but
all-too-real tale, of a woman from San Jose, California whose secret ripped a family apart and
left a community in shock.
Scamanda is the true story of a woman whose own words held the key to her secret.
New episodes every Monday.
Follow Scamanda on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen.
Amanda’s blog posts are read by actor Kendall Horn.