Episode 57 Suzanne Phillips - Broccoli Rabe
Aired: Thursday, April 29th 2021
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HOSTED BY Zahra Tangorra and Bobbie Comforto
On this week’s show we welcome Dr Suzanne Phillips. Suzanne is a licensed Psychologist, Psychoanalyst, Diplomate in Group Psychology,Certified Group Therapist, Fellowand Co-chair of Community Outreach for the American Group Psychotherapy Association (AGPA). She has been a Psychologist for over 35 years and after 28 years, she is a newly retired Adjunct Full Professor of Clinical Psychology at LIU
Post, N.Y. She joins us to discuss the concept of food and grief through her highly trained lense, and calls upon experiences in her incredibly prolific career to offer insight into how the intersection of food and grief affects couples, children and folks who have suffered intense trauma. It was an honor to have Suzanne join us for a deeply interesting and meaningful conversation. Not only is she an expert in
Trump, the Working Class, and Fascist Rhetoric
William E. Connolly (bio)
1
I will not focus extensively here upon the broadest political strategies to adopt with respect to the Trump phenomenon and the constituencies drawn into the dangerous movement he has intensified (It is certainly not a new movement).
1 That is largely because the strategies I support have recently been adumbrated in chapter 5 of
Facing the Planetary.
2 Briefly, they involve articulating a militant, pluralist, cross-regional assemblage consisting of diverse constituencies who together contest the priorities of investment capital, expose Trumpian tactics, attract a larger segment of the white working class into an assemblage, and seek to reduce inequality, nurture pluralism, and cope with climate change. I call this the politics of swarming because it rolls across role experiments that help to recode the visceral registers of cultural life, to social protest movements, to renewed attention to electoral pol
Kendimiz olmak konusu (2) t24.com.tr - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from t24.com.tr Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A similar joke I heard recently:
A helicopter was flying around above Seattle when an electrical malfunction disabled all of the aircraft s electronic navigation and communications equipment.
Due to the clouds and haze, the pilot could not determine the helicopter s position and course to fly to the airport.
The pilot saw a tall building, flew toward it, circled, drew a handwritten sign, and held it in the helicopter s window. The pilot s sign said WHERE AM I? in large letters.
People in the tall building quickly responded to the aircraft, drew a large sign and held it in a building window.
Illustration by Tim Robinson.
On April 6, 1967, Theodor W. Adorno accepted an invitation from the Association of Socialist Students at the University of Vienna to deliver a lecture on “aspects of the new right-wing extremism.” The topic held a special urgency: The National Democratic Party, a recently founded neofascist group in West Germany, was surging in popularity and would soon surpass the official 5 percent threshold needed to secure representation in seven of Germany’s 11 regional parliaments. In Europe after World War II, Adorno was highly esteemed not only for his philosophical and cultural writings but also for his analysis of the fascist tendencies that still survived in the so-called liberal democratic orders of the capitalist West, and the students and socialist activists gathered in Vienna were eager to hear his thoughts.