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S1E4 - Crip Times Episode 4: The Cindy Baker Episode

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Manage episode 306483536 series 3003496
Content provided by Kayla Besse/Yousef Kadora & Kristina McMullin, Kayla Besse/Yousef Kadora, and Kristina McMullin. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Kayla Besse/Yousef Kadora & Kristina McMullin, Kayla Besse/Yousef Kadora, and Kristina McMullin or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Episode Notes

This week, Yousef and Kristina are joined by Cindy Baker, a contemporary artist whose work engages with queer, gender, race, disability, fat, and art discourses. We recorded this episode in the summer, but we think you’ll find it really speaks to the end-of-2020 burnout that many of us are collectively experiencing.

Cindy describes herself as feeling ‘wobbly’—how relatable. She tells us about her work “Crash Pad,” how she resists the notion of productivity, and how the pandemic has brought to light some things that disabled folks have been advocating for for years. The conversation ends with a reminder that self-indulgence is something that can only ever be positive.

As a content warning, the episode contains a brief mention of Cindy being abducted as a child from minute 38:00 to 41:00.

For a full transcript of this episode, as well as helpful links and key quotes, visit the Bodies in Translation Website: https://bodiesintranslation.ca/crip-times-a-podcast-series/

  continue reading

10 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 306483536 series 3003496
Content provided by Kayla Besse/Yousef Kadora & Kristina McMullin, Kayla Besse/Yousef Kadora, and Kristina McMullin. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Kayla Besse/Yousef Kadora & Kristina McMullin, Kayla Besse/Yousef Kadora, and Kristina McMullin or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Episode Notes

This week, Yousef and Kristina are joined by Cindy Baker, a contemporary artist whose work engages with queer, gender, race, disability, fat, and art discourses. We recorded this episode in the summer, but we think you’ll find it really speaks to the end-of-2020 burnout that many of us are collectively experiencing.

Cindy describes herself as feeling ‘wobbly’—how relatable. She tells us about her work “Crash Pad,” how she resists the notion of productivity, and how the pandemic has brought to light some things that disabled folks have been advocating for for years. The conversation ends with a reminder that self-indulgence is something that can only ever be positive.

As a content warning, the episode contains a brief mention of Cindy being abducted as a child from minute 38:00 to 41:00.

For a full transcript of this episode, as well as helpful links and key quotes, visit the Bodies in Translation Website: https://bodiesintranslation.ca/crip-times-a-podcast-series/

  continue reading

10 episodes

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