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#2: "A utopia for Europe is a utopia for the world" with Ethel Brooks

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Manage episode 284432129 series 2871799
Content provided by Isabel Raabe, William Bila, Katja Lehmann, Isabel Raabe, William Bila, and Katja Lehmann. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Isabel Raabe, William Bila, Katja Lehmann, Isabel Raabe, William Bila, and Katja Lehmann 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.
Academic and feminist Ethel Brooks about ancestors and family, stories of survival and monuments of hope

Our guest:
Ethel Brooks is a Romani academic and a feminist. Though she is based in the US, she has made significant contributions to the European Roma Movement. She always emphasizes that she brings in her community and her family into her work. We wanted to know that more precisely. So we talk a lot about Ethel's ancestors and family, about the Roma community in which she grew up, and about her work on gender studies and the Holocaust of the Sinti and Roma. We learn about her „Monument of Hope“ – and of course about her utopia for Europe.
Our guest: Ethel Brooks is Associate Professor of Women's and Gender Studies and Sociology at Rutgers University and a Tate-TrAIN Transnational Fellow at the University of the Arts London. Brooks is a member of the United States Holocaust Memorial Council, Chair of the European Roma Rights Centre, and her contributions played a central role to the creation of ERIAC, the European Roma Institute for Arts and Culture. She has spoken in the General Assembly for the United Nations Holocaust Remembrance Ceremony. Brooks is the author of the award-winning Unraveling the Garment Industry: Transnational Organizing and Women’s Work. Her current book project focuses on histories of encampment, claim-staking and Romani futures.
https://womens-studies.rutgers.edu/faculty/core-faculty/645-brooks-ethel
http://eriac.org
http://www.errc.org
https://www.ushmm.org/information/about-the-museum/council

**Unser Gast: **
Ethel Brooks ist Romija, Akademikerin und Feministin. Auch wenn sie in den USA lebt, hat sie bedeutende Beiträge zur europäischen Roma und Sinti-Bewegung geleistet. Sie betont stets, dass sie ihre Roma-Community und ihre Familie in ihre Arbeit einbezieht. Das wollten wir genauer wissen, und so sprechen wir viel über Ethels Vorfahren und ihre Familie, über die Roma-Community, in der sie aufgewachsen ist, und über ihre Forschungsarbeit in den Bereichen Gender Studies und zum Holocaust an den Sinti und Roma. Wir erfahren etwas über ihr "Denkmal der Hoffnung" - und natürlich über ihre Utopie für Europa.
Ethel Brooks ist außerordentliche Professorin für Women’s and Gender Studies und Soziologie an der Rutgers University und Tate-TrAIN Transnational Fellow an der University of the Arts London. Brooks ist Mitglied des United States Holocaust Memorial Council und Vorsitzende des European Roma Rights Centre. Sie spielte eine zentrale Rolle bei der Gründung von ERIAC, dem Europäischen Roma-Institut für Kunst und Kultur. Brooks sprach in der Generalversammlung für die Holocaust-Gedenkfeier der Vereinten Nationen. Sie ist die Autorin des preisgekrönten Buches “Unraveling the Garment Industry: Transnational Organizing and Women’s Work”. Ihr aktuelles Buchprojekt konzentriert sich auf die Geschichte des Lagers, Anspruchsdeckung und die Zukunft der Roma.
https://womens-studies.rutgers.edu/faculty/core-faculty/645-brooks-ethel
http://eriac.org
http://www.errc.org
https://www.ushmm.org/information/about-the-museum/council

  continue reading

14 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 284432129 series 2871799
Content provided by Isabel Raabe, William Bila, Katja Lehmann, Isabel Raabe, William Bila, and Katja Lehmann. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Isabel Raabe, William Bila, Katja Lehmann, Isabel Raabe, William Bila, and Katja Lehmann 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.
Academic and feminist Ethel Brooks about ancestors and family, stories of survival and monuments of hope

Our guest:
Ethel Brooks is a Romani academic and a feminist. Though she is based in the US, she has made significant contributions to the European Roma Movement. She always emphasizes that she brings in her community and her family into her work. We wanted to know that more precisely. So we talk a lot about Ethel's ancestors and family, about the Roma community in which she grew up, and about her work on gender studies and the Holocaust of the Sinti and Roma. We learn about her „Monument of Hope“ – and of course about her utopia for Europe.
Our guest: Ethel Brooks is Associate Professor of Women's and Gender Studies and Sociology at Rutgers University and a Tate-TrAIN Transnational Fellow at the University of the Arts London. Brooks is a member of the United States Holocaust Memorial Council, Chair of the European Roma Rights Centre, and her contributions played a central role to the creation of ERIAC, the European Roma Institute for Arts and Culture. She has spoken in the General Assembly for the United Nations Holocaust Remembrance Ceremony. Brooks is the author of the award-winning Unraveling the Garment Industry: Transnational Organizing and Women’s Work. Her current book project focuses on histories of encampment, claim-staking and Romani futures.
https://womens-studies.rutgers.edu/faculty/core-faculty/645-brooks-ethel
http://eriac.org
http://www.errc.org
https://www.ushmm.org/information/about-the-museum/council

**Unser Gast: **
Ethel Brooks ist Romija, Akademikerin und Feministin. Auch wenn sie in den USA lebt, hat sie bedeutende Beiträge zur europäischen Roma und Sinti-Bewegung geleistet. Sie betont stets, dass sie ihre Roma-Community und ihre Familie in ihre Arbeit einbezieht. Das wollten wir genauer wissen, und so sprechen wir viel über Ethels Vorfahren und ihre Familie, über die Roma-Community, in der sie aufgewachsen ist, und über ihre Forschungsarbeit in den Bereichen Gender Studies und zum Holocaust an den Sinti und Roma. Wir erfahren etwas über ihr "Denkmal der Hoffnung" - und natürlich über ihre Utopie für Europa.
Ethel Brooks ist außerordentliche Professorin für Women’s and Gender Studies und Soziologie an der Rutgers University und Tate-TrAIN Transnational Fellow an der University of the Arts London. Brooks ist Mitglied des United States Holocaust Memorial Council und Vorsitzende des European Roma Rights Centre. Sie spielte eine zentrale Rolle bei der Gründung von ERIAC, dem Europäischen Roma-Institut für Kunst und Kultur. Brooks sprach in der Generalversammlung für die Holocaust-Gedenkfeier der Vereinten Nationen. Sie ist die Autorin des preisgekrönten Buches “Unraveling the Garment Industry: Transnational Organizing and Women’s Work”. Ihr aktuelles Buchprojekt konzentriert sich auf die Geschichte des Lagers, Anspruchsdeckung und die Zukunft der Roma.
https://womens-studies.rutgers.edu/faculty/core-faculty/645-brooks-ethel
http://eriac.org
http://www.errc.org
https://www.ushmm.org/information/about-the-museum/council

  continue reading

14 episodes

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