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We Who Are Dark

We Who Are Dark

24 episodes

Woodrow Wilson and his International Policies

Jun 23, 202640 min

Meta Warrick Fuller's Mary Turner

Jun 17, 20261h 11m

Meta Warrick Fuller's The Talking Skull

Jun 10, 20261h 0m

Meta Warrick Fuller's The Awakening of Ethiopia

Jun 1, 202649 min

Policies of the F.D.R. Adminstration and Black Americans

May 25, 202635 min

A History of the Political Parties

May 19, 202653 min

The Art of Augusta Savage (Part 2)

May 11, 202646 min

The Art of Augusta Savage (Part 1)

May 5, 202648 min

The British Contribution to the American Concept of Race

Apr 27, 202647 min

How Europe Underdeveloped Africa

Apr 20, 202649 min

A War of Images: Aaron Douglas's Painting, "Aspirations"

Apr 13, 202638 min

Aaron Douglas - Aspects of Negro Life (Part 4 - Song of the Towers)

Apr 6, 202623 min

S1 Ep 11Aaron Douglas - Aspects of Negro Life (Part 3 - From Slavery to Reconstruction)

This episode continues Dr. Vaz and Professor Tomengo's conversation on Aaron Douglas's Aspects of Negro Life, this time focusing on the third painting in the series, From Slavery to Reconstruction. The conversation includes a discussion of the era of Reconstruction along with the Great Migration and the challenges and opportunities Black people faced at the turn of the 20th century.

Mar 30, 202621 min

S1 Ep 10Aaron Douglas - Aspects of Negro Life (Part 2 - Idyll of the Deep South)

Dr. Neil Vaz and Professor Trent Tomengo continue their discussion of Aaron Douglas's "Aspects of Negro Life", this time taking a deep dive into "Idyll of the Deep South". They discuss the ideas inherent in its imagery and asthetics and how these ideas are reflected in the writings of scholars like Robert Farris Thompson and Eric Williams.

Mar 23, 202639 min

S1 Ep 9Aaron Douglas - Aspects of Negro Life (Part 1)

In this episode, Dr. Neil Vaz and Professor Trent Tomengo discuss the artist Aaron Douglas and his series of paintings called "Aspects of Negro Life", particularly "The Negro in an African Setting". The conversation includes general information about the Harlem Renaissance, the historical/cultural importance of Douglas's art, and its relevance for the time period and for today.

Mar 16, 202633 min

S1 Ep 8Blacks Freed Themselves

Dr. Neil Vaz and Professor Trent Tomengo discuss the self-emancipation of Africans throughout the African Diaspora focusing on self-emancipation during the Civil War, the creation of independent Maroon nations throughout the Americas, as well as the Haitian Revolution. They delve into the importance of agency in bringing about change in the historical narrative, challenging the recent push to hide that history.

Mar 9, 202637 min

S1 Ep 7Spirituality and The Ancestors

Dr. Neil Vaz and Trent Tomengo discuss West African spirituality and its influence on the development of African diasporal cultures that resulted from the Transatlantic Slave Trade. The co-hosts address the power of the drum and why it was banned along with certain African-based spiritual traditions. Nevertheless, these ancestral expressions ultimately survived and continue to thrive in Black cultures all over the world.

Mar 2, 202638 min

S1 Ep 6Religion and Rebellion

In this episode Dr. Neil Vaz and Trent Tomengo discuss the role that religion played in the rebellions of the Translatlantic Slave Trade and slavery in the Americas.

Feb 23, 202634 min

S1 Ep 5Dividing the Atlantic

Dr. Neil Vaz and Trent Tomengo discuss how the Portuguese and Spanish claims to lands on either side of the Atlantic Ocean influenced the kinds of Black diasporal cultures found all over the world, including Latin America, the Caribbean, and the United States.

Feb 16, 202621 min

BONUS EPISODE: Mercantilsim and the Rise of the Transatlantic Slave Trade

In this conversation about the functionality of the concept of "race", Dr. Neil Vaz discusses mercantilism, the initial Western European attraction to Africa, and the rise of the Translatlantic Slave Trade.

Feb 12, 202626 min

S1 Ep 4The Psychology of Being. Black (Part 2)

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Dr. Neil Vaz and Trent Tomengo continue their discussion of how various forms of European slavery and colonialism produced a fluid, global "Black" identity.

Feb 9, 202637 min

S1 Ep 3The Psychology of Being Black

In this episode Dr. Neil Vaz and Trent Tomengo discuss how slavery, colonialism, and racist propaganda contributed to the collective psychology of Black people.

Feb 2, 202634 min

S1 Ep 2Race is an "idea".

Dr. Neil Vaz and Trent Tomengo discuss the complexities of "race" as a concept rooted in Europen colonialism and cultual hegemony.

Jan 26, 202634 min

S1 Ep 1Introduction

This is an introductory episode to We Who Are Dark, a Conversation in History and Humanities. In this episode Dr. Neil Vaz and Trent Tomengo discuss the origin of the podcast, it's format, its content, and its importance.

Jan 17, 202613 min