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Sweet Medicine

Sweet Medicine

De : Studio Styles
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How have Nigerians been taught to think about how to be in the world? Sweet Medicine is a project about the reclamation of the humanities in a post-SAP Nigeria because the humanities are the necessary foundation for genuine and ethical technical and societal development.


Website: sweetmedicine.me / studiostyles.org

Newsletter: sweetmedicinelap.substack.com


The podcast was funded through an Open Society Foundations Ideas Workshop Fellowship.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Studio Styles
Science Sciences sociales
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    Épisodes
    • “We can give the world beauty, band for band" - Oluwakemi Agbato
      Dec 15 2024

      For my final guest episode, I’m with the researcher and designer Oluwakemi Agbato who lives by the question: “How can we make good things to live with?” And explores that question through her research and design studio, Studio GB and her jewellery brand RENIKEJI. This conversation was full of passion on both sides for how history continues to live with us in the objects around us.


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      04:41 James Baldwin on Suffering and Achieving One’s Own Authority

      15:06 The Rich History of Nigerian Silk

      19:34 The 1960 Nigeria Exhibition

      22:16 “It becomes real, you’re the one pursuing knowledge, knowledge is not pursuing you.”



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      Website: sweetmedicine.me

      Newsletter: studiostyles.substack.com.

      Instagram: @ss.studiostyles


      Support Sweet Medicine: https://flutterwave.com/donate/olt4tbjytsjr

      Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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      25 min
    • "It's not if I can, it's how I can." - Mobolaji Otuyelu
      Dec 14 2024

      Today’s conversation is with Mobolaji Otuyelu, the founder of two startups—a kitchenware company AGBO ILÉ and Ọjà Wellness Foods, a beverage company. As an entrepreneur focused on black innovation and social change, Mobolaji is also deeply involved with the Federation of Informal Workers’ Organisations of Nigeria (FIWON), where she collaborates on member-led initiatives to provide tangible support like health insurance, mortgage opportunities, and pension schemes for informal workers. In this conversation we discuss the ties between economic development and healing—the two need each other—, the gift of now and the power of the contemporary.



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      04:02 FIWON: A Model for Informal Workers

      08:48 Resourcefulness in Nigerian Entrepreneurship

      16:15 Healing Through Money and Economic Capital

      25:34 The Gift of Now/Culture is Dynamic


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      Mentioned in the episode:

      https://www.mondragon-corporation.com/en/


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      Website: sweetmedicine.me

      Newsletter: studiostyles.substack.com.

      Instagram: @ss.studiostyles


      Support Sweet Medicine: https://flutterwave.com/donate/olt4tbjytsjr



      Consider joining or supporting Kwanda


      From the founder of Kwanda, Jermaine Craig: "I'm focused on making the world a more generous place. I'm interested in the potential of the collective, not the individual. I want to get future philanthropists started earlier by gathering as 'Micro Philanthropists'. A blocker to generosity is a lack of transparency and trust, so I'm building Kwanda. This platform brings diasporans together to pool capital and fund local-led projects in Africa. The platform is financially transparent and allows members to decide how funds are spent."

      Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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      29 min
    • Chapter 6: Why Take Ownership? What Are Our Bodies Good For?
      Dec 13 2024

      I've spent the past seven weeks discussing why social healing, why the humanities when people are starving, what do we do with History, what are Nigerian nervous conditions, what kind of society is Nigeria and why was Nigeria made in the first place. I set up these questions to give a sense of what the problem is, and how the centuries before now led us here.

      With all this information, how can we work towards these resilient, compassionate and responsible futures? My suggestions: take ownership and pay attention to our bodies.


      This episode includes an excerpt from this talk, What Kids Can't Do: Youth, Historical Agency, and Authority, by Abosede George (Associate Professor of History, Barnard College and Columbia University) at Wolf Humanities Center's 2020-21 Forum on Choice, March 17, 2021.


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      03:21 Is agency all that matters? Abosede George on foregrounding other dimensions of being human

      10:04 Connection comes with risk of loss and failure, connect anyway

      12:47 My body’s my buddy / Body go tell you

      18:24 Denying our self-sovereignty


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      Website: sweetmedicine.me

      Newsletter: studiostyles.substack.com.

      Instagram: @ss.studiostyles


      Support Sweet Medicine: https://flutterwave.com/donate/olt4tbjytsjr

      Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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      24 min
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