Exploring Identity with Jill Louise Busby
Media Type |
audio
Categories Via RSS |
Society & Culture
Publication Date |
Nov 30, 2019
Episode Duration |
00:38:06

Jill Louise Busby is a writer and filmmaker critiquing, imploding, and barrel-laughing at our personal and communal hierarchies; the myth of white fragility (and other words for racism); the endlessly-pending and highly-exclusive revolution, identity, and reaction-based illusions of societal progress; and the boundaries that all place on our lives.

Believing a shift away from anti-difference begins with an outpouring of radical, multi-generational, inclusive, and validating honesty, Jill’s work charms audiences just past their limits of comfort, inviting them to seek a new and more genuine freedom in the discomfort of truth.

Follow Jill on Instagram for more!

 

Episode Questions:

• Jill says these days she feels like "Identity is a reaction to oppression". Is this true for you? What identities do you claim? Which of those markers are linked to oppression? Which markers are linked to privilege? Which are linked to general experience?

• Think about the identities that you possess. What is the first identity you remember claiming? What identity or identities do you claim most ardently now? What identities have others tried to affix to you that you've taken issue with or rejected?

• Jill humorously referred to the internet as a virtual high school where people show up as representatives of themselves but not their actual selves. What's your internet high school avatar? What may people miss about you if this is the only version that they see?

• Jill mentioned that she doesn't want to live governed by the reactions of other people or in defense of who she is. What would it look like to resist giving systems of dominance our lives and energies while still cultivating space that affirms those impacted their oppression?

• We live in a culture in which it is easy to call others out but what sort of things do you need to check yourself on? How do you hold yourself accountable as you work towards personal and social transformation?

• Jill notes that in 10 years everything we say could end up being problematic. What could it look like to hold people accountable but also cultivate empathy for others and ourselves as we work to disengage from toxic patterns, thoughts, speech, and behaviors as we evolve?

 

Sign up for Andre's Hope & Hard Pills Newsletter at his website. Catch up with Andre on Twitter, Instagram, & Facebook.

Find out what Alicia is up to at her website and on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook.

Of course, this podcast couldn't happen with out the support of our wonderful patrons! Click here to become a patron of the Hope & Hard Pills Podcast on Patreon to support our work and gain access to exclusive content.

A special thank you to our Collaborators on Patreon:Ahren SamuelsAnne TomkinsonDonna LynnJanet ElsbachJason DeMeoJohn TomkinsonMichaela DoelmanMike McHargueRebecca WilliamsonRegina-Wink SwinfordSamantha HamSamuel MuthiahScott UngerStephen MatlockMichael KinmanRyan Ku-Borden

 

New Music: The Love In Her Eyes by Andre Henry

Music: Supa Dred II (Wake Up) & It Doesn't Have To Be This Way by Andre Henry

Balancing identity and how we operate in society with digital representations of ourselves can influence our own narratives.

Jill Louise Busby is a writer and filmmaker critiquing, imploding, and barrel-laughing at our personal and communal hierarchies; the myth of white fragility (and other words for racism); the endlessly-pending and highly-exclusive revolution, identity, and reaction-based illusions of societal progress; and the boundaries that all place on our lives.

Believing a shift away from anti-difference begins with an outpouring of radical, multi-generational, inclusive, and validating honesty, Jill’s work charms audiences just past their limits of comfort, inviting them to seek a new and more genuine freedom in the discomfort of truth.

Follow Jill on Instagram for more!

 

Episode Questions:

• Jill says these days she feels like "Identity is a reaction to oppression". Is this true for you? What identities do you claim? Which of those markers are linked to oppression? Which markers are linked to privilege? Which are linked to general experience?

• Think about the identities that you possess. What is the first identity you remember claiming? What identity or identities do you claim most ardently now? What identities have others tried to affix to you that you've taken issue with or rejected?

• Jill humorously referred to the internet as a virtual high school where people show up as representatives of themselves but not their actual selves. What's your internet high school avatar? What may people miss about you if this is the only version that they see?

• Jill mentioned that she doesn't want to live governed by the reactions of other people or in defense of who she is. What would it look like to resist giving systems of dominance our lives and energies while still cultivating space that affirms those impacted their oppression?

• We live in a culture in which it is easy to call others out but what sort of things do you need to check yourself on? How do you hold yourself accountable as you work towards personal and social transformation?

• Jill notes that in 10 years everything we say could end up being problematic. What could it look like to hold people accountable but also cultivate empathy for others and ourselves as we work to disengage from toxic patterns, thoughts, speech, and behaviors as we evolve?

 

Sign up for Andre's Hope & Hard Pills Newsletter at his website. Catch up with Andre on Twitter, Instagram, & Facebook.

Find out what Alicia is up to at her website and on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook.

Of course, this podcast couldn't happen with out the support of our wonderful patrons! Click here to become a patron of the Hope & Hard Pills Podcast on Patreon to support our work and gain access to exclusive content.

A special thank you to our Collaborators on Patreon:Ahren SamuelsAnne TomkinsonDonna LynnJanet ElsbachJason DeMeoJohn TomkinsonMichaela DoelmanMike McHargueRebecca WilliamsonRegina-Wink SwinfordSamantha HamSamuel MuthiahScott UngerStephen MatlockMichael KinmanRyan Ku-Borden

 

New Music: The Love In Her Eyes by Andre Henry

Music: Supa Dred II (Wake Up) & It Doesn't Have To Be This Way by Andre Henry

This episode currently has no reviews.

Submit Review
This episode could use a review!

This episode could use a review! Have anything to say about it? Share your thoughts using the button below.

Submit Review