One of the many COVID-related discussions I find myself having these days.
Read MoreHappy to appear on NPR’s 1A to discuss ethical issues arising from COVID-19 vaccine development.
Read MoreTimely conversation with Robert Newman, director of the National Humanities Center for the NHC podcast, Discovery and Inspiration.
Read MoreDiscussing health justice with Myisha Cherry of The UnMute Podcast.
Read MoreThe Daily Drum discussion of the Jussie Smollett incident.
Read MoreMore on race, brain death, and bioethics.
Read MoreI was on Al-Jazeera English yesterday (a sound bite), and I’m on several morning shows for CBC radio this morning.
Read MoreI appeared on the HBCU Digest After Dark podcast today to discuss media outlets tapping into HBCU faculty expertise. Thanks to Tiffany Brockington and Jarrett Carter for the invite. I hope we can work together in the future.
Read MoreWe recorded this podcast episode in August, and it’s now available. Listening to it, I kept thinking, “Dam, this is good stuff!” Sometimes I don’t realize just how good I am!
Read MoreI was involved in a colorism discussion on the radio, and it didn’t go completely off the rails…
Read MoreThis interview on “Pillow Talk With Angela” is a taste of what goes down (wow! I just caught that pun) in my philosophy of love and sex course.
Read MoreI don’t find the word bitch particularly empowering, but I refuse to allow it to be disempowering.
Read MoreOn April 26, 2018, I was a guest on The Daily Drum, a nightly radio show hosted by Harold Fisher. The Daily Drum is simulcast on WHUR-FM (96.3 Washington, DC) and SiriuxXM 141 (HUR Voices) at 7p.m. eastern time. My fellow guest was civil rights attorney, Donald Temple. We discussed the guilty verdict in Bill Cosby's retrial. The discussion was, at times,… lively. I was the only woman in the mix. Even the callers all were men.
Read MoreI was interviewed by The Chronicle of Higher Education in response to the publication of a controversial article published in Hypatia, widely regarded as the top (US) feminist philosophy journal in the profession. Critics argued that the author did not properly engage the work of the marginalized scholars who have been thinking and writing in race theory and trans identity. I argued that we will continue to see these kinds of mistakes in the profession as long as marginalized scholars are largely excluded from editorial boards and peer reviewing. This article initially appeared May 18, 2017.
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