THE CHAIR
I built an AWARD WINNING Podcast called THE CHAIR to highlight hair journeys. I’m a Black woman, an educator and newly minted tech entrepreneur. As people sit in THE CHAIR, you will be immersed into stories surrounding education, entrepreneurship, identity, and magic. I have built THE CHAIR platform dedicated to supporting Black and Brown people on their hair journey. Enjoy as you listen to the voices in THE CHAIR.
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THE CHAIR
One and a Half Way Street
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On this episode, I introduce you to Dr. Ping-Ann an Anthropology professor who takes us on a journey unraveling her why she entered and continues to stay in the field of anthropology. She brings us into her world of ethnographic research of the Tonga women and the parallels doing research on in the world of Boston Carnival. Enjoy!
Her Bio:
Ping-Ann Addo (she/her) is an ethnographer who is an Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of Massachusetts Boston and a core faculty member in the Critical Ethnic and Community Studies Master’s program and the Native American and Indigenous Studies minor. Her book, Creating a Nation with Cloth: Tradition, Textiles, and Tongan Women (Berghahn Books, 2013), analyzes women’s agency, nation-building, and cross-generational immigrant identity in contemporary New Zealand through the shifting value of traditional wealth. She conducts ethnographic fieldwork in Boston at the intersection of Caribbean immigrant identity, place-keeping, and resistance to gentrification; has conducted fieldwork in Boston and Trinidad; and has story consultant on the documentary film (More Than Mas’, 2022) about Caribbean Carnival costume, competition, and the multiple meanings of victory in Boston. Ping-Ann serves on the academic team for the United Maroon Indigenous Peoples and as an ethnographer of their emergent social movement, focusing on women and youth-led processes of earth-care, food sovereignty, and healing. Her related forthcoming edited volume is entitled The Spirit of Marronage: Expressions of Afrikan Indigenous Self-Determination (Vernon Press). She is of Akan-Ghanaian and Chinese-Malaysian heritage, and Trinidadian up-bringing. She is a mother, partner, daughter, auntie, friend, and collaborator.
THE CHAIR (S2/Ep60) —One and a Half Way Street
I’m Your AWARD WINNING Host Dreme.
I’m a Black woman, an educator turned tech entrepreneur but still an educator. Building a platform called THE CHAIR is a Black and Brown centered tech platform dedicated to supporting people on their hair journey. You can design hairboards, connect to hair stylists, and share hair care tips all in one space for a more joyous and streamlined experience. AND built a AWARD WINNING podcast to share hair stories and stories surrounding identity, education, and entrepreneurship.
Host & Exec Producer: Dreme Flynt, M.Ed, MBA
Editor: Lila Woodbridge
http://www.lilawoodbridge.com/
Music Creators: Your Host Dreme & Seoul (@xSeoulMusicx)
Learn More About THE CHAIR:
Join THE CHAIR Community for FREE:
http://thechair.kinsta.cloud/
Join THE CHAIR Newsletter for FREE:
https://growinghands.wpengine.com/newsletter/
Commercial Credits:
Visionary: Your Host Dreme
Animator: Ahmad Merhi
https://amerhifilm.com/film
Voice Actor: D. Ruff (@d_ruff3), The Poet
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xFAH2cqo64U
My Book:
From Nowhere & Everywhere: Captured Emotions of a Beautifully Broken Love Story
My explorations through poetry, diary entries and photography as a Black woman, an educator in Guangzhou, China.
Website - https://www.lulu.com/en/us/shop/j...