『Claiming the Power to See on Our Own Terms』のカバーアート

Claiming the Power to See on Our Own Terms

Claiming the Power to See on Our Own Terms

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る

今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

Black women's visibility is not a simple gift — it's a question. Who benefits when we are seen, and who benefits when we are not? In this episode of the Knowledge Gumbo Podcast, host Alicia Thomas opens with a striking quote from writer, critic, and cultural thinker Margo Jefferson: "The eye is always caught by light, but shadows have more to say."

Jefferson's insight becomes the lens for an honest, personal reflection on images — the ones we absorb, the ones we create, the ones we share, and the ones quietly discarded. Alicia explores what it means to be a curator in a visual age, and why the question of who holds the camera matters more than we realize.

This episode will stay with you. It's the kind of quiet episode that catches something true.

Key Takeaways

Margo Jefferson's work challenges us to pay attention not just to what is centered and lit, but to what lives in the margins and shadows — because meaning is often held there. Engaging with Black women's stories and images requires reading what's just outside the frame.

Being seen and being understood are not the same thing. Visibility for Black women can be empowering in one context and diminishing in another, and recognizing that difference is a form of wisdom worth practicing.

Every image we post, share, like, or scroll past makes us participants in a visual economy that shapes how communities and individuals will be remembered. That is not a neutral act — it carries obligation.

Family photo albums and digital feeds are both acts of curation. Decisions about what to preserve and what to discard quietly shape memory, identity, and what future generations will know about us.

In This Episode

[00:00] Welcome to Knowledge Gumbo

[00:32] The Quote: "The eye is always caught by light, but shadows have more to say." — Margo Jefferson

[00:58] Context: Who is Margo Jefferson and why her work on attention matters

[01:30] Reflection: Shadows as information, not absence

[02:11] What images have been teaching us about worth and complexity

[03:06] The tension between being seen and being understood

[04:10] Family photo albums as curated memory — and what got thrown away

[04:16] We are all curators now: every post, every share, every like

[04:47] The obligation we carry with the images we share

[06:07] Closing question: When you close your eyes, what image comes to mind — and who's holding the camera?

📱 CONNECT:

YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@aliciatsays

Newsletter: https://tremendous-painter-642.kit.com/305737ceb5

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aliciatsays/

Merch: https://aliciatsays.shop/

まだレビューはありません