Episode notes
On the urgent need to reclaim our political voices, the forces that silence dissent, and how art and poetry are crucial tools for survival
Our guest today is an activist scholar who believes the classroom is inseparable from the public square. David Palumbo-Liu is the Louise Hewlett Nixon Professor of Comparative Literature at Stanford University and a founding faculty member of Stanford’s Program in Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity. But his work has long reached beyond the academy. Through his book,
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David Palumbo-Liu, Speaking Out of Place, Campus Activism, Gaza, Israel, American Dream, Stanford University, AI Ethics, Resistance, Ethical Citizenship, Art, Poetry, Human Rights, Comparative Literature, Academic Freedom
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