Skip to Primary Menu Skip to Utility Menu Skip to Main Content Skip to Footer
UC Santa Cruz Logo Institute of the Arts and Sciences
UC Santa Cruz Logo

Remaking the Exceptional Podcast on 90.5 FM KSJS: Episode 6 “Flowers, Freedom, and Justice”

Loading Events
  • This event has passed.

July 31 @ 1:30 pm

Tune in to SJSU’s radio station, 90.5 FM KSJS, on Wednesdays at 1:30pm PT to hear the Tea Project’s podcast “Remaking the Exceptional.” Each episode brings together activists, artists, poets, and torture survivors to investigate connections between policing and incarceration in Chicago and the human rights violations at the US military prison in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. The Tea Project suggests that sitting, sipping, and reflecting over a cup of tea with others can create the space for conversations on difficult and at times painful subjects, but also can create opportunities to envision a new set of social relations. See San José Museum of Art webpage here.

This broadcast is a partnership between San Jose State University’s 90.5FM KSJS and San José Museum of Art.

The first broadcast premiered on June 26, International Day in Support of Victims of Torture, and runs through July 31. 

Listen on 90.5 FM or via TuneIn.

Episode Schedule (Wednesdays from June 26 to July 31, 2024):

  • June 26 — Episode 1: Tea, Tenderness, and Torture 
  • July 3 — Episode 2: Maps, Memory, and Violence 
  • July 10 — Episode 3: Poetry, Resilience, and Resistance 
  • July 17 — Episode 4: Ships, Contradictions, and Confinement 
  • July 24 — Episode 5: Trees, Solidarity, and Struggle 
  • July 31 — Episode 6: Flowers, Freedom, and Justice 

KSJS will re-air the series in Fall 2024 – check back here for dates and times. 

This program is presented in conjunction with Seeing through Stone, a multi-sited exhibition that is part of Visualizing Abolition. 

Image: Tea Project (Amber Ginsburg & Aaron Hughes), Tracing the Torture Tree | Chicago to Guantánamo | The ecosystem of police and military violence from John Burge and his co-accused to Richard Zuley, 2022. Courtesy of the Tea Project.