Soundings

Informações:

Synopsis

The Stanford Storytelling Project is an arts program at Stanford University that explores how we live in and through stories and how we can use them to change our lives. Our mission is to promote the transformative nature of traditional and modern oral storytelling, from Lakota tales to Radiolab, and empower students to create and perform their own stories. The project sponsors courses, workshops, live events, and grants, along with its radio show State of the Human.

Episodes

  • Kris Harris: Ride Along, Animal Edition

    25/03/2019 Duration: 07min

    Dead animals, opera music, and cute cats. Welcome to Animal Control.

  • Grace Greenwald: The Ridaelong Curse

    25/03/2019 Duration: 10min

    A day at the firehouse, finding where the action is.

  • Stephanie Ham: Instant noodles

    25/03/2019 Duration: 05min

    100 billion servings of instant noodles are sold every year. What does their journey across the world tell us?

  • Water on Concrete: An LA River Story

    16/03/2019 Duration: 25min

    If a river could talk, who’s story would it tell? Running 51 miles through one of the most urbanized landscapes in the world, the Los Angeles River is overflowing with a rich history, a complex present, and a contested future. Travel down its concrete banks with producer Cameron Tenner, as he uncovers a story of power, exploitation, and resilience. Special thanks to Catherine Gudis, Robert García, Irma Muñoz, Steven Appleton, Johanna Hackett, and all those who spoke with and guided me along the way. Music:​ Memory Wind by Podington Bear, Los Angeles New Years by Woody Guthrie

  • My Mexican Dream

    27/01/2019 Duration: 13min

    I would have been born here, had my parents never left this town for the U.S. In my journey, I retrace my steps back to Malinaltenango, Mexico, the land my parents have always called home and a land I have never really known on my own. During my time here, I struggle with ideas of identity, belonging, family, and trauma. I re-open wounds that have long been sealed to make sense of my life in relation to my grandmothers. “It’s a part of my history that I never like to think about, because it makes me sad, or maybe guilty for being born when I was and where I was. Or maybe I don’t think about it because it makes me fear loneliness. Because what if they pain of loneliness is just as transferable as their love?” Producer: ​Andrea Flores

  • The Stories They Don’t Tell: the Vietnam War at Home

    26/01/2019 Duration: 16min

    Description: In Hue, Vietnam, bullet holes and bunkers are constant reminders of the stories no one mentions. In New York, a daughter tries to understand how the war in Vietnam has shaped her father’s life and hers. In both worlds, however, “History is politics” and silence is the rule. But what happens when we start asking about memory, not History? Producer: Axelle Marcantetti

  • What I’m Grateful For -- Besher’s Story

    23/12/2018 Duration: 12min

    Besher grew up in Syria till the war forced him, and his family, to flee. This non-narrated portrait follows his journey from Aleppo to California and finally to Stanford Medical School. Produced as part of MED 232 Global Health course (2018) Producer: Besher Ashouri (and Jake warga) Photo: www.flickr.com/photos/seier/1477997213

  • A Postcard from Mariana

    18/12/2018 Duration: 12min

    Hurricane Maria revealed a dependency on the government but there was one community that used it as an opportunity to claim their independence. “There was no government here. And we couldn't wait for the government. We couldn't wait for anyone.” In this story I visit of the community of Mariana that has tried to separate themselves from the government. Producer: Gabriela Nagle Alverio Music: Puerto Rico from Pastel Beach by Englewood, Elementary wave by Erokia, Night Cave by Lee Rosevere.

  • The taste of war: The Koreans and U.S. combat ration

    17/12/2018 Duration: 12min

    What does a war taste like? Tracing the history of U.S. military combat ration in Korea, the podcast tells the Koreans’ bittersweet encounters with America. Producer: Won-Gi Jung Music: “Submerging Blue-Black” by Podington Bear, in Fathomless-Ambient “Memory Wind” by Podington Bear, in Fathomless-Ambient

  • Brains and Bronze: How Octavius Catto came back to life

    17/12/2018 Duration: 17min

    Octavius Catto, a 19th century activist, stands in bronze as the first statue of a black man on Philadelphia public property. And he’s coming back to life in other ways--on a giant mural, and in the art and social justice scenes of the city. What would this statue of an activist from history say to the activists surrounding it now...why is he back, and what’s he trying to tell us? Produced in memory of Willis “Nomo” Humphrey. Producer: Melina Walling Featuring: Melina Walling, Keir Johnston, Shakirah, Eddy, Kim McCleary, Branly Cadet, Dejay Duckett, Paul Farber Music: sonder, johnny_ripper, epilogue; Everybody Wants Gold and a Mermaid, Tony Higgins, Ray-A Life Underwater; You Can Calmly Put This Thing Together (Piece by Piece), junior85, Upside Down, Left to Right; Flight, Nctrnm, EQUINOX

  • Seeing with Sound

    16/12/2018 Duration: 16min

    If sound matters, why? I am not alone in fearing blindness, because we live in a world of visuals. Whether I am reading a book, following street signs, or hopping on a train, I can’t imagine navigating a world without my eyes. I tune out the cacophony of cars, squeaks, barks, and pedestrian crossings on a daily basis. In privileging sight, what am I missing in sound? “When you close your eyes you begin to feel your body. You become aware of your non-visual abilities,” said Thomas Tajo, a blind echolocator. I speak with human echolocators, eye researchers, and music professors to discover just how much sound has to offer. Close your eyes. Tune in, and listen to what is revealed. Producer: Chloe Barreau Music: Veni Creator Spiritus by John Dunstable (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9dYAEpf-A-A) Lost and Found by Podington Bear Three Colors by Podington Bear

  • Respite: a journey into Foster Care

    15/12/2018 Duration: 12min

    You’re six years old. Child protective services removed you from the only life you’ve ever known and placed you in state custody, into the foster care system. Producer: ​​Rachel Vaughan Music:​​ Junior85 - You can calmly put this thing together Lee Rosevere - And So Then Podington Bear - Daydreamer

  • Lost In The Stacks by Graham Todd

    26/03/2018 Duration: 08min

    Coursework from students in "Your American Life" Oralcomm 130 Winter18. Storytelling.stanford.edu

  • Cactus Garden by Ethan Cruikshank

    26/03/2018 Duration: 10min

    Coursework from students in "Your American Life" Oralcomm 130 Winter18. Storytelling.stanford.edu

  • Brothers by Alexa Corse

    26/03/2018 Duration: 07min

    Coursework from students in "Your American Life" Oralcomm 130 Winter18. Storytelling.stanford.edu

  • Be the Best You Can Be by Kaylee Blevins

    26/03/2018 Duration: 11min

    Coursework from students in "Your American Life" Oralcomm 130 Winter18. Storytelling.stanford.edu

  • Columbae by Mo Asebiomo

    26/03/2018 Duration: 09min

    Course work from students in "Your American Life" Oralcomm 130 Winter18. Storytelling.stanford.edu

  • Lavamae by Lucas Hornsby

    25/03/2018 Duration: 11min

    Coursework from students in "Your American Life" Oralcomm 130 Winter18. Storytelling.stanford.edu

  • BG17 Show Hour 1

    24/01/2018 Duration: 01h00s

    Claudia Heymach, Megan Calfas, Isaac Goldstein Individual stories here: https://soundcloud.com/stanfordsoundings/sets/braden-grant-stories-2017

  • Ghost Temples: The Spirit of Taiwan

    08/01/2018 Duration: 14min

    Producer: Katie Lan Some people pray to gods, but other people pray to ghosts. In this story, Katie Lan explores the temples and folk religion in Taiwan, where her parents and the rest of her family is from. Here, she explores ghost temples and even learns to pray to a dog? Music: 晶晶 1969 鄧麗君 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zI0lHGnKtSI

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