After Virtual: Education

After Virtual: Education

Author: frontporchrepublic November 30, 2022 Duration: 1:13:29
The second episode from the FPR conference After Virtual: The Art of Recovering Lost Goods looks at education.  Jeff Polet discusses walking away from Hope.  Angel Adams Parham talks about the elementary power of a rapping Homer.  Jason Peters goes back to the future of the educational machine.  Speakers:  Jeff Polet, Angel Adams Parham, and Jason Peters  Highlights  1:15 Jeff Polet—Why I Left the Academy  2:00 The news from Nineveh   5:30 Signs of declines  8:30 Searching for a pony   16:30 Jargon, gymnasts, adjudications, and generals   23:15 Gerald Ford comes calling   25:00 Angel Adams Parham—Education for Flourishing: K-16 and Beyond  26:30 Cultural canons and tug-of-war  28:15 Classics and community  32:30 Taking creative license with the gods  34:00 Disturbing images of beauty  40:00 Rapping Homer, Reading Frederick Douglas, and Rediscovering Sundiata  45:00 Resources for Learning  47:00 Jason Peters—The Sin Against the Body: For This They Wept Not  48:30 March madness and the managerial class  51:45 Phone sex prophecy  55:00 Would not a storm by any other name smell just the same  58:00 Even better than the real thing?  64:00 1909 all over again  70:00 Truth buoys up      Resources  Speaker bios  Conference videos  Save the date:  2023 Conference in Madison, Wisconsin (October 7, 2023)  Thanks to Wendell Kimbrough for his musical talents 

There’s a certain kind of conversation that happens best when you’re not in a hurry, when the topic can wander from the headlines of the day to the deeper questions that have always shaped how we live together. The Brass Spittoon is built for that kind of talk. Hosted by the folks at Front Porch Republic, this podcast serves as a gathering spot for discussions rooted in the tangible realities of our lives-our connections to a specific place, the practical limits we encounter, and what genuine liberty means within that framework. Each episode feels less like a lecture and more like joining a thoughtful, meandering dialogue among friends who aren’t afraid to chew over ideas from both the past and the present. You’ll hear explorations of culture, community, and the small-scale practices that build a durable society, all approached with a sense of curiosity and a lack of pretense. It’s for anyone weary of abstract debates and hungry for conversations grounded in the texture of everyday life. So, pull up a chair and settle in; this is where we consider how to live well, right where we are.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 32

The Brass Spittoon
Podcast Episodes
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Duration: 56:22
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