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Fact and Science Fiction

Planets and Space with Harriet Brettle

This week I have planetary scientist Harriet Brettle on the show. We talk about those beautiful pictures of Jupiter, how Harriet got her start in a STEM field, what she thinks about Elon Musk and, of course, science fiction!


Follow Harriet on Twitter @harriet_brettle

Follow the pod on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram @factandscifi


Support the podcast by telling a friend, submitting a review on Apple Podcasts, or download a free audiobook or two at http://audibletrial.com/factandscifi


Music by the 126ers and 129ers under Creative Common license

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  • Special announcement: Afrofuturism and diverse science fiction

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    I was going to create a podcast episode on afrofuturism but I found that this genre/aesthetic/artform can speak for itself so instead I'm going to link all my research sources and then make a pledge to ensure all @FactandScifi eps from now on include black and non-black POC media rep. Afrofuturism, broadly defined, imagines a future, past or present of the African diaspora freed from colonialism (and from white people.) It's not just black characters in science fiction, it centers the black experience. It challenges western, white-centric ideas of sci-fiFilms and educational podcasts about afrofuturismSpace is the Place by Sun Ra (available on Youtube) - part funk and experimental jazz music performance part scifi imagines a home for black people away from whites (note Sun Ra liberates black people in Oakland very much like Wakandans want to do in the Black Panther movie)Learn the history of Afrofuturism in music and its connections to modern day hip-hop including Missy Elliot, Kendrick Lamar and OutKast in the pod Bottom of the Map: Culture in the Cosmos: AfroFuturism, Hip-Hop, and Black JoyHow did Black Panther (2019) open up Afrofuturism to the world? Listen to this interview with Shawn Taylor from Nerds of Color as he explains Afrofuturism in academia, music, film and seminal books of the genreWatch this short film called Robots of Brixton about a riot of underclass robots against their oppressors. This is the first time I can remember seeing robots that don't look like white peopleHow is Afrofuturism different from African science fiction? I can't speak to the quality of this podcast overall but this interview with Dr. Moradewun Adejunmobi about Afrofuturism and what it signals about future expectations was fantastic.Watch this short film called Afronauts, an alternate history about the first African astronauts during the space raceAfrofuturism novels and anthologiesKindred by Octavia ButlerMothership: Tales from Afrofuturism and Beyond ed. by Bill Campbell and Edward Austin HallShuri: The Search for Black PantherWar Girls by Tochi Onyebuch
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  • Science of Superheroes: Planet Comicon Live

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