JUST KEEP FIGHTING MENU
EPISODE GUIDE
Through the run of Season 7, we will be digging back through our archives to create a landing page for important resources that we discussed along the way, both in special, thematic episodes and also in the conversation on Buffy episodes, specifically. This list will grow, so please come back for more!
EPISODE 6.19 / 6.22
MORE ON THE YIDAKI
In the Buffy episode Normal Again, the character Andrew plays an instrument called The Yidaki. In our initial conversation about this instrument, we had not done the proper research and our resulting conversation was harmful to Indigenous communities. That conversation was edited out and in our introduction to 6.22: Grave, we talked about the error and gave more history on the instrument with a link to the below list of resources!
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander individuals are advised that the following resources may contain images and voices of people who have died. However, to our best knowledge, the individuals featured in the videos below are still living.
VIDEO INTERVIEWS
Below is a short collection of video interviews with Yolŋu Aboriginal People in Northeast Arnhem Land about their sacred instrument, the yidaki. English subtitles are included in each video.
Listening to Djambawa Marawili:
“Of his travels in the early 1970s, when he never saw didjeridus outside the Top End”
Listening to Wukun Wanambi:
“Discussing the depth of yidaki knowledge and the fact that it takes time to learn”
“Speaks of fears of sharing deeper knowledge about yidaki and lack of mutual sharing”
Listening to Galarrwuy Yunupiŋu:
“Galarrwuy Yunupiŋu, Gumatj clan leader, at the Garma Festival Yidaki Forum in August 2004
talking about the appropriation of the yidaki by non-Aboriginal people in Australia”
Learn About Yidaki Aboriginal Music
In this video, the story of the yidaki is explained by Brendan Mitchell, a Marrawarra/Barkindji man. The video is produced by Gunawirra Ltd, an organization made up of both Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island people and non-Indigenous people. Closed captioning is available.
0.33: INVISI-BIPOC:
The BIPOC Experience of Invisibility
Through the Lens of Buffy the Vampire Slayer
Producer Alba Daza & Consultant Mack MacDade delve into the BIPOC experience of invisibility, using episodes and themes from Buffy the Vampire Slayer to better understand the ways in which the BIPOC community is made to feel invisible.
WATCHING GUIDE
Episodes of Buffy referenced inside of this
podcast conversation, if you’d like to re-watch!
S1E1 & 2 | Welcome to the Hellmouth + The Harvest
S1E11 | Out of Mind Out of Sight
S2E18 | Killed by Death
S3E1 | Anne
S3E12 | Helpless
S3E21 & 22 | Graduation Day Pt. 1 & 2
S5E12 | Checkpoint
S5E3 | The Replacement
S7E17 | Lies My Parents Told Me
READING GUIDE
Suggested readings to support and dive deeper
into the themes inside of the podcast conversation!
GLAAD’s Where We Are on TV 2020
Documenting Portrayals of Race/Ethnicity on Primetime Television over a 20-Year Span and Their Association with National-Level Racial/Ethnic Attitudes by Riva Tukachinsky, Dana Mastro & Moran Yarchi (2015)
Why the Trope of Rebellious Asian Women With Colorful Hair Is Problematic by Rae Chen
MACK’S CORNER
Resources Shared In Our Reading + Discussion Series
After our first reading + discussion group in 2020 with facilitator Mackenzie MacDade, we created this central place to share the resources she shared with us, as well as resources some of you brought into the conversation. There are also some starting resources for those who are new to conversations around white supremacy, white supremacy culture, and anti-racism overall as recommended by Mack!
If these conversations are newer to you and causing you to reckon with some Big Feelings, take some time with these resources to see if they might help orient those feelings and give some larger context!
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
YABA BLAY, TARANA BURKE, GLENNON DOYLE, & ABBY WAMBACH “What to Do When You Fuck Up”
SONYA RENEE TAYLOR “The Difference Between Absolution & An Apology”
GINA CROSLEY-CORCORAN “Explaining White Privilege to a Broke White Person”
NPR’s “Breaking Down the Legacy of Race in Traditional Music in America”
LISA J GREEN African American English: A Linguistic Introduction