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Woman's Hour

Arooj Aftab, PIP implants, Race, trauma & culture, Reclaiming sexist language

Woman's Hour

BBC

Society & Culture

4.13K Ratings

🗓️ 4 June 2021

⏱️ 58 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Arooj Aftab is a Pakistani composer, based in Brooklyn. She joins Anita to talk about her music and influences from jazz and Qawwali to Jeff Buckley and Abidi Parveen. She explains how grief has shifted the tone of her music to ‘heavy metal harp’, and discusses her latest album, Vulture Prince, which honours and reimagines centuries-old ghazals, a form of South Asian poetry and music that she grew up listening to with her family.

Now the dust has settled on the recent court ruling on compensation for women with PIP Implants, it's become clear a group of women will miss out. The French court ruled that those who had implants pre 2006 will not get any money, as it decided the safety regulator who approved the implants for market couldn't have been aware of any problems before that date. Lawyers representing the women will go back to the French supreme court to fight this. Melanie Abbott has been looking into this.

Therapist and researcher, Guilaine Kinouni’s book Living While Black looks at the racial inequalities within the mental health system and their consequences for Black people. She is joined by author, academic, and broadcaster Emma Dabiri whose new book What White People Can Do Next looks at racial justice and how we demonstrations of support can be transformed into real and meaningful change.

Language – and the way we use it – is forever changing. We explore how the word ‘bitch’ and other similar words with a sexist history are being reclaimed and reinvented by women to mean something positive. Chante Joseph is a social media creative and writer. Jacqueline Springer is a Black music and culture journalist. Helen Taylor is an Emeritus Professor of English at the University of Exeter.

Presenter: Anita Rani Producer: Frankie Tobi

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Choosing what to watch night after night the flicking through the endless

0:06.8

searching is a nightmare we want to help you on our brand new podcast off the

0:11.8

telly we share what we've been watching

0:14.0

Fladiated.

0:16.0

Load to games, loads of fun, loads of screaming.

0:19.0

Lovely. Off the telly with me Joanna Paige.

0:21.0

And me, Natalie Cassidy, so your evenings can be a little less

0:25.0

searching and a lot more auction listen on BBC Sounds.

0:29.0

BBC Sounds music radio podcasts.

0:35.0

Hello, I'm Anita Rani and welcome to Woman's Hour from BBC Radio 4.

0:40.0

Good morning. Welcome to Friday's Woman's Hour.

0:44.0

Today's show comes with a warning.

0:46.0

We are reclaiming sexist language later.

0:49.0

If you want a clue to the word,

0:51.0

what word comes before please and after basic boss and of course Brittany.

0:59.0

Quick quiz to get you thinking. If you have got children at home I will give you plenty of

1:03.8

warning before that item. And a year on from when the world witnessed the

1:08.6

horrific murder of George Floyd. I'm going to be joined by Gilane Kinnawani and Emma de Berry to talk about

1:14.3

overcoming black trauma how the experience of being born black in the West can

1:19.5

affect every aspect of your life and your psychology and what can be done about it.

1:24.9

It will be a really interesting and important conversation.

1:28.6

Then, as it's Friday, I have a musical treat for your ears. who may be bade.

...

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