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Wonder Cabinet

The Outsider (Updated)

Wonder Cabinet

Wonder Cabinet Productions

Society & Culture, Wonder, Philosophy, Ttbook, Knowledge, Interview

4.81K Ratings

🗓️ 12 June 2016

⏱️ 52 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this hour, we explore the cultural shift in outsiders. They used to be the outcasts, misfits, and underemployed. Today, outsiders are indie, alternative and ahead of their time. How Outsiders Are Redefining Normal; Colin Wilson's "The Outsider"; How to Unleash Your Inner Misfit; Joseph Mitchell's Literary Journalism; Existentialism is Still Relevant Today.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Support for WPR comes from St. Luke's Burthing Center, providing expectant mom's low intervention options with labor tubs, remote telemetry, and nitrous oxide.

0:10.3

More information is at slh Duluth.com slash baby.

0:15.5

Hi, I'm Anne Strange Champs. You probably know what it feels like to be an outsider, not part of the in crowd.

0:21.3

That used to be a bad thing, but not anymore.

0:26.4

Here's to the crazy ones.

0:29.2

The rebels, the troublemakers, the ones who see things differently.

0:37.1

While some may see them as the crazy ones, we see genius.

0:43.2

Because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ones who do.

0:52.8

Today, on to the best of our knowledge from PRI, how misfits, outsiders, geeks, and rebels gained social status and economic clout.

1:02.4

To the point that today, you could say, the outsiders are the new in-crowd.

1:07.9

So one of the books that got us thinking about this is Alyssa Quartz, Republic of Outsiders,

1:12.6

The Power of Amateurs, Dreamers, and Rebels. Her definition of outsider is pretty expansive,

1:18.6

ranges from indie filmmakers and musicians to transgender activists and bipolar pride supporters.

1:24.6

For example, she writes about the Icarus Project. So the Icarus project started

1:29.3

it in 2002, and they were a couple of kids, really. They were young people who had had

1:36.5

nervous breakdowns, or that was how the world thought what had happened to them. They had

1:41.1

gotten to a state. They were sometimes young as college students,

1:44.3

and something had happened, and they had been institutionalized. After that, there's a couple of

1:50.4

people in this group. One of them was Sasha DeBruill, another one is somebody named Jacks, Ashley McNamara,

1:56.1

and they decided they wanted to organize a movement, which would potentially offer alternative strategies for dealing with mental states, extreme mental states.

2:07.4

What do you mean alternative strategies?

2:09.3

Not being put in institutional settings necessarily if they had a breakdown, sometimes not being given psychopharmacological assistance, healing in groups,

...

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