Music can break down walls between once sworn enemies, but it also has the power to reinforce systems of oppression. Host Sadie McFadden, a self-proclaimed 21st-century feminist talks about feminist intersectionality with some historical contexts. With music that ranges in genre and age, join Sadie in exploring how songs or their music videos have ignored or empowered marginalized experiences and voices.
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Music can break down walls between once sworn enemies, but it also has the power to reinforce systems of oppression. Host Sadie McFadden, a self-proclaimed 21st-century feminist talks about feminist intersectionality with some historical contexts. With music that ranges in genre and age, join Sadie in exploring how songs or their music videos have ignored or empowered marginalized experiences and voices.
Travel back in time to the early 1980’s where MTV dominated the music industry, the internet didn’t exist, and the first-ever commercial cell phone weighed two pounds. Join host, Sadie McFadden, as she asks if the music video of Cyndi Lauper’s “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun” and Olivia Newton-John’s “Physical” can be considered feminist anthems.
Behind the Wall
Music can break down walls between once sworn enemies, but it also has the power to reinforce systems of oppression. Host Sadie McFadden, a self-proclaimed 21st-century feminist talks about feminist intersectionality with some historical contexts. With music that ranges in genre and age, join Sadie in exploring how songs or their music videos have ignored or empowered marginalized experiences and voices.