• IP0601 African vs Anglo-American Feminism: Decolonising Power
    Feb 2 2026
    What happens when feminism is treated as universal — despite emerging from very unequal histories and contexts? In this episode of Intersectional Psychology, I compare Anglo-American feminism and African feminisms, asking what gets lost when Western feminist frameworks are exported as the default lens for understanding gender, power, and justice. Drawing on African feminist scholarship and decolonial theory, this episode explores how feminism looks different when it is shaped by colonial histories, economic inequality, community-based survival, and collective responsibility — rather than liberal individualism. 🎁 Support the podcast and get exclusive bonus content at Patreon.com/IntersectionalPsychology. 🌈 If this episode resonates, please share it, rate the show, and send us your thoughts. 📄 Download a transcript of this episode on IntersectionalPsychology.com. ⏳ Chapter Timestamps 00:00:00 Pre-credit teaser 00:01:22 Land acknowledgement 00:01:50 Title credits 00:02:17 Introduction to African vs Anglo-American feminism 00:04:18 Anglo-American feminism: Who is it really for? 00:07:42 The problem with universal womanhood 00:09:46 African feminism: Context is not optional 00:13:15 Why Anglo-American feminism still falls short 00:16:18 Intersectionality: Why this is personal 00:17:55 South Africa, apartheid, and compounded oppression 00:22:28 Why African feminism matters 00:26:32 End credits Stay connected 🔗 Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts 📮 Got feedback or questions? Reach out at @IntersectionalPsychology or IntersectionalPsychologyPod[@]gmail.com You can contribute to the Palestine Children's Relief Fund at https://www.pcrf.net/ References Ahmed, S. (2000). Whose Counting? Feminist Theory, 1(1), pp. 97-103 [online]. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/14647000022229083 (Accessed 10 July 2024) Bakare-Yusuf, B. (2003). Beyond Determinism: The Phenomenology of African Female Existence. Feminist Africa, 2 [online]. Available at: https://www.jstor.org/stable/48724973 (Accessed 10 July 2024) Bakare-Yusuf, B. (2004) '"Yoruba's don't do gender": A critical review of Oyeronke Oyěwùmí's The Invention of Women: Making an African Sense of Western Gender Discourses', in Arnfred et al. (2004) African Gender Scholarship: Concepts, Methodologies and Paradigms. Dakar: Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa. Camminga, B. (2020) 'Disregard and danger: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and the voices of trans (and cis) African feminists', The Sociological Review, 68(4), pp. 817-833. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/0038026120934695 (Accessed 10 July 2024) Carrera-Fernández, M. V., & DePalma, R. (2020). Feminism will be trans-inclusive or it will not be: Why do two cis-hetero woman educators support transfeminism? The Sociological Review, 68(4), pp. 745-762 [online]. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/0038026120934686 (Accessed 10 July 2024) Connell, R.W. (1985) 'Theorising gender', Sociology, 19(2), pp. 260-272. Crenshaw, K. (1991) 'Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence Against Women of Colour', Stanford Law Review, 43(6), pp. 1241-1299 [online]. Available at: https://www.jstor.org/stable/1229039 (Accessed 10 July 2024) DiAngelo, R. (2018) White fragility: why it's so hard to talk to white people about racism. Boston: Beacon Press. Dosekun, S. (2019) 'African feminisms', in Yacob-Haliso, O. & Falola, T. (eds.), The Palgrave Handbook of African Women’s Studies [online]. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-77030-7_58-1 (Accessed 10 July 2024) Eddo-Lodge, R. (2017) Why I'm No Longer Talking to White People about Race. London: Bloomsbury Circus. Garutsa, T.C. & Nekhwevha, F. (2019) 'Decreasing Reliance of Indigenous Knowledge Systems in Rural Households: The Case of Khambashe, Eastern Cape, South Africa', Africa Insight, 49(1) [online]. Available at: https://www.ajol.info/index.php/ai/article/view/188718 (Accessed 10 July 2024) Gqola, P.D. (2001) 'Defining people: Analysing power, language and representation in metaphors of the New South Africa', Transformation 47, pp. 94-106 [online]. Available at: https://www.africabib.org/htp.php?RID=P00021717 (Accessed 10 July 2024) Gqola, P.D. (2005) 'Through Zanele Muholi's eyes: re/imagining ways of seeing Black lesbians', in Tamale, S. (ed.) African Sexualities: A Reader. Wantage: Pambazuka Press. pp. 622-629. Hill Collins, P. (1996) What's in a Name? Womanism, Black Feminism, and Beyond', The Black Scholar, 26(1), pp. 9-17 [online]. Paradigm Publishers. Available at: http://www.jstor.org/stable/41068619 (Accessed 10 July 2024) Kisiang'ani, E.N.W. (2004) 'Decolonising Gender Studies in Africa', in Arnfred et al. (2004) African Gender Scholarship: Concepts, Methodologies and Paradigms. Dakar: Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa. Lewis, D. (2004) 'African Gender Research and Postcoloniality: Legacies and Challenges', in Arnfred...
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    29 mins
  • IP26.1.26 Intersectional Psychology announcement
    Jan 26 2026

    This mini episode shares updates for Intersectional Psychology in 2026, including a new biweekly release schedule, ongoing Patreon benefits, and a preview of upcoming series on GBV, disability, democracy, climate justice, migration, and the return of Intersectional Scenes.

    🎁 Support the podcast and get exclusive bonus content at Patreon.com/IntersectionalPsychology.

    📄 Download a transcript of this episode on IntersectionalPsychology.com.

    Stay connected

    🔗 Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts 📮 Got feedback or questions? Reach out at @IntersectionalPsychology or IntersectionalPsychologyPod[@]gmail.com

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    4 mins
  • IP03 Best of Transgender Health Care and Rights (Season 3) 2025
    Jan 12 2026

    Season 3 of Intersectional Psychology focuses on trans and gender-diverse healthcare, rights, and resistance, with a particular emphasis on South Africa and the African continent. This episode challenges myths and centres lived experience, offering evidence-based insight and a clear-eyed look at the political realities shaping care and access today.

    🎁 Support the podcast and get exclusive bonus content at Patreon.com/IntersectionalPsychology.

    🌈 If this episode resonates, please share it, rate the show, and send us your thoughts.

    📄 Download a transcript of this episode on IntersectionalPsychology.com.

    ⏳ Chapter Timestamps

    00:00:00 Land acknowledgement 00:00:28 Title credits 00:01:09 Introduction to transgender health and rights 00:02:02 The actual access to gender-affirming health care (GAHC) 00:04:49 Affirmation is the first step 00:06:41 Non-medical gender-affirming practices 00:11:19 It goes all the way to the top! 00:14:40 What is hormone therapy in GAHC actually? 00:20:26 What is gender-affirming surgery actually? 00:22:31 Exporting "Eden": God, guns, and glossy pamphlets in Africa 00:30:11 Platforms of harm, laws of hope 00:33:12 The Gospel according to gaslight 00:41:01 Receipts, resistance, and raising hell 00:51:43 Don't feed the trolls, but don't starve yourself either 00:56:54 Love, families, and finding your people 01:00:11 End credits

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    🔗 Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts 📮 Got feedback or questions? Reach out at @IntersectionalPsychology or IntersectionalPsychologyPod[@]gmail.com

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    1 hr and 3 mins
  • IP02 Best of Decolonising Mental Health (Season 2) 2025
    Jan 6 2026

    This Best Of Season 2 episode of Intersectional Psychology brings together key moments from a season focused on decolonising mental health practice.

    Host Aurora Brown, Registered Counsellor, is joined by Shaheeda Sadeck and Neesha Chhiba, two Registered Counsellors working at the intersections of psychology, culture, spirituality, community care, and social justice. Together, they explore how colonial histories, apartheid, religion, racism, Islamophobia, homophobia, and global political violence continue to shape mental health — particularly in South Africa.

    🎁 Support the podcast and get exclusive bonus content at Patreon.com/IntersectionalPsychology.

    🌈 If this episode resonates, please share it, rate the show, and send us your thoughts.

    📄 Download a transcript of this episode on IntersectionalPsychology.com.

    ⏳ Chapter Timestamps

    00:00:00 Land acknowledgement 00:00:28 Title credits 00:01:23 Introduction to decolonising mental health 00:10:04 Decolonial practice with children 00:18:34 How social practice and multiculturalism enhance psychology 00:24:39 Trauma-informed child mental health care 00:30:38 Impact of Islamophobia on the mental health of Muslims in SA 00:35:58 Mental health of Queer Muslims in Cape Town 00:41:15 How parents can support their children's mental health 00:45:36 From SA to Palestine: Ongoing decolonial work 00:48:24 Power, freedom, and difference in mental health care 00:53:13 Trauma-informed self care 00:56:30 End credits

    Stay connected to Aurora and Intersectional Psychology

    🔗 Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts 📮 Got feedback or questions? Reach out at @IntersectionalPsychology or IntersectionalPsychologyPod[@]gmail.com

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    59 mins
  • IP01 Best of Dissecting Intersectional Psychology (Season 1) 2025
    Dec 16 2025

    What is intersectional psychology — and why does it matter so much for mental health today?

    In this Best of Season 1 episode, Aurora Brown brings together key moments from all four episodes of Dissecting Intersectional Psychology, offering a rich and accessible introduction to intersectionality, social justice, and their ethical relevance to psychology and counselling practice.

    This episode also grapples honestly with psychology’s history — including its complicity in systems like apartheid and eugenics — and asks what accountability, repair, and ethical practice require of us today. Along the way, Aurora reflects on coalition-building, civil disobedience, and how mental health professionals can engage in advocacy without abandoning care, nuance, or humility.

    Whether you’re a psychology professional, student, activist, or someone navigating the mental health system yourself, this episode offers language, frameworks, and courage for thinking differently about care.

    Aurora will be taking a short recording break over the festive season, but episodes will continue to drop — starting with this Season 1 retrospective.

    🎁 Support the podcast and get exclusive bonus content

    Patreon.com/IntersectionalPsychology

    🌈 If this episode resonates, please share it, rate the show, and send us your thoughts.

    📄 Download a transcript of this episode on IntersectionalPsychology.com.

    ⏳ Chapter Timestamps

    00:00:00 Land acknowledgement 00:00:28 Title credits 00:01:23 Welcome and introduction 00:03:33 Intersectionality in practice 00:12:47 Practical social justice advocacy in psychology 00:22:10 Psychology's historical missteps 00:34:24 Civil disobedience and systemic change 00:43:21 The empathetic, ethical, and empowered counsellor 00:53:12 End credits

    Stay connected to Aurora and Intersectional Psychology

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    You can contribute to the Palestine Children's Relief Fund at https://www.pcrf.net/

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    56 mins
  • IPIS004 Inside Out (2015): Keeping Riley happy all day long? (w/ Marlize Labuschagne & Altay Turan)
    Dec 8 2025

    In this episode of Intersectional Psychology, we dive head-first into the colourful chaos of Disney Pixar’s Inside Out — a film that looks deceptively simple, but opens the door to some beautifully complex conversations about emotions, memory, identity development, neurodiversity, and what it means to be human.

    I’m joined by two brilliant guests:

    Marlize Labuschagne, Educational Psychologist, whose work is grounded in neurodiversity-affirming practice, brain-based models, and Internal Family Systems. | Website: ndhive.co.za | Facebook Page: Marlize Labuschagne, Educational Psychologist

    Altay Turan, Clinical Neuropsychologist, who brings a sharp, playful, neuroscience-informed perspective to how the film represents emotions, memory, and the mind. | Website: maiapsychology.com | TikTok: @brainbownation

    🎁 Support the podcast and get exclusive bonus content

    Patreon.com/IntersectionalPsychology

    🌈 If this episode resonates, please share it, rate the show, and send us your thoughts.

    📄 Download a transcript of this episode on IntersectionalPsychology.com.

    ⏳ Chapter Timestamps

    00:00:00 Land acknowledgement 00:00:28 Title credits 00:01:13 Welcome 00:03:04 Introduction to Inside Out (2015): "What is going on inside their head?" 00:08:08 Recap of Inside Out (plus many, many tangents): "Take her to the moon for me." 00:35:25 Discussing Inside Out: "These Facts and Opinions look so similar." 00:42:59 Child development in Inside Out: "I like Tragic Vampire Romance Island." 00:54:40 Does Inside Out pass the Fanon Test? 01:20:27 Checking Out: "What's 'pub-er-ty'?" 01:21:50 End credits

    Stay connected to Aurora and Intersectional Psychology

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    You can contribute to the Palestine Children's Relief Fund at https://www.pcrf.net/

    📚 References

    Benarous, X. & Munch, G. (2016). Inside children's emotions: commentary, on the last Pixar movie, Journal of Developmental & Behavioral Pediatrics, 37(6), 522 [online]. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1097/DBP.0000000000000312 Feldman Barrett, L. (2017). How Emotions Are Made. New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing. Panksepp, J. & Biven, L. (2010). The Archaeology of Mind. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. Schwartz, R.C. (1995). Internal Family Systems Therapy. New York: The Guilford Press. Schwartz, R.C. (2021). No Bad Parts. Boulder: Sounds True. Siegel, D.J. (2020). The Developing Mind. New York: The Guilford Press. Siegel, D.J. & Payne Bryson, T. (2011). The Whole-Brain Child. New York: Delacorte Press. Son, E. (2022). Visual, auditory, and psychological elements of the characters and images in the scenes of the animated gilm, Inside Out, Quarterly Review of Film and Video, 39(1), 225-240 [oline]. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/10509208.2021.1959815

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    1 hr and 24 mins
  • IPGR006 Guided Relaxation: Body Scan
    Dec 2 2025

    A 40-minute guided body scan to reduce stress, support emotional regulation, and support better sleep.

    In this guided body scan meditation, we slow down, breathe, and explore the body with curiosity rather than criticism. Whether you’re new to mindfulness or a seasoned pro who just needs a reminder to unclench your jaw (again), this relaxation practice invites you to reconnect with your body in a gentle, grounded way.

    Use this session to unwind after a long day, to reset between tasks, or to drift more easily into sleep. Consider it a small act of kindness to yourself — one that your future self might even thank you for.

    🎁 Support the podcast and get exclusive bonus content

    Patreon.com/IntersectionalPsychology

    🌈 If this episode resonates, please share it, rate the show, and send us your thoughts.

    📄 Download a transcript of this episode on IntersectionalPsychology.com.

    ⏳ Chapter Timestamps

    00:00:00 Land acknowledgement 00:00:28 Welcome 00:01:28 What is a body scan? 00:02:11 What are the benefits of a body scan? 00:03:44 Guided body scan 00:48:00 End credits

    Stay connected to Aurora and Intersectional Psychology

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    45 mins
  • IPGR005 Guided Relaxation: Burnout Meditation
    Nov 18 2025

    Burnout isn’t a personal failure — it’s a signal. And if your signal is currently flashing, sirening, or doing that chaotic strobe-light thing… you’re in the right place.

    In this month’s guided relaxation practice, we slow everything down and offer your nervous system exactly what it’s been begging for: rest, grounding, and a moment of personal care.

    🎁 Support the podcast and get exclusive bonus content

    Patreon.com/IntersectionalPsychology

    🌈 If this episode resonates, please share it, rate the show, and send us your thoughts.

    📄 Download a transcript of this episode on IntersectionalPsychology.com.

    ⏳ Chapter Timestamps

    00:00:00 Land acknowledgement 00:00:30 Welcome and intention 00:03:59 Grounding 00:06:32 Gentle body scan 00:18:04 The "shade" visualisation 00:26:53 Circles of influence and focus 00:31:07 Self-compassion 00:35:08 Micro-practice guidance 00:36:50 Silent reflection 00:39:13 Re-orientation and close 00:41:41 End credits

    Stay connected

    🔗 Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts 📮 Got feedback or questions? Reach out at @IntersectionalPsychology or IntersectionalPsychologyPod[@]gmail.com

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    45 mins