Older Women Live (OWL) was a collaborative, intergenerational podcast project that broughts graduate student and sound producer Michelle Macklem together with elder community activist and radio host Rose Marie Whalley to re-examine decades of radio interviews that have taken Rose Marie around the world.

Picture Perfect: Portrayals of Women in Society and the Media

This is episode 1 of Older Women Live presented by Ageing + Communication + Technology. This episode is hosted by Rose Marie Whalley who speaks with Andrea O’Reilly and Josie Dolan about how women are treated in society.

This episode aired on AMARC’s Women’s Voice series on March 8, 2016. http://www.amarc.org/?q=node/2591

First Nations in Canada are disproportionally affected by climate change. This is episode 2 of Older Women Live the podcast presented by ACT Project. This episode focuses on two small First Nations communities thousands of kilometers apart, each devastated by profit-driven industries in Canada. Host Rose Marie Whalley, an older woman and radio producer, speaks with an elder from each community. Louise Wawatie describes the effects of logging in her Algonquin home in Quebec, while Myrle Ballard describes the devastation of the flooding of her homeland in Lake St. Martin in Manitoba. Throughout the ravages of colonialism both of these small communities continued to maintain their First Nations identity, but these present day brutalities brought about by globalization are threatening their existence.

Produced by Rose Marie Whalley and Michelle Macklem

Selma was home to many of the Civil Rights struggles in the 1960s, and to this day many of its inhabitants still deal with racism and oppression. In episode 3 of Older Women Live, Rose Marie Whalley discusses her trip to Selma, Alabama and the interviews she did with local members of the community, Annie Pearl Avery and Marie Claire Powell. Following these interviews, Rose Marie speaks with Joanne Bland by telephone who was involved in the infamous Bloody Sunday protest march.

In this episode, Rose Marie Whalley continues to share the series of interviews she did in the deep American South. She speaks with pillars of the civil rights movement including Dr. Gwen Patton in Alabama who is an archivist of the Civil Rights movement. Rose Marie also speaks with Efia Nwangaza, a former Human Rights lawyer, and who now runs the Malcolm X Centre for Self Determination.

Accessing Food in Remote Indigenous Communities

How is food security affecting remote and rural communities all over the world? In this episode, Rose Marie speaks with Liz Ballantyne-Jackson who volunteers with the Guatemala Stove Project, which aims to provide better cooking stoves in Western Highlands of Guatemala. She also speaks to Dr Shirley Thompson, a professor studying natural resources in remote first nations communities at the University of Manitoba, Winnipeg.

Rose Marie speaks with Dr. Golda Tradounsky, the director of the Mount Sinai Palliative Care Services about end of life care and our society’s problematic views on death and dying.

In this episode, Rose Marie speaks with two women from Africa, Gertrude Hambira from Zimbabwe and Hellen Mshilla from Uganda both of whom are human rights advocates. Gertrude was the secretary general of the General Agricultural Plantation Workers Union of Zimbabwe but she was forced for to flee for her life after she was issued a death warrant. Hellen is a Kenyan journalist now living in northern Uganda.

What are Canadian prisons actually like for both prisoners and the people who work there? In this episode, Rose Marie speaks with a women named ‘Maureen’ who served 9 years at the Grand Valley Institute for Women after shooting her abusive partner. Rose Marie also speaks with Rosemary Redshaw, the former chaplain at Grand Valley, about her experiences working with women dealing with grief and trauma, and the institutional shifts to an increasingly closed off federal prison system.

Researcher
Michelle Macklem

Collaborator
Rose Marie Whalley

ACT Partners
OWL (Older Women Live)

Funding
ACT – SSHRC