Building A Living Archive Of Caribbean Women’s Wisdom episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 4, 2026 · 9 MIN

Building A Living Archive Of Caribbean Women’s Wisdom

from Strictly Facts: A Guide to Caribbean History and Culture · host Alexandria Miller

Send us a text message and tell us your thoughts.What happens when you go searching for the words of Caribbean women—and find silence where there should be an echo? We follow that uneasy question into the kitchens, verandas, classrooms, and studios where wisdom has always lived, then ask why so little of it appears on slides, posters, and timelines. Along the way, we unpack how publishing power, archival choices, and diaspora networks shape which voices become quotable and which remain unnamed, even as their ideas guide our lives.We explore proverbs like every mickle mek a muckle and one one coco full basket as distilled philosophies of patience, accumulation, and community care. These are not folk extras; they are intellectual traditions forged through scarcity, migration, and resistance. We contrast the global prominence of figures like Marcus Garvey or Audre Lorde with the many Caribbean women whose insights travel orally or locally and rarely get tagged to a name. Then we turn to a practical solution: building a living archive by treating our conversations with scholars, artists, and educators as citable sources. When a phrase reframes history, names a power dynamic, or offers a tool for survival, we capture it, attribute it, and pass it on.Together we commit to a simple practice with big stakes: cite women’s words. Citation is care, visibility, and lineage—a way to ensure that students, educators, and community organizers can trace ideas back to the women who shaped them. We close with an open invitation: share the quote by a Caribbean woman you live by, whether it came from a poet, a professor, a musician, a grandmother, or a guest on the show. Tag us and tell us what it means to you, and we’ll amplify it so those voices stay present in our feeds, our classrooms, and our futures.If this conversation resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves Caribbean history and culture, and leave a review so more listeners can find these voices. Your citation, your share, and your story help build the archive.Support the showConnect with Strictly Facts -  Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | LinkedIn | YouTube | Website Looking to read more about the topics covered in this episode? Subscribe to the newsletter at www.strictlyfactspod.com to get the Strictly Facts Syllabus to your email!Want to Support Strictly Facts?Rate & Leave a Review on your favorite platformShare this episode with someone or online and tag usSend us a DM or voice note to have your thoughts featured on an upcoming episode Donate to help us continue empowering listeners with Caribbean history and educationProduced by Breadfruit Media

Send us a text message and tell us your thoughts. What happens when you go searching for the words of Caribbean women—and find silence where there should be an echo? We follow that uneasy question into the kitchens, verandas, classrooms, and studios where wisdom has always lived, then ask why so little of it appears on slides, posters, and timelines. Along the way, we unpack how publishing power, archival choices, and diaspora networks shape which voices become quotable and which remain unnam...

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Building A Living Archive Of Caribbean Women’s Wisdom

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This episode is 9 minutes long.

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This episode was published on March 4, 2026.

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Send us a text message and tell us your thoughts.What happens when you go searching for the words of Caribbean women—and find silence where there should be an echo? We follow that uneasy question into the kitchens, verandas, classrooms, and studios...

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