Excavations with Connie Chen

PODCAST · arts

Excavations with Connie Chen

Conversations at the margins of faith. Excavations interviews scholars, survivors, and spiritual truth-tellers doing the work of recovering what religion buried: centering marginalized voices, bodies, and the theologies that were never supposed to survive. Hosted by Connie Chen.

  1. 6

    Faithful Without God: Marxism, Christianity, and Getting Free

    What does it mean to live by Christian ethics without God at the center? What happens when Marxist theory meets the bars of Rikers Island, the wards of outpatient psychiatric care, and the walls of San Quentin? In this episode of Excavations, Connie sits down with Chris Alfonso (Jean-Paul Fartre), a Marxist scholar, organizer, and abolitionist, to trace the surprising theological architecture inside radical thought.They explore the structural parallels between Hegel's dialectic and Christian eschatology, why Jesus might be history's most compelling militant communist, the difference between Marxism as critique and Marxism as state religion, and how theory fails the moment it stops meeting people where they are. This episode is for anyone who has ever felt the gap between what institutions profess and what they practice. And for anyone trying to keep the faith, in whatever language that takes.Topics include: liberation theology, abolition, Marxist philosophy, Hegel, Paulo Freire, CLR James, prison organizing, sacred encounter, agnosticism, dialectical materialism, embodied pedagogy, No Brooklyn Jails.Support the show

  2. 5

    Queer God, Queer Sex: A Conversation with Ciarra Jones on Bodies, Pleasure, and Divine Love

    What happens when you stop apologizing for your body and start reading it as sacred text? In this episode of Excavations, I sit down with Ciarra Jones (@thegardeningtheologian) to talk about what it actually means to reclaim the body after religious trauma. We go deep on queer sexual ethics, the theology of pleasure, disability justice, Eve as liberator, and why so much of Christian tradition has needed us to stay at war with our own flesh.This is a conversation for anyone who grew up being taught that their body was the problem and is starting to suspect the tradition was wrong.We cover:Queer theology and sexual ethicsEmbodiment, pleasure, and the sacred bodyDeconstruction and religious traumaDisability justice and theologyEve, death, rebirth, and what liberation actually costsSupport the show

  3. 4

    The Shame Cycle: Sex, Sin, and Scripture

    What happens when desire meets doctrine and neither will back down?In this episode of Excavations, Connie Chen sits down with Colten Barnaby for a wide-ranging, unfiltered conversation about the tangled roots of faith, sexuality, and identity. They dig into what it means to grow up Christian with a body full of desires you've been taught to distrust, how worshiping a male God shapes the way we relate to ourselves and others, and why shame doesn't just disappear when you leave the pew.From trans theology to the violence embedded in liberation, this conversation refuses easy answers, and wrestles honestly with scripture, pleasure, body image, and the communities that formed (and sometimes deformed) us.Because you can't excavate your faith without excavating yourself.Connect with us:Colten Barnaby on Instagram, Tiktok, SubstackConnie Chen on Instagram, TikTok, and YouTubeHelp sustain my work and this podcast on PatreonSupport the show

  4. 3

    Hospicing Whiteness: Learning How to Die So We Can Live

    Join Connie Chen and Dr. Tamice Spencer-Helms for a rich conversation exploring hospice work as a powerful metaphor for helping whiteness face its own death and transformation. Together, we reflect on the sacred interconnectedness of birth and death, the vital role of embodiment in spiritual practice, and the possibility of resurrection that emerges when we embrace grief, ritual, and our shared humanity.In this episode, we explore:How the disembodiment of whiteness disconnects us from ourselves and how its death can open the door to a more authentic way of beingChoosing joy, depth, and meaningful impact over fame and performanceThe complex relationship between sin and shameCrying as part of the body’s natural, life-giving cycleHow post-Christian identity creates space for more expansive, honest conversations about faithWhy God cannot be contained by rigid categories. God is being itselfConnect with us:Dr. Tamice Spencer-Helms on InstagramConnie Chen on Instagram, TikTok, and YouTubeHelp sustain my work and this podcast on PatreonSupport the show

  5. 2

    8:46

    From the perspective of an Asian American artist, I explore the Instagram blackout designed to prompt reflection and amplify black voices after the death of George Floyd.If you enjoyed listening to this episode, please consider leaving a review here on iTunes and supporting me on Patreon. If you would like to suggest topics for future episodes or send in comments, please email [email protected] Website: www.connie-chen.comInstagram | Tiktok | Youtube Support the show

  6. 1

    Unclaimed Bodies

    Welcome to the inaugural episode of Excavations, where I share my response to a photo I stumbled upon on April 9th, 2020 and have not been able to look away from since. If you enjoyed listening to this episode, please consider leaving a review here on iTunes and supporting me on Patreon. If you would like to suggest topics for future episodes or send in comments, please email [email protected] Website: www.connie-chen.comInstagram | Tiktok | Youtube Support the show

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Conversations at the margins of faith. Excavations interviews scholars, survivors, and spiritual truth-tellers doing the work of recovering what religion buried: centering marginalized voices, bodies, and the theologies that were never supposed to survive. Hosted by Connie Chen.

HOSTED BY

Connie Chen

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