Joint Plenary: Black Geographies Specialty Group, cultural geographies, and Political Geography: Tianna Bruno, Andrew Curley, Mabel Gergan, Sara Smith speak on The Work of Repair: Land, Relation, and Pedagogy
The session recording will be archived on the site until June 25th, 2023
This session was streamed but not recorded
Date: 3/25/2023
Time: 2:40 PM - 4:00 PM
Room: Governors Square 14, Sheraton, Concourse Level
Type: Panel, Hybrid session with both in-person and virtual presenters
Theme: Toward More Just Geographies
Curated Track: Black Geographies Specialty Group Curated Track
Sponsor Group(s):
Black Geographies Specialty Group, Cultural Geography Specialty Group, Indigenous Peoples Specialty Group, Political Geography Specialty Group
Organizer(s):
Dydia DeLyser University of California, Fullerton
Kevin Grove Florida International University
Priscilla McCutcheon University of Kentucky
Patricia Ehrkamp University of Kentucky
Mark Jackson University of Bristol
Chair(s):
Mark Jackson University of Bristol
Patricia Ehrkamp University of Kentucky
Description:
This is the second of two joint plenary sessions organized in the spirit of collaboration and repair by the Black Geographies Specialty Group and the journals cultural geographies and Political Geography. (This joint plenary is organized in lieu of cultural geographies Annual Lecture)
The Work of Repair: Land, Relation, and Pedagogy
Abstract: Geographers center space and place in our theorizations of power, arguing that relationships to place matter, that space is a result of power relations, and that how we represent the world makes the world. But to what extent do we turn these methods of analysis to understanding our relations to the land beneath our feet? Building on land-as-pedagogy, work on Black place-making and the afterlives of slavery, among other methods, we approach land and place-making as political and cultural practices that orient us toward action and building relations. In this plenary lecture, we propose that geographers take up more seriously and more materially, the work of repair. We are bound up in institutions that stole land from Indigenous peoples, benefitted from enslaved peoples, and built a world of knowledge that shored up the logics and tools of empire; moreover, the afterlives of these practices in their extractive relations to people and land both near and far. We can and should be pushing for different kinds of partnerships with the Native nations whose land we are on, toward reparations in the form of material redistribution and restructured power structures, and toward better relations with other workers at our institutions as well. We have an uneven responsibility to devote not only words but also resources and labor to understanding what justice and repair might look like in our fieldsites, discipline, and in our home institutions. We discuss examples of this in our work and at our institutions, propose guiding questions, and invite reflection from the audience on how to do the material work of repair.
Presentations (if applicable) and Session Agenda:
Non-Presenting Participants
Role | Participant |
Introduction | Dydia DeLyser |
Introduction | Kevin Grove Florida International University |
Introduction | Priscilla McCutcheon University of Kentucky |
Panelist | Tianna Bruno University of Texas, Austin |
Panelist | Andrew Curley University of Arizona |
Panelist | Mabel Gergan Vanderbilt University |
Panelist | Sara Smith University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill |
Discussant | Sofía Zaragocín Universidad San Francisco de Quito |
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Joint Plenary: Black Geographies Specialty Group, cultural geographies, and Political Geography: Tianna Bruno, Andrew Curley, Mabel Gergan, Sara Smith speak on The Work of Repair: Land, Relation, and Pedagogy
Description
Type: Panel, Hybrid session with both in-person and virtual presenters
Date: 3/25/2023
Time: 2:40 PM - 4:00 PM
Room: Governors Square 14, Sheraton, Concourse Level
Contact the Primary Organizer
Dydia DeLyser University of California, Fullerton
dydia@fullerton.edu