The contributors to The Black Geographic explore the theoretical innovations of Black Geographies scholarship and how it approaches Blackness as historically and spatially situated. In studies that span from Oakland to the Alabama Black Belt to Senegal to Brazil, the contributors draw on ethnography, archival records, digital humanities, literary criticism, and art to show how understanding the spatial dimensions of Black life contributes to a broader understanding of race and space. They examine key sites of inquiry: Black spatial imaginaries, resistance to racial violence, the geographies of racial capitalism, and struggles over urban space. Throughout, the contributors demonstrate that Blackness is itself a situating and place-making force, even as it is shaped by spatial processes and diasporic routes. Whether discussing eighteenth- and nineteenth-century abolitionist print records or migration and surveillance in Niger, this volume demonstrates that Black Geographies is a mode of analyzing Blackness that fundamentally challenges the very foundations of the field of geography and its historical entwinement with colonialism, enslavement, and imperialism. In short, it marks a new step in the evolution of the field.
Contributors. Anna Livia Brand, C.N.E. Corbin, Lindsey Dillon, Chiyuma Elliott, Ampson Hagan, Camilla Hawthorne, Matthew Jordan-Miller Kenyatta, Jovan Scott Lewis, Judith Madera, Jordanna Matlon, Solange Muñoz, Diana Negrín, Danielle Purifoy, Sharita Towne
- Cover
- Contents
- Introduction. Black Geographies Material Praxis of Black Life and Study
- Part I. Praxis
- 1. Call Us Alive Someplace: Du Boisian Methods and Living Black Geographies
- 2. Shaking the Basemap
- 3. “My Bad Attitude toward the Pastoral”: Race, Place, and Allusion in the Poetry of C. S. Giscombe
- Part II. Resistances
- 4. Blackness Out of Place and In Between in the Sahara
- 5. Words Re(en)visioned: Black and Indigenous Languages for Autonomy
- 6. Blackness in the (Post)Colonial African City
- 7. Marielle Franco and Black Spatial Imaginaries
- Part III. Futurity
- 8. Rendering Gentrification and Erasing Race: Sustainable Development and the (Re)Visioning of Oakland, California, as a Green City
- 9. “Need Black Joy?”: Mapping an Afrotechtonics of Gathering in Los Angeles
- 10. The San Francisco Blues
- 11. Today Like Yesterday, Tomorrow Like Today: Black Geographies in the Breaks of the Fourth Dimension
- 12. A Black Geographic Reverie & Reckoning in Ink and Form
- Contributors
- Index
- A
- B
- C
- D
- E
- F
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- H
- I
- J
- K
- L
- M
- N
- O
- P
- Q
- R
- S
- T
- U
- V
- W
- X
- Y
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