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Lecture_Nik Heynen

October 4, 2021 @ 5:30 pm - 7:30 pm

No cost
photo of Nik Heynen

Our 2021-2022 Lecture Series continues on Oct. 4, 5:30 p.m. ET, with an in-person lecture featuring Nik Heynen, Distinguished Research Professor, Dept. of Geography, University of Georgia. Heynen will present “Re-Earthing from the Sea: Oyster-tecture and Abolition,” which will center the politics of “re-earthing” Sapelo Island, a term used by the late Cornelia Walker Bailey to convey abolitionist place-making.

In the largest/most intact remaining Gullah/Geechee community left in the United States, Heynen and others have worked to establish an agricultural revival of heritage crops as a strategy to save Black land from development, create employment and make Saltwater Geechee culture more visible on the landscape. Amidst simultaneous threats from development and sea level rise, they have started to recognize the long history of aquaculture, and especially oyster shell utilization on Sapelo, going back more than 4,000 years through Indigenous residents’ innovative uses of oyster shell.  The researchers are working to not only mobilize abolitionist politics to stave off cultural genocide on Sapelo Island, but to bring abolitionist politics to other conversations about “oyster-tecture” happening along the east coast of the United States. Heynen and Maurice Bailey are co-authoring the research.

Get to know Nik Heynen

Dr. Nik Heynen is a Distinguished Research Professor in the University of Georgia’s Department of Geography. His research focuses on political ecology and political economy, especially as focused on race and social reproduction. He has done research on the intersections of urbanization, environmental and racial justice in Indianapolis, Milwaukee, Atlanta and New Orleans. Heynen is a co-PI on the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER Project looking at intersections of sea level rise and economic development within the largest most intact remaining Gullah/Geechee community in the U.S. .

The lecture is open to the public. It is funded by the Robert B. Church Memorial Lecture Fund. Can’t attend in person? .

Visitors are asked to follow .

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Details

Date:
October 4, 2021
Time:
5:30 pm - 7:30 pm
Cost:
No cost