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Afterlives of the Plantation: Plotting Agrarian Futures in the Global Black South

Author Talk with Jarvis McInnis, Cordelia and William Laverack Family Assistant Professor of English at Duke University. In collaboration with the Stanford L. Warren Branch Durham County Library.

Built on the grounds of a former cotton plantation, the Tuskegee Institute, founded by Booker T. Washington, offered agricultural and industrial education as a strategy for Black self-determination. In his new book Afterlives of the Plantation: Plotting Agrarian Futures in the Global South, Duke University professor Dr. Jarvis C. McInnis charts a new account of Black modernity by centering Tuskegee’s vision of agrarian worldmaking. He traces the diasporic ties and networks of exchange that linked Black communities in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Although Washington is often regarded as an accommodationist, McInnis shows how artists, intellectuals and political leaders—including George Washington Carver, Jean Price-Mars, Zora Neale Hurston, Claude McKay and Marcus Garvey—adapted Tuskegee’s methods into dynamic strategies for liberation in places like Cuba, Puerto Rico, Haiti and Jamaica. A local land and farm advocate will join Dr. McInnis to discuss the contemporary dynamics of this groundbreaking book. Copies will be available for purchase while supplies last, and a book signing will take place following the discussion.

Fee: Free; NO REGISTRATION REQUIRED.

Parking: Free.

Location: Durham County Library, Stanford L. Warren Branch, 1201 Fayetteville St.

Accessibility: This will be an indoor lecture with a ramp and elevator available to access the downstairs lecture hall.

Questions?

Please contact us at 919-668-1701 or GardensEducation@duke.edu.