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Published byPeter Hamilton Modified over 8 years ago
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MAPPING IDENTITY & COMMUNITY AS SITES OF HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHIC MEMORY I. Fundamental Questions of Human Existence II. WHY People of Color Need to Know Geography III. The Meaning of Community & Identity IV. Sites & Sources of Memory
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Geography Speaks to the Fundamental Questions of Human Existence What am I?-Physical/Biological Facts of Life Who am I? Cultural Context of One’s Life Why am I? Purpose /Raison d’Etre How am I?Action/Praxis Where am I? Absolute and Relative Location/Situational Context Knowing Who You Are Depends on Knowing Where You Are
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What is the Worst Feeling in the World? Being Lost Disorientation Knowing Where You’re Going Depends on Knowing Where You Have Been The Need for a Map The Need for Understanding Relations, Patterns & Distributions of Phenomena That Impact Life
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Why People of Color Need to Know Geography Geography is the Science of European Imperialism, Racial Subordination & Spatial Control Mapping the Terrain of Americas, Africa and Asia prior to Colonialism and Slavery Constructing Anglo-American’s Mental Map and Worldview vis-à-vis Those POC Conquered The Legacy of Ideological And Institutional Racism Personal Prejudice v.s. Political-Economic Systems of Spatial Control Reservation-Plantation-Ghetto-Barrio-Bantustan Landscapes The Realities of Racial And Ethnic Identity Social & Spatial Construction of Identity
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The Meaning of Community & Identity Modern Notions of Identity: I think therefore I am Traditional Notions of Identity: I am Because We Are & Because We are Therefore I am Identity and Community Context Interwoven Internal Dynamics of Community External Relations Between Communities
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Sources of Memory Cultural Landscapes & Historic Landmarks of Community Community Building as a an Act of Human Agency, Resistance & Self-Determination Making History & Making Geography Historical Neighborhood & Settlement Patterns of Kin Social and Physical Relations
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Sources of Memory Archival Bibliographical Memories of Elders and Ancestors Family Albums, Bibles and Scrapbooks Heirlooms Stories, Songs & Myths Legends & Lies Legacies of Silence
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Sites of Memory Cultural Landscapes & Historic Landmarks of Community Community Building as a an Act of Human Agency, Resistance & Self-Determination Making History & Making Geography Historical Neighborhood & Settlement Patterns of Kin Social and Physical Relations
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Key Terms: Geography Race Racism Segregation Community & Settlement Diaspora Frontier
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The Historical Geographic Context of Remembering and Forgetting Memory formation as a process of remembering the particulars of one’s experiences The forgotten past as those things that we choose to not remember
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Seeing Oneself in Local/ Diasporan Context
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Geography and Worldview
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Cartographic and Visual Representations of African American History
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