Plantation Futures: Foregrounding Lost Narratives

Item

Title
Plantation Futures: Foregrounding Lost Narratives
Description
Oak Alley Plantation, located in Louisiana, is preserved as a master narrative: a cultural heritage landscape reflecting the values and cultures of the Antebellum era. Reconstructed cabins in the rear of the property stand as the only recognition and acknowledgment of the forged Black landscapes used for refuge, joy, and resistance.

The thesis critically engages in the plantation as a landscape system of white supremacy that linked the exploitation of racialized bodies and fertile lands to commodities. Moments for accountability and reparations are conceived, such as the Citizen Assembly, which holds industry and systems of dispossession to account through new forms of democratic processes and landscape-based evidence collection.

Through the layering of archival narratives, poetry, literature, and drawing, Black ecologies emerge on site, foregrounding lost narratives within the plantation. These narratives envision radically different futures, where interspecies kinship and empathy surface as new ecologies that point to new Black futurities.
Creator
Cavelier, Enrique
Subject
Activism
Afrofuturism
Extractivism
Heritage
Louisiana
Plantation
Landscape architecture
Contributor
Monacella, Rosalea
Date
2023-05-22T04:05:48Z
2023
2023-05-19
2023-05
2023-05-22T04:05:48Z
Type
Thesis or Dissertation
text
Format
application/pdf
application/pdf
application/octet-stream
application/octet-stream
application/octet-stream
application/octet-stream
application/octet-stream
application/octet-stream
application/octet-stream
Identifier
Cavelier, Enrique. 2023. Plantation Futures: Foregrounding Lost Narratives. Master's thesis, Harvard Graduate School of Design.
30521765
https://nrs.harvard.edu/URN-3:HUL.INSTREPOS:37375281
Language
en