Down South Dirt: Lecture and Reception

In this opening public event of the 2024-25 Keohane Professorship, interdisciplinary artist and scholar Ashon Crawley will present on the relation of dirt and soil to the making of Black life, and how degrading the earth is part of the attempt to unmake Black possibility. Thinking through "Cancer Alley" in Louisiana and soil erosion in Mississippi, what practices are available to help us conceive life otherwise?

About the Project:
"Down South Dirt" is the first installment of Crawley's public events during the Keohane Professorship at Duke and UNC, collectively titled "Otherwise, We are Down South Folk-Dirt, Water, Air"

"Black folks have been severed from land, water, air. This is the fact of antiblack racism. Indigenous siblings in the Americas know this severance as well. In black, this has meant being forcibly transported from the African continent's western coast to various ports and parts of the world. In the Americas, the ports and parts were primarily southern, down south, before such a concept even existed. The port is the meeting place of dirt, water and air through architectural design. Is there a wisdom, a thought practice, an approach to making things, that can prompt in us a way to move and think and do and be otherwise? Is there a wisdom, a thought practice, an approach to making things that not only lets us notice but lets us work against the continued antiblack racist imposition that severs us from dirt, water and air?" -Ashon Crawley
Sponsor

Duke Arts

Co-Sponsor(s)

African and African American Studies (AAAS); Art, Art History & Visual Studies; Center for Documentary Studies (CDS); Center for Interdisciplinary Studies in Science and Cultural Theory (CISSCT); Divinity School; English; Franklin Humanities Institute (FHI); Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies; Kenan Institute for Ethics; Keohane Distinguished Visiting Professorship; Music; Provost's Office; Religious Studies; Vice Provost for Interdisciplinary Studies