List of Editors: Perspectives in Vernacular Architecture and Buildings & Landscapes

Pub Date : 2019-09-01 DOI:10.1353/bdl.2019.0013
ANDREA R ROBERTS, Avigail Sachs, Brent R. Fortenberry, B. Goldstein, Cristina Stancioiu, Cynthia G. Falk, J. M. Lord, L. Rainville, Paula Lupkin, R. Cowherd, Weiju Zhao, Zachary J. Violette
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Abstract

Abstract:Angel David Nieves and Leslie M. Alexander's We Shall Independent Be (2008), which contemplated the relationship between American ideals such as freedom and black space creation, advanced the validity of vernacular African American placemaking and architecture as a by-product of protest, cultural expression, and intentional design. Despite this, few scholars have focused on related rural African American building and preservation practices as expressions of a continuous freedom struggle and diasporic search for home. Through observation of African American grassroots preservationists, this essay argues for increased attention to rural grassroots homestead preservation. From 1865 to 1920, former slaves founded more than 557 "freedom colonies" across Texas. Ethnographic and archival research conducted within Newton County freedom colonies demonstrates that descendants, regardless of residency status, have sustained place attachments and nurtured stewardship of homesteads through heritage conservation, rehabilitation, and family property retention. Rehabilitation activities in two settlements, Shankleville and Pleasant Hill, show the relationship between intangible heritage and descendants' landscape stewardship practices. The concept, called here the homeplace aesthetic, illuminates descendants' preservation methods, resilience strategies, and stylistic preferences as unrecognized dimensions of significance and integrity. The concept of a homeplace aesthetic also explains descendants' concurrent negotiation—through subversion and assimilation—of the racialized landscape and regulatory environment, with important implications for preservation documentation and legal regulations.
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编者名单:乡土建筑和建筑与景观的视角
摘要:安吉尔·大卫·尼夫斯和莱斯利·m·亚历山大的《我们应该独立》(2008)思考了自由等美国理想与黑人空间创造之间的关系,提出了非洲裔美国人的地方制造和建筑作为抗议、文化表达和有意设计的副产品的有效性。尽管如此,很少有学者关注相关的非洲裔美国农村建筑和保护实践,将其作为持续的自由斗争和流散寻找家园的表达。通过对非裔美国基层保护主义者的观察,本文认为应该增加对农村基层宅基地保护的关注。从1865年到1920年,前奴隶在德克萨斯州建立了超过557个“自由殖民地”。在牛顿县自由殖民地进行的人种学和档案研究表明,无论居住身份如何,后代都通过遗产保护、修复和家庭财产保留保持了对家园的依恋和管理。Shankleville和Pleasant Hill两个定居点的修复活动显示了非物质遗产与后代景观管理实践之间的关系。这个概念在这里被称为家园美学,它阐明了后代的保存方法、恢复策略和风格偏好,这些都是未被认识到的重要性和完整性的维度。家园美学的概念也解释了后代通过颠覆和同化对种族化景观和监管环境的同步协商,这对保存文件和法律法规具有重要意义。
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