通过社区花园将种族、空间和地点交叉

IF 0.7 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Annals of Anthropological Practice Pub Date : 2017-11-21 DOI:10.1111/napa.12113
EMILY BENTON HITE, DORIE PEREZ, DALILA D'INGEO, QASIMAH BOSTON, MIAISHA MITCHELL
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引用次数: 13

摘要

在这篇文章中,我们研究了佛罗里达州塔拉哈西最具凝聚力和最古老的非裔美国人社区Frenchtown的社区花园的结构和意义。在这里,居民们将空旷的空间改造成参与和赋权的地方,有效地抵制了系统性的种族主义。在为期5周的国家科学基金会资助的人种学实地学校与塔拉哈西健康公平联盟合作期间,我们使用混合方法来对抗法国小镇普遍存在的耻辱,这种耻辱使其持续边缘化。我们认为社区花园是社会抵抗的表现。通过花园活动,居民超越了种族、文化、收入和社区,同时也促进了健康、遗产、场所创造和经济机会。场所是由文化环境中的空间政治构成的,这在社区通过花园交叉不同机构边界的能力中是显而易见的。本研究的背景是一个基于社区的参与性研究项目如何通过空间转换成功地抵抗暴力环境。
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Intersecting race, space, and place through community gardens

In this article, we examine the structure and meaning of community gardens in Florida's most cohesive and oldest African American community of Frenchtown in Tallahassee. Here, residents reclaim and transform empty spaces into places of engagement and empowerment, effectively resisting systemic racism. Using a mixed methods approach during a 5-week NSF-funded ethnographic field school with the Health Equity Alliance of Tallahassee, we counter the prevailing stigma of Frenchtown that perpetuates its continued marginalization. We argue that community gardens are expressions of social resistance. Through garden activities, residents transcend race, culture, income, and neighborhoods, while also promoting health, heritage, place-making, and economic opportunities. Place is constituted by spatial politics in a cultural milieu, evident in the community's ability to intersect diverse institutional boundaries via gardens. This research contextualizes how a community-based participatory research project successfully resists violent environments through spatial transformation.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
14.30%
发文量
21
期刊最新文献
Issue Information Ethnography beyond thick data Diversity Human centered design for applied anthropology Applying up: How ethnographers powered public health changes in the United States during the COVID-19 pandemic
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