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Black Lives, White (Sugar) Empires: Notes on Confinement and Care in the Wake of the Texas Prison System

  • University of Virginia [online] Charlottesville, VA USA (map)

Dr. Ashanté Reese presents Black Lives, White (Sugar) Empires: Notes on Confinement and Care in the Wake of the Texas Prison System.  Few commodities have shaped and continue to haunt the lives of Black people across the diaspora as much as sugar. Yet, to only view Black people’s relationship to sugar through violent histories and presents is to miss a sweetness—belonging, intimacy, connection—that exceeds it. Simultaneously engaging violence and care as co-constitutive forces that structure Black life, this talk draws from archival research about carceral structures and sugar production alongside my own practice of baking in search of answers to the question: how might we map a distinction between sugar—a product of racial capitalism—and sweetness, a necessary component of Black life?

Dr. Ashanté Reese is assistant professor of African and African Diaspora Studies at The University of Texas at Austin. She earned a PhD in Anthropology from American University and a Bachelor of Arts in History with a minor in African American studies from Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas. Broadly speaking, Dr. Reese works at the intersection of critical food studies and Black geographies, examining the ways Black people produce and navigate food-related spaces despite anti-Blackness.

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The Life and Legacy of Miss Virginia Estelle Randolph

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February 7

Risk, Resilience, and the Black Family