Black Futures Symposium: Black Ecologies

Fall 2022

(October 13 and October 14, 2022, via ZOOM)

Black Futures Symposium: Black Ecologies

Black Studies Colloquium held it’s inaugural Black Futures symposium. The theme was “Black Ecologies.” This symposium featured presentations from activists and scholars discussing a range of interpretations of Black Ecologies as thought and practice emerging from the study of geography, social history, effects of climate change or disruptions in the social and natural world, and the ways Black people have created their own environments to protect themselves. 

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Who is the MST? How They Manifest Black Futures

By Yuddy Fermin

On October 13, 2022, Cristina Sturmer, an activist, and researcher with Brazil’s Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra (MST), Landless Rural Workers Movement participated in Baruch College’s Black Studies Colloquium symposium “Black Futures: Black Ecologies.” The following post is a reflection of what I learned from her talk, from my research on the MST, and how I connected it to our class Afro-Latinidades taught by Dr. Rojo Robles.

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Breaking Down Harmful Structures Through Ecological Relationships

By Alexandra Acevedo

The foundations of Brazilian society are racist, anti-LGBTQ, patriarchal, and capitalistic. The same could be said about all the Americas and the United States. The colonizer European powers built these societal structures in Latin America. As a result, many indigenous and enslaved people (and their descendants) lost their relationship with the land and their ancestral communities. They partially lost the knowledge they held and their culture. Now, these belief systems of racism and so on are embedded in the way we view the world. However, we can repair these relationships through reconnection between people and the land. Through both the Landless Workers Movement (MST) in Brazil and Khalil Haywood’s essay “Paraíso Negro” we can see how reconnection to the land is crucial for the Afro-Latinx diaspora. We must unlearn these harmful belief systems and gain new knowledge to deconstruct these systems through reconnection to nature; in doing so, we can become closer to ourselves, our culture, and our families and communities.

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An Indestructible Life: Reflections on Marronage Pedro Lebrón Ortiz

Afro-Indigenous Past Lives and Futures

By Jacquelyn Ortiz

The following is an overview of some of the topics I addressed in my podcast series “Afro-Indigenous Past Lives and Futures.” In these episodes, I reflect on readings and audiovisual works discussed in the course LTS 3110 Debates in Latin American Social Theory taught by Professor Rojo Robles. I also incorporated ideas presented by the Black Studies Colloquium and guests in the ongoing project “Black Futures.”

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