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Abstract

Black labor and agricultural knowledge have been exploited as currency forAmerica’s first major economic system-- the plantation. Drawing on geographer Katherine McKittrick’s notion of plantation futures, the plantation’s role in perpetuating Black loss and placelessness must be addressed in order to decolonize food-producing landscapes. Because America has centralized Blackness at the site of the plantation, this ethnographic landscape design study explores site- specific suggestions on Sapelo Island, Georgia that may support racial healing and (re)incorporate African diasporic food crops into a joyful, sustainable act of liberation from the plantation’s carceral state. Seventeen months were spent immersed on the island during this mixed-method study. In addition to site-specific suggestions, this two-pronged project leans into its community-driven approach to offer a new design process that designers and food activists may use for reimagining racialized landscapes that have been subjected to colonialism: monocultures, extraction, and Black invisibility.

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