海角社区

AAG President Selects Four 海角社区 Geography Alumni for Plenary Session

April 1, 2018

The AAG announced President Derek Alderman鈥檚 2018 Presidential Plenary: 鈥淲hen the Big Easy Isn鈥檛 So Easy: Learning from New Orleans鈥 Geographies of Struggle.鈥 The session will be held during the annual AAG meeting in New Orleans in April 2018.

鈥淲hen the Big Easy Isn鈥檛 So Easy鈥 creates a space to explore the role of struggle in the making, unmaking, and remaking of New Orleans. The city鈥檚 development has long been a power-laden process in which multiple identities, histories, and social interests converge, mix, but also clash.

Panelists, all of whom are civically engaged scholars and gifted geographic storytellers, will highlight not only the (Post) Katrina experience but also the deeper historical and geographic roots of struggle in New Orleans.

Among the panel are:

Richard Campanella, a prolific author of several books on New Orleans, including his most recent Bourbon Street, and also producer of lively online content.  He earned his M.S. in 1993. Currently he is a geographer with the Tulane School of Architecture and arguably is the unofficial geographer-in-residence for New Orleans.

Michael Crutcher completed his Ph.D. in 2001.  His dissertation  focused on the struggles to protect public space in the Trem茅 neighborhood in New Orleans and appeared in book from as Trem茅: Race and Place in a New Orleans Neighborhood in 2010.

Rebecca Sheehan earned her Ph.D. in 2006 with a dissertation that explored the struggles to define public use of the French Quarter.  She is currently an Associate Professor of Geography at Oklahoma State University and is working on issues related to public monuments.

Craig Colten left 海角社区 in 1978 with an M.A. degree in geography.  After a number of years pursuing his Ph.D. and subsequently working in government, the private sector, and the academy he returned to teach at 海角社区 in 2000.  In 2005 he published An Unnatural Metropolis: Wresting New Orleans from Nature.

Two other panelists are Laura Pulido at the University of Oregon and Catarina Passidomo at the University of Mississippi.

Alderman recruited panelists who are civically engaged scholars and gifted geographic storytellers. They will take the audience to evocative spaces and moments, using the opening session to open broader discussions of issues such as black lives and geographies, disaster response and recovery, food justice, water-society relations, the politics of public memory, and urban political economy. Panelists will reflect on the larger academic-political lessons from New Orleans, offer ideas for (re)imagining the future of this city and others, and demonstrate how geographers can learn from and with the host cities for our AAG meetings.