Rewriting the Erased History of Blacks in New Orleans Urban Gardening and Farming

P. Broom, Yuki Kato, Shawn “Pepper” Roussel
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Abstract

Urban agriculture has gained prominence over the last decade in New Orleans, but the majority of the new gardens and farms that have emerged in the city since 2010 are neither culturally nor socially connected to the vibrant history of local food provisioning in the city’s Black communities. The history is tied closely to the region’s economic boom and bust, systemic oppression and segregation, and the cultural co-optation and devaluation of Black folk foodways in the city. By relying on the oral history to complement where the official or academic documentation has failed to capture the rich history of urban gardening by Black New Orleanians, this article demonstrates that the residents of Black communities in New Orleans once grew their own food, both as a form of collective efficacy and as a way of passing on horticultural knowledge and skills.
重写新奥尔良黑人被抹去的历史 城市园艺与农业
过去十年间,城市农业在新奥尔良日益崭露头角,但自 2010 年以来,该市出现的大多数新菜园和农场在文化和社会方面都与该市黑人社区当地食物供应的蓬勃发展历史无关。这段历史与该地区的经济繁荣和衰退、系统性压迫和种族隔离以及该市黑人民间饮食方式的文化共用和贬值密切相关。本文通过口述历史来补充官方或学术文献未能记录的新奥尔良黑人城市园艺的丰富历史,证明新奥尔良黑人社区的居民曾经自己种植食物,既是一种集体效能,也是一种传承园艺知识和技能的方式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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