Share Everyday Environmentalism
Share to email
Share to Facebook
Share to X
By Amanda Martin-Hardin
5
77 ratings
The podcast currently has 10 episodes available.
In this episode we sit down with Everyday Environmentalism’s own Maddy Aubey! Maddy is a PhD archaeology student at UCLA who tells us about her undergraduate thesis: “Visions Underfoot: Seneca Village and the Poetics of Remembrance.” It’s an interdisciplinary project that combines archaeology, history, and poetry. Maddy used physical objects found by archaeologists at the Seneca Village dig site as a way to creatively ponder the interior lives of the individuals who called it home.
This is Part II of our series of episodes on Seneca Village. If you want a more traditional history about the facts and origins of Seneca Village, listen to our previous episode with Dr. Nan Rothschild if you have not already.
Here are the resources we discuss in this episode:
“Seneca Village Unearthed,” The NYC Archaeology Repository: https://archaeology.cityofnewyork.us/collection/digital-exhibitions/seneca-village-unearthed
“Venus in Two Acts,” Saidiya Hartman (on critical fabulation)
My Seneca Village, Marilyn Nelson
Black Feminist Archaeology, Whitney Battle-Batiste
***
Everyday Environmentalism is a podcast that tells past and present stories about "urban nature" in New York City. We interview current activists in tandem with environmental historians to produce a long history of the ways ordinary New Yorkers have experienced the urban outdoors and created more sustainable relationships with their environment.
This podcast is hosted by Amanda Martin-Hardin, Maddy Aubey, and Prem Thakker.
Visit www.everydayenvironmentalism.org for more information.
***
For a full transcript of this podcast, visit this URL: *coming soon*
Did you know before Central Park was built a rural community of African Americans owned property & built homes there? They were displaced to build the park & it took well over a century for New Yorkers to rediscover Seneca Village.
This episode features Dr. Nan Rothschild, a historical archaeologist and Professor Emerita at Columbia University who worked on the team that excavated Seneca Village, a predominantly African American community that was displaced to build Central Park in the nineteenth century. We discuss why Seneca Village is a historically significant site and what it took to convince the reluctant NYC Parks Department to allow an excavation to take place, among many other fascinating topics.
***
Everyday Environmentalism is a podcast that tells past and present stories about "urban nature" in New York City. We interview current activists in tandem with environmental historians to produce a long history of the ways ordinary New Yorkers have experienced the urban outdoors and created more sustainable relationships with their environment.
This podcast is hosted by Amanda Martin-Hardin, Maddy Aubey, and Prem Thakker.
Visit www.everydayenvironmentalism.org for more information.
***
For a full transcript of this podcast, visit this URL: *coming soon*
Archaeologists aren’t just interested in digging up relics of the past. This episode features Dr. Kelly Britt, an assistant professor of urban archaeology at Brooklyn College who focuses on community-based historical archaeology of urban spaces. We discuss Dr. Britt's experience excavating a site at City Hall and her knowledge about the African Burial Ground. We also discuss the importance of community-based archaeology, particularly as it pertains to ways archaeologists can assist urban communities in the aftermath of "natural" disasters. Other topics include "green gentrification" and the need to drop the term "climate resilience."
***
Everyday Environmentalism is a podcast that tells past and present stories about "urban nature" in New York City. We interview current activists in tandem with environmental historians to produce a long history of the ways ordinary New Yorkers have experienced the urban outdoors and created more sustainable relationships with their environment.
This podcast is hosted by Amanda Martin-Hardin, Maddy Aubey, and Prem Thakker.
Visit www.everydayenvironmentalism.org for more information.
***
For a full transcript of this podcast, visit this URL: *coming soon*
This episode features a conversation with Dr. Thomas Campanella, the New York City Department of Parks & Recreation Historian-in-Residence and a Cornell history professor who researches city planning and the urban built environment.
We have an off-the-beaten path conversation about NYC parks history, including: the roots of American anti-urbanism; Brownstone Brooklyn’s glacial history; graveyards as the predecessors of public parks; the Indigenous history of Marine Park; European design influence on NYC public spaces; Robert Moses and Frederick Law Olmsted; Dr. Campanella’s park recommendations, and more!
To learn more about Dr. Thomas Campanella’s work, visit www.builtbrooklyn.org, or read his books:
Brooklyn: The Once and Future City, and The Republic of Shade: New England and the American Elm.
***
Everyday Environmentalism is a podcast that tells past and present stories about "urban nature" in New York City. We interview current activists in tandem with environmental historians to produce a long history of the ways ordinary New Yorkers have experienced the urban outdoors and created more sustainable relationships with their environment.
This podcast is hosted by Amanda Martin-Hardin, Maddy Aubey, and Prem Thakker.
Visit www.everydayenvironmentalism.org for more information.
***
For a full transcript of this podcast, visit this URL: *coming soon*
This episode features a conversation with Dr. Marika Plater, an environmental historian and visiting assistant professor at Dickinson College.
To learn more about Marika Plater's work, visit their website: https://marikaplater.wixsite.com/marikaplater or follow them on twitter @marikareads.
Everyday Environmentalism is a podcast that tells past and present stories about "urban nature" in New York City. We interview current activists in tandem with environmental historians to produce a long history of the ways ordinary New Yorkers have experienced the urban outdoors and created more sustainable relationships with their environment.
This podcast is hosted by Amanda Martin-Hardin, Maddy Aubey, and Prem Thakker.
Visit www.everydayenvironmentalism.org for more information.
***
For a full transcript of this podcast, visit this URL: https://otter.ai/u/a3yHBulMV2lmG0tqhyft7x0Ak3k
This episode features a conversation with Lena Tibebe, the founder of Ride to DC, which is a NYC-based organization that aims to diversify cycling.
Last year, Ride to DC began hosting an annual group bike ride from NYC to DC--hence, the “Ride to DC”--as a way to recognize the existence and significance of Black Lives. During the inaugural 2020 ride, 127 cyclists joined the week-long, 306-mile journey.
We discuss the origin and inspiration behind Ride to DC with Lena, as well as providing more context about her own personal relationship with cycling in New York City. Lena is also an ESL teacher in the Bronx and a Bike New York board member, so she brings many different perspectives to her understanding of bikes in the city.
Everyday Environmentalism is a podcast that tells past and present stories about "urban nature" in New York City. We interview current activists in tandem with environmental historians to produce a long history of the ways ordinary New Yorkers have experienced the urban outdoors and created more sustainable relationships with their environment.
Visit www.everydayenvironmentalism.org for more information.
***
***
This episode features Dr. Evan Friss, a U.S. urban historian who teaches at James Madison University. He researches the intersections between bicycles, people, and cities.
In this episode we discuss the long history of cycling in New York City, including its liberating potential (from a tool for mass protests to an escape for suburban kids), as well as the way access to bikes has often been impaired by race, class, and gender. We contemplate the many forms of cycling in NYC, from Citibike, to food delivery cyclists, to competitive athletes training in Central Park. We also speak about when and where we’ve personally had the most fun riding bikes in NYC!
To learn more about his work, check out his website (www.evanfriss.com) or follow him on Twitter @EvanFriss
Everyday Environmentalism is a podcast that tells past and present stories about "urban nature" in New York City. We interview current activists in tandem with environmental historians to produce a long history of the ways ordinary New Yorkers have experienced the urban outdoors and created more sustainable relationships with their environment.
Visit www.everydayenvironmentalism.org for more information.
***
***
This episode features a conversation with Dr. Darrel Wanzer-Serrano, a professor of communication at Texas A&M University and the author of The New York Young Lords and the Struggle for Liberation. Dr. Wanzer-Serrano teaches college courses in rhetoric, cultural studies, critical theories of race/ethnicity, de/coloniality, and Latinx studies; and he has a research focus on the same topics.
To learn more about Darrel Wanzer-Serrano's work, visit his website: https://wanzerserrano.com/dws/
You can also follow him on Twitter @DoctorDWS
Everyday Environmentalism is a podcast that tells past and present stories about "urban nature" in New York City. We interview current activists in tandem with environmental historians to produce a long history of the ways ordinary New Yorkers have experienced the urban outdoors and created more sustainable relationships with their environment.
Visit www.everydayenvironmentalism.org for more information.
***
For a full transcript of this podcast, click here or visit this URL:
This episode features a conversation with Dr. Catherine McNeur, an environmental historian at Portland State University and the author of Taming Manhattan: Environmental Battles in the Antebellum City.
Professor McNeur explains how these tensions exacerbated early forms of gentrification in the nineteenth century, and contemplates how we can learn from the past to create more equitable urban green spaces and shared environmental resources in the future.
To learn more about Catherine McNeur's work, visit her website: http://www.catherinemcneur.com/
Everyday Environmentalism is a podcast that tells past and present stories about "urban nature" in New York City. We interview current activists in tandem with environmental historians to produce a long history of the ways ordinary New Yorkers have experienced the urban outdoors and created more sustainable relationships with their environment.
Visit www.everydayenvironmentalism.org for more information.
***
For a full transcript of this podcast, visit this URL: https://otter.ai/u/aevndM7qESN1G1VxpjoREoLHPqY
Everyday Environmentalism is a podcast that tells past and present stories about "urban nature" in New York City.
The podcast currently has 10 episodes available.