SAPIENS: A Podcast for Everything Human

Slavery, Sustenance, and Resistance


Listen Later

Archaeology helps reimagine a fuller range of experiences, including how people ate, innovated, and rebelled. In this episode, “slave cuisine” opens a window to honor the legacy of Black creativity, resistance, and community. 

Dr. Peggy Brunache, a food historian and archaeologist, finds shellfish remains in a village of enslaved people, uncovering an untold story of how people found ways to resist. Dr. Kelley Deetz uses Southern food, which is really African food, to initiate difficult conversations about the history of slavery. 

 

  • (00:01:44) A history of asking “why” – from Caribbean markets to American history classrooms.
  • (00:04:50) Introduction.
  • (00:05:56) Dr. Peggy Brunache’s journey to food archaeology as a Haitian-American.
  • (00:13:57) Uncovering slave cuisine.
  • (00:22:33) Dr. Kelley Deetz describes education through food at Stratford Hall.
  • (00:30:43) Slave cuisine today.
  • (00:34:38) Credits.
  •  

    SAPIENS: A Podcast for Everything Human, is produced by House of Pod and supported by the Wenner-Gren Foundation. SAPIENS is also part of the American Anthropological Association Podcast Library. This season was created in collaboration with the Indigenous Archaeology Collective and Society of Black Archaeologists, with art by Carla Keaton, and music from Jobii, _91nova, and Justnormal. For more information and transcriptions, visit sapiens.org.  

     

    Additional Sponsors:

    This episode was made possible by the UC Berkeley Archaeological Research Facility and the Imago Mundi Fund at Foundation for the Carolinas.

     

    Additional Resources:

     

    • About Whitney Battle-Baptiste
    • About Stratford Hall
    • From SAPIENS: The Resistance and Ingenuity of the Cooks Who Lived in Slavery
    •  

      Guests:

       

      Dr. Peggy Brunache is a lecturer in the history of Atlantic slavery at the University of Glasgow and the first director of the newly established Beniba Centre for Slavery Studies. Follow her on Twitter @peggybrunache.

       

      Dr. Kelley Fanto Deetz is a historian and archaeologist who works as the director of collections and visitor engagement at Stratford Hall, the director of education and historic interpretation at Virginia’s Executive Mansion, and a visiting scholar in the department of African American studies at the University of California, Berkeley. 

      ...more
      View all episodesView all episodes
      Download on the App Store

      SAPIENS: A Podcast for Everything HumanBy SAPIENS

      • 4.7
      • 4.7
      • 4.7
      • 4.7
      • 4.7

      4.7

      202 ratings


      More shows like SAPIENS: A Podcast for Everything Human

      View all
      The Book Review by The New York Times

      The Book Review

      3,857 Listeners

      Radiolab by WNYC Studios

      Radiolab

      43,969 Listeners

      This American Life by This American Life

      This American Life

      90,949 Listeners

      Planet Money by NPR

      Planet Money

      30,845 Listeners

      Freakonomics Radio by Freakonomics Radio + Stitcher

      Freakonomics Radio

      32,299 Listeners

      99% Invisible by Roman Mars

      99% Invisible

      26,169 Listeners

      Reveal by The Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX

      Reveal

      8,276 Listeners

      The New Yorker Radio Hour by WNYC Studios and The New Yorker

      The New Yorker Radio Hour

      6,691 Listeners

      Science Vs by Spotify Studios

      Science Vs

      12,103 Listeners

      The Gray Area with Sean Illing by Vox

      The Gray Area with Sean Illing

      10,706 Listeners

      The Daily by The New York Times

      The Daily

      111,917 Listeners

      Throughline by NPR

      Throughline

      16,072 Listeners

      The Ezra Klein Show by New York Times Opinion

      The Ezra Klein Show

      15,335 Listeners

      Unexplainable by Vox

      Unexplainable

      2,215 Listeners

      Critics at Large | The New Yorker by The New Yorker

      Critics at Large | The New Yorker

      605 Listeners