Black Geographies of Respite: Relief, Recuperation, and Resonance at Florida A&M University

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Abstract

In this article, I argue that places of respite provide relief from the burdens of oppressive articulations and experiences of society and space and are produced through three general practices: relief as a practice that mitigates psychological and physical burdens of oppression; recuperation as a form of (self-)care that can help heal harms; and affirmative resonance as a practice of counter-storytelling that challenges hegemonic social narratives and internalises affirmative narratives for marginalised peoples. Through a case study with members of the Marching 100 at Florida A&M University (FAMU), I demonstrate how these relational practices produce FAMU as a multiscalar place of respite for black students. Finally, I claim that places of respite, produced through a black sense of place, offer scholars interested in affirmative black geographies an ontological object produced by (and productive of) visions and practices of black life and produced for the celebration and protection of black lives.

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APA

Allen, D. L. (2020). Black Geographies of Respite: Relief, Recuperation, and Resonance at Florida A&M University. Antipode, 52(6), 1563–1582. https://doi.org/10.1111/anti.12658

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