“From Enslavement to Empowerment” and What Comes After: Plantation Futures on a Palimpsestic Landscape

Author(s): Jennifer Saunders

Year: 2023

Summary

This is an abstract from the "Deepening Archaeology's Engagement with Black Studies" session, at the 88th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology.

The idea of the landscape as a palimpsest, where traces of a former version can be read under the present one, came out of Paleolithic archaeology, where thousands of years of human activity must be read through low-density artifact scatters. In 2013’s “Plantation Futures,” Black geographer Katherine McKittrick describes the plantation landscape as a “meaningful conceptual palimpsest” that underpins the association between Blackness, geographic othering, and dispossession. McKittrick’s “plantation futures,” however, are ultimately hopeful—or rather, McKittrick is hopeful about the potential to avoid what would seem to be an inevitable outcome of continued oppression. In Powhatan County, Virginia, St. Emma Military Academy and St. Francis de Sales School, two Catholic-run boarding schools for African American and Native American students, were housed on the former grounds of Belmead Plantation—what one stakeholder group described as going “from enslavement to empowerment.” How did living on this palimpsestic landscape shape students’ experiences? Did lingering plantation logic inform their daily practices? And now that St. Emma and St Francis de Sales are closed and the property under private ownership, will plantation logic relegate them to obscurity based on their Blackness, or can archaeology help unbind this Black future from the plantation?

Cite this Record

“From Enslavement to Empowerment” and What Comes After: Plantation Futures on a Palimpsestic Landscape. Jennifer Saunders. Presented at The 88th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. 2023 ( tDAR id: 474042)

Keywords

General
Historic Theory

Geographic Keywords
North America

Spatial Coverage

min long: -168.574; min lat: 7.014 ; max long: -54.844; max lat: 74.683 ;

Record Identifiers

Abstract Id(s): 36155.0