Black Roots: Grounded and Growing Toward Collective Futures is a conference at the Harvard Graduate School of Design presented by the Black Student Union (formerly African American Student Union) and Africa GSD. This event investigates the Black praxes of making space, taking space, and creating “tools for living” through three interconnected themes: Black theologies, Black ecologies, and Black geographies. It explores the complex relationships between belief systems, environments, and lands that shape Black communities across the diaspora. Design serves as both terrain and a tool to explore lineage, land, and lore as intertwined forces shaping our communities. Through keynote panels, workshops, performances, and creative exchanges, the conference critically examines histories of migration, displacement, and resilience in the context of ongoing political and environmental crises. Through dialogue and creative expression, Black Roots foregrounds how Black spatial practices shape, and are shaped by, resistance, resilience, and regeneration.
Keynote: The Spider, The Rabbit and The Preacher Man
Featuring Kevin Bernard Moultrie Daye in discussion with Curry Hackett
Beer and Drums Performance with Kera M. Washington, Joh Camara, Luana Brazzan Ramos, Ivanna Cuesta Gonzalez, and Amelia Deshmukh
00:00 Welcome from Dean Sarah Whiting
07:48 Keynote Introduction
11:50 Keynote Address by Kevin Bernard Moultrie Daye
01:18:31 Discussion with Curry Hackett
01:34:30 Day 1 Wrap-Up and Intro to Drum Performance
01:37:34 Drum Performance
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