Research

AADHum continues to deepen its commitments to broadening the landscape of Black digital humanities, while also highlighting the numerous places where Black DH intersects with electronic literature, digital storytelling, computational poetics, and public humanities more generally. Through our own boundary-pushing research collaborations with leading scholars in the arts and humanities, AADHum serves as a vibrant center for Black DH research both in the greater Washington, DC area as well as nationally and internationally.

Black Belt Brooklyn

Black Belt Brooklyn is a digital humanities website that emerges out of the research I have been doing related to my next book, also titled Black Belt Brooklyn. The format of a book is limited—the number of images included is small, you can’t hear the voices of people on the page, and the additional details that build the world of the book are at risk of being cut for going beyond a narrow book argument. Thus, this digital humanities site serves as an ongoing effort to think about Black Brooklyn before 21st century gentrification, to think about Black urban place beyond the limitations of the page.

Black Belt Brooklyn aims to illustrate and historicize Black practices of vitality, mutual-aid, and institution building during a period of widespread neglect by formal political institutions at every level. Using Black spatial production (or an emplaced “making a way out of no way”) Black residents produce place counter to official geographies and understandings of urban space that draws from practices of Black resistance, community organizing, and institution building. Thus, Black Belt Brooklyn serves as a tool in a “technology of recovery,” (Gallon 2016) excavating time-space activities, events, and socialities.

The AADHum Scholars Program program image

This project is supported by the The AADHum Scholars Program program.