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dc.contributor.authorJames, Kenzo
dc.date.accessioned2024-01-26T21:49:16Z
dc.date.available2024-01-26T21:49:16Z
dc.date.issued2023
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12648/14030
dc.description.abstractThis senior project of two parts, the first being a research paper regarding Hoodoo, an African Diasporic Religion and syncretic ethnoreligious practice hailing from the enslaved and their descendants across the Antebellum South, and the second being an autoethnographic narrative detailing glimpses of my experience with earth-honoring spiritualist practice encountered through my tenure as a youth apprentice and volunteer at both the Hattie Carthan Community Garden and the Hattie Carthan Herban Farm, I interrogate the spiritual technologies used by Black people across time to seek protection, healing and connection to the divine through land stewardship, herbalism, and spiritual agrarianism.
dc.subjectFirst Reader Shaka McGlotten
dc.subjectSenior Project
dc.subjectSemester Fall 2023
dc.titleWorkin' Roots: African Diasporic Religion, Earth-honoring Traditions and Urban Agrarianism as Liberatory Practice
dc.typeSenior Project
refterms.dateFOA2024-01-26T21:49:16Z
dc.description.institutionPurchase College SUNY
dc.description.departmentAnthropology
dc.description.degreelevelBachelor of Arts
dc.description.advisorMcGlotten, Shaka
dc.date.semesterFall 2023
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