Guest Speaker: Chris Newman
Indigenous Heritage: Issues of Representation and Ownership
Location
Library and Gallery, Albin O. Kuhn : Gallery
Date & Time
May 9, 2018, 2:30 pm – 3:30 pm
Description
UMBC Department of American Studies Guest Speaker
Chris Newman is a permaculturalist and an outspoken advocate of ecological, economic, and social sustainability in food. He's garnered both criticism and praise for advocating a moderate, pragmatic approach to sustainable food systems that recognizes the complementary roles of ecological farming and technological innovation; frank discussions of the intersection of race, agriculture, and permaculture; and blunt, unsparing criticism of the "clean food" movement's often-elitist values and aversion to self-reflection. Chris is the founder of Sylvanaqua Farms, which is charged with developing sustainable food-producing ecosystems throughout his ancestral homelands in the Chesapeake Bay region. His organization is actively working on landscapes extending from large private estates near Charlottesville, Virginia; eastward to a food forest concept at James Madison’s Montpelier; still further east to Stratford Hall in the Northern Neck, and north across the Potomac River to the Accokeek Foundation where, as a member of the board of trustees, Chris articulated the vision for the National Food Forest, slated to be the largest permaculture project ever undertaken on public land. A member of the Choptico Band of Piscataway Indians, Chris places a heavy emphasis on the indigenous ethics, values, and knowledge serving as the (often unacknowledged) foundation of the modern permaculture movement, and the decolonized worldview necessary to ensure the sustainable stewardship of natural resources. An engineer and technologist by trade, he also accepts and explores the potential of modern scientific innovation to address the gaps left by ecosystem farming in solving a sustainability problem wherein timeliness is a factor. His essays and talks have been featured on NPR, the Huffington Post, Quartz, and NewCo Shift. He has also spoken as a guest lecturer and on panels at the University of Virginia, the Tom Tom Founders Festival, and the Virginia Natural Resources Leadership Institute.
Sponsored by the American Studies Department; the Dresher Center for the Humanities; Gender + Women's Studies Department; Geography and Environmental Systems Department; Media and Communication Studies Department; Sociology, Anthropology, and Health Administration & Policy; and Sustainability Matters
Chris Newman is a permaculturalist and an outspoken advocate of ecological, economic, and social sustainability in food. He's garnered both criticism and praise for advocating a moderate, pragmatic approach to sustainable food systems that recognizes the complementary roles of ecological farming and technological innovation; frank discussions of the intersection of race, agriculture, and permaculture; and blunt, unsparing criticism of the "clean food" movement's often-elitist values and aversion to self-reflection. Chris is the founder of Sylvanaqua Farms, which is charged with developing sustainable food-producing ecosystems throughout his ancestral homelands in the Chesapeake Bay region. His organization is actively working on landscapes extending from large private estates near Charlottesville, Virginia; eastward to a food forest concept at James Madison’s Montpelier; still further east to Stratford Hall in the Northern Neck, and north across the Potomac River to the Accokeek Foundation where, as a member of the board of trustees, Chris articulated the vision for the National Food Forest, slated to be the largest permaculture project ever undertaken on public land. A member of the Choptico Band of Piscataway Indians, Chris places a heavy emphasis on the indigenous ethics, values, and knowledge serving as the (often unacknowledged) foundation of the modern permaculture movement, and the decolonized worldview necessary to ensure the sustainable stewardship of natural resources. An engineer and technologist by trade, he also accepts and explores the potential of modern scientific innovation to address the gaps left by ecosystem farming in solving a sustainability problem wherein timeliness is a factor. His essays and talks have been featured on NPR, the Huffington Post, Quartz, and NewCo Shift. He has also spoken as a guest lecturer and on panels at the University of Virginia, the Tom Tom Founders Festival, and the Virginia Natural Resources Leadership Institute.
Sponsored by the American Studies Department; the Dresher Center for the Humanities; Gender + Women's Studies Department; Geography and Environmental Systems Department; Media and Communication Studies Department; Sociology, Anthropology, and Health Administration & Policy; and Sustainability Matters
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