
In Part Two, the conversation continues as host Melody Hunter Pillion and bestselling author Tracy Deonn talk Deonn’s novel Legendborn, UNC’s cemetery and its connection to slave history, grief, the mythology of the South, and the cereal boxes whose smells transport us back to the past.
Mar 29, 2021
15 min

In Part One, host Melody Hunter Pillion and bestselling author Tracy Deonn talk Deonn’s novel Legendborn and the complex and tragic truths in genealogical study, the parallel stories and experiences that can arise on a college campus, and the joy in eating a pineapple popsicle.
Mar 29, 2021
22 min

Assistant professor of Dramatic Arts at UNC, Jacqueline E. Lawton is a playwright, dramaturg, producer, and advocate for access, equity, diversity, and inclusion in the American Theatre. In this episode, she discusses how playwriting and dramaturgy are methods of inclusion, understanding, and visibility.
Nov 23, 2020
29 min

Diamond Holloman, a PhD Candidate in Environment, Ecology and Energy Program at UNC Chapel Hill, and Jeff Currie, the RiverKeeper of the Lumber River, both work to keep communities at the center of their work in Environmental Justice. In this episode, they discuss their community-led work, and why listening is key to real solutions.
Nov 23, 2020
31 min

Faculty from the American Studies Department at UNC Chapel Hill, Annette Rodríguez and Seth Kotch, both research lynching and public violence. In this episode, we learn more about the history of public violence, and what resonance this history has today.
Nov 23, 2020
34 min

In this episode, Sharon P. Holland, Townsend Ludington Distinguished Professor and Chair of American Studies at UNC Chapel Hill, spends time storytelling: when she first knew she would be an academic, writing her first book, being a Black equestrian. She also explains the subject of Critical Ethnic Studies, and it's relevance to our society today.
Nov 23, 2020
30 min

In this episode, María R. Estorino, Associate University Librarian for Special Collections and Director of the Wilson Special Collections Library, explains exactly what kind of knowledge the archives provide for the public, and why this work is important today.
Nov 23, 2020
28 min

Southern Futures season 2 launches November 23rd. Reimagine the American South.
Nov 13, 2020
1 min

Memories from yesterday blend with events of today in this special episode of the Southern Futures Podcast series. Dr. Gloria Thomas (Director of UNC Women's Center) and Danita Mason-Hogans (Oral Historian at Duke Center for Documentary Studies) respond to narratives captured by the Southern Oral History Program--stories of African Americans voting for the first time in the South, during the 1960s, reveal a determination to vote that resonates today.
Oct 20, 2020
22 min

Mark Little shares plans for combatting economic disparity in North Carolina’s poorest counties, while on the personal level creating strong historical and ancestral foundations for his children. Co-founder of the Black Communities Conference, his work facilitates and fosters community-engaged research partnerships, between universities and communities, in support of Black community life. Little is Executive Director of CREATE, Co-Founder of SmartUp and former Executive Director of the Kenan Institute. He launched NCGrowth, a program that helps North Carolina’s rural and under-served communities grow and retain business, facilitates strategic regional economic development, and researches solutions to pressing energy, environment, and climate related problems. This music composer is also a native North Carolinian with a Ph.D. in geology and geophysics.
Jul 17, 2020
24 min
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