Cultural Community Wealth: Project Pride (People Re-Collecting Insightful Data Effervescently) a Commemorative Memorial Black Collective in Trenton, NJ

Presently, an insurgence is taking place in which Blacks are reclaiming Black bodies, Black community history, and Black responsibility. I employed the theoretical concepts of Cultural Community Capital and the conceptualization of two vectors-the vector of similarity and continuity, and the vector...

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Main Author: Angeline Dean
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-07-01
Series:Genealogy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2313-5778/4/3/78
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spelling doaj-8691eb9f6334426ab09b5cafa0245bf92020-11-25T03:02:07ZengMDPI AGGenealogy2313-57782020-07-014787810.3390/genealogy4030078Cultural Community Wealth: Project Pride (People Re-Collecting Insightful Data Effervescently) a Commemorative Memorial Black Collective in Trenton, NJAngeline Dean0College of Education, Center for Access, Success and Equity, Rowan University, Glassboro, NJ 08028, USAPresently, an insurgence is taking place in which Blacks are reclaiming Black bodies, Black community history, and Black responsibility. I employed the theoretical concepts of Cultural Community Capital and the conceptualization of two vectors-the vector of similarity and continuity, and the vector of difference and rupture. I positioned genealogy as a collective familial history that is integrated and aligned through ancestral roots and development as—“We as one, a village, are one.” Using narrative inquiry, I collected the stories of four Elders and showed how they positioned their bodies, their communal spaces, and their histories as an ancestral community family in relation to the city of Trenton, New Jersey. I define Elders as those 65 and older who serve as present-day sites of wisdom and historical knowledge and chose them as a sign of respect and honor. This paper provides a unique positioning as it gives voice to Elders (ages 68–99) and provides insight into the intricacies and dehumanizing components of enslavement coupled with a determination to thrive. These are stories that one will never experience through White-washed, indoctrinated, and sanitized history books.https://www.mdpi.com/2313-5778/4/3/78collective memorycultural capitalcritical community familial historynarrativeblack
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Angeline Dean
spellingShingle Angeline Dean
Cultural Community Wealth: Project Pride (People Re-Collecting Insightful Data Effervescently) a Commemorative Memorial Black Collective in Trenton, NJ
Genealogy
collective memory
cultural capital
critical community familial history
narrative
black
author_facet Angeline Dean
author_sort Angeline Dean
title Cultural Community Wealth: Project Pride (People Re-Collecting Insightful Data Effervescently) a Commemorative Memorial Black Collective in Trenton, NJ
title_short Cultural Community Wealth: Project Pride (People Re-Collecting Insightful Data Effervescently) a Commemorative Memorial Black Collective in Trenton, NJ
title_full Cultural Community Wealth: Project Pride (People Re-Collecting Insightful Data Effervescently) a Commemorative Memorial Black Collective in Trenton, NJ
title_fullStr Cultural Community Wealth: Project Pride (People Re-Collecting Insightful Data Effervescently) a Commemorative Memorial Black Collective in Trenton, NJ
title_full_unstemmed Cultural Community Wealth: Project Pride (People Re-Collecting Insightful Data Effervescently) a Commemorative Memorial Black Collective in Trenton, NJ
title_sort cultural community wealth: project pride (people re-collecting insightful data effervescently) a commemorative memorial black collective in trenton, nj
publisher MDPI AG
series Genealogy
issn 2313-5778
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Presently, an insurgence is taking place in which Blacks are reclaiming Black bodies, Black community history, and Black responsibility. I employed the theoretical concepts of Cultural Community Capital and the conceptualization of two vectors-the vector of similarity and continuity, and the vector of difference and rupture. I positioned genealogy as a collective familial history that is integrated and aligned through ancestral roots and development as—“We as one, a village, are one.” Using narrative inquiry, I collected the stories of four Elders and showed how they positioned their bodies, their communal spaces, and their histories as an ancestral community family in relation to the city of Trenton, New Jersey. I define Elders as those 65 and older who serve as present-day sites of wisdom and historical knowledge and chose them as a sign of respect and honor. This paper provides a unique positioning as it gives voice to Elders (ages 68–99) and provides insight into the intricacies and dehumanizing components of enslavement coupled with a determination to thrive. These are stories that one will never experience through White-washed, indoctrinated, and sanitized history books.
topic collective memory
cultural capital
critical community familial history
narrative
black
url https://www.mdpi.com/2313-5778/4/3/78
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