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The Racial Geography Podcast

The Racial Geography Podcast

By The Racial Geography Project

Through a series of mini-episodes, the Racial Geography Podcast provides an alternative itinerary of the Rice University campus, one that acknowledges its racial landscape and recognizes long-standing activism by Black students and faculty on campus while critically analyzing its land, construction, architecture, and monuments. It features “New Freedom Remix,” an original sound composition and performance by Lisa E. Harris.

This is an original podcast series made by the Racial Geography Project, a research collaborative led by Fabiola Lopez-Duran and Adrienne Rooney.
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The Campus Land and Settler Colonialism

The Racial Geography PodcastMay 07, 2021

00:00
12:08
Early Black Activism at Rice and the Creation of the BSU

Early Black Activism at Rice and the Creation of the BSU

This episode—by Lynne Lee, a Ph.D. Student in Art History—explores how some of the first Black students admitted to Rice paved the way for transforming the university into a more inclusive and diversified institution through their unrelenting activism on campus in the years following its official desegregation in 1964.

The Racial Geography Podcast features “New Freedom Remix,” an original sound composition and performance by Lisa E. Harris.

May 14, 202108:54
A Familiar Pendulum

A Familiar Pendulum

This episode—by Venus Alemanji, majoring in Computer Science—spotlights two Black women athletes at Rice University: Regina Tippens, class of 1974, and Goya Qualls, class of 1982.

The Racial Geography Podcast features “New Freedom Remix,” an original sound composition and performance by Lisa E. Harris.

May 13, 202106:47
The Unveiling of the William Marsh Rice Memorial, June 8, 1930

The Unveiling of the William Marsh Rice Memorial, June 8, 1930

This episode—by James McCabe, a Ph.D. Student in Art History—spotlights the three speeches given at the unveiling ceremony of the William Marsh Rice Memorial in June of 1930, questioning the speakers’ uncritical portrayal of Rice as the benevolent founder of Rice University.

The Racial Geography Podcast features “New Freedom Remix,” an original sound composition and performance by Lisa E. Harris.

May 12, 202108:42
Plantation to Segregation: Colonial Nostalgia at Rice

Plantation to Segregation: Colonial Nostalgia at Rice

This episode—by Morgan Seay, majoring in Social Policy Analysis and French—traces racist nostalgia for the antebellum south that showed itself at Rice events during the 20th century.

The Racial Geography Podcast features “New Freedom Remix,” an original sound composition and performance by Lisa E. Harris.

May 11, 202108:02
William Marsh Rice’s Trade Circuit

William Marsh Rice’s Trade Circuit

This episode—by Chaney Hill, a Ph.D. Student in English—spotlights many of the business contacts and associates of William Marsh Rice, the founder of Rice University, revealing not only his trade networks but also his participation in the plantation economy reliant on enslaved labor.

The Racial Geography Podcast features “New Freedom Remix,” an original sound composition and performance by Lisa E. Harris.

May 10, 202106:32
Building a University from the Ground Up: A History of Labor at Rice University

Building a University from the Ground Up: A History of Labor at Rice University

This episode—by Sanvitti Sahdev, majoring in English and Political Science—spotlights the people who worked to build and maintain the physical campus we today know as Rice.

The Racial Geography Podcast features “New Freedom Remix,” an original sound composition and performance by Lisa E. Harris.



May 09, 202107:21
“These Trees Shall Be My Books”: Rice-Land Lumber Co. and University Development

“These Trees Shall Be My Books”: Rice-Land Lumber Co. and University Development

This episode—by Marc Armeña, majoring in Mechanical Engineering—spotlights the role of extractive industries on the construction of the Rice University campus.  

The Racial Geography Podcast features “New Freedom Remix,” an original sound composition and performance by Lisa E. Harris.

May 08, 202106:58
The Campus Land and Settler Colonialism

The Campus Land and Settler Colonialism

This episode—by Giovanna Bassi Cendra, a Ph.D. Candidate in Art History—spotlights the troubled story of the land Rice University occupies while addressing the legacies of settler colonialism and racialization that continue to this day.
The Racial Geography Podcast features “New Freedom Remix,” an original sound composition and performance by Lisa E. Harris.
May 07, 202112:08