1 hr 21 min

BONUS: Justin Garrett Moore on Humanities in Place Urban Roots

    • History

EXCITING NEWS…Season 3 is coming soon! If you’re not subscribed to our podcast or our newsletter, please do so now! You can also follow us on LinkedIn and Instagram. That way, you’ll know immediately when a new episode drops. 

Today we have a high-energy conversation with Justin Garrett Moore, program director for the Mellon Foundation’s Humanities in Place program and a renaissance man of urbanism. We talk with Moore about his childhood in Indianapolis, IN, his formative professional moments (at a high school internship and at the University of Florida), and the particular challenges he sees facing preservation today (including its fragmentation, over-emphasis on credentials, and the under-valuing of narrative). Plus, we dive deep into the Humanities in Place program, which funds nonprofits doing cultural preservation, urban development, placekeeping, and storytelling.

We talked to Justin about:


His youth and the internship that changed his life [4:23-11:23]


Going South and getting an education — in more ways than one [11:24-17:10]


The challenges facing preservation and the power of narrative [17:11-43:48]


Spotlighting organizations funded by Humanities in Place [43:49-51:21]


Humanities in Place: What it does and doesn’t do [51:22-1:15:08]


What’s close to his heart: Flanner House and Urban Patch [1:15:09-1:20:13]



Mentioned In this Episode: 


Scalawag Magazine - A magazine focused on the South 


Ekvn-Yefolecv - an intentional ecovillage community of Indigenous Maskoke persons who bought land in Alabama to build a place where they could preserve their culture through language. 


New York LGBT Sites - broadening people’s knowledge of LGBT history beyond Stonewall and placing that history in its geographical context


The American Indian Community House - a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization serving the needs of Native Americans residing in New York City.


Flanner House - An African-American community service center in Indianapolis


Urban Patch - An Indianapolis-based organization focused on inner cities. 



Credits: 

Your hosts are Deqah Hussein-Wetzel and Vanessa Quirk. This episode was edited by Deqah and Vanessa and mixed by Connor Lynch. Our music is by Adaam James Levin-Areddy. Thanks again to Justin Garrett Moore and Zuri Phelps. 

Urban Roots is a product of Urbanist Media, a non-profit dedicated to community preservation. You can make a tax-deductible donation to us via Venmo or Paypal. 

Follow us on IG at urbanrootsculture. Drop us an email urbanrootspodcast@gmail.com

EXCITING NEWS…Season 3 is coming soon! If you’re not subscribed to our podcast or our newsletter, please do so now! You can also follow us on LinkedIn and Instagram. That way, you’ll know immediately when a new episode drops. 

Today we have a high-energy conversation with Justin Garrett Moore, program director for the Mellon Foundation’s Humanities in Place program and a renaissance man of urbanism. We talk with Moore about his childhood in Indianapolis, IN, his formative professional moments (at a high school internship and at the University of Florida), and the particular challenges he sees facing preservation today (including its fragmentation, over-emphasis on credentials, and the under-valuing of narrative). Plus, we dive deep into the Humanities in Place program, which funds nonprofits doing cultural preservation, urban development, placekeeping, and storytelling.

We talked to Justin about:


His youth and the internship that changed his life [4:23-11:23]


Going South and getting an education — in more ways than one [11:24-17:10]


The challenges facing preservation and the power of narrative [17:11-43:48]


Spotlighting organizations funded by Humanities in Place [43:49-51:21]


Humanities in Place: What it does and doesn’t do [51:22-1:15:08]


What’s close to his heart: Flanner House and Urban Patch [1:15:09-1:20:13]



Mentioned In this Episode: 


Scalawag Magazine - A magazine focused on the South 


Ekvn-Yefolecv - an intentional ecovillage community of Indigenous Maskoke persons who bought land in Alabama to build a place where they could preserve their culture through language. 


New York LGBT Sites - broadening people’s knowledge of LGBT history beyond Stonewall and placing that history in its geographical context


The American Indian Community House - a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization serving the needs of Native Americans residing in New York City.


Flanner House - An African-American community service center in Indianapolis


Urban Patch - An Indianapolis-based organization focused on inner cities. 



Credits: 

Your hosts are Deqah Hussein-Wetzel and Vanessa Quirk. This episode was edited by Deqah and Vanessa and mixed by Connor Lynch. Our music is by Adaam James Levin-Areddy. Thanks again to Justin Garrett Moore and Zuri Phelps. 

Urban Roots is a product of Urbanist Media, a non-profit dedicated to community preservation. You can make a tax-deductible donation to us via Venmo or Paypal. 

Follow us on IG at urbanrootsculture. Drop us an email urbanrootspodcast@gmail.com

1 hr 21 min

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