44 episodes

Welcome to Monument Lab's Future Memory, a public art and history podcast. Each episode, hosts Paul Farber and Li Sumpter explore stories and critical conversations around the past, present, and future of monuments. We speak to the artists, activists, and historians on the frontlines, building the next generation of public spaces through stories of social justice and equity. Here are the monumental people, places, and ideas of our time.

Plot of Land is a podcast mini-series by Monument Lab that explores how land ownership and housing in the United States have been shaped by power, public memory, and privatization.

Future Memory Monument Lab

    • Education
    • 5.0 • 39 Ratings

Welcome to Monument Lab's Future Memory, a public art and history podcast. Each episode, hosts Paul Farber and Li Sumpter explore stories and critical conversations around the past, present, and future of monuments. We speak to the artists, activists, and historians on the frontlines, building the next generation of public spaces through stories of social justice and equity. Here are the monumental people, places, and ideas of our time.

Plot of Land is a podcast mini-series by Monument Lab that explores how land ownership and housing in the United States have been shaped by power, public memory, and privatization.

    Plot of Land - Ep. 10: We Have to be Creative as Hell

    Plot of Land - Ep. 10: We Have to be Creative as Hell

    Concluding the Plot of Land series, we look at the work being done across the United States to repair our relationship with the land, from the Tongva conservancy in Los Angeles to the Sea Islands of South Carolina. What will it take to imagine a radically different future? With the stakes rising along with the temperature, what is the scale of change we need to shift power and build a more just world?

    • 1 hr 10 min
    Plot of Land - Ep. 9: Rotten Eggs & Gasoline

    Plot of Land - Ep. 9: Rotten Eggs & Gasoline

    We return to Louisiana and the Joneses, where in recent decades family members have moved away for work and to escape the increasingly toxic air and water leaking from the neighboring chemical plants of Cancer Alley. As stronger hurricanes and vanishing wetlands reconfigure Louisiana’s topography, new industries continue old patterns of environmental harm. What will this mean for the future of Jonesland? What can their story on the front-lines of climate change teach us as the nation faces the dire consequences of extractive economies?

    • 1 hr 9 min
    Plot of Land - Ep. 8: 66 Acres Down by the River

    Plot of Land - Ep. 8: 66 Acres Down by the River

    We learn the incredible story of Sedonia Dennis, a woman once enslaved in Louisiana, who came to own a piece of the plantation that had once claimed ownership of her family. And we explore how, over time, the plantation economy gave way to the petrochemical industry. Join us as we spend time with Sedonia Dennis’s descendant, Jazzy Miller who is documenting her family’s fight to exist at the intersection of each of these forms of extraction.

    • 1 hr 7 min
    Plot of Land - Ep. 7: The Sad Part Is That It Was Successful

    Plot of Land - Ep. 7: The Sad Part Is That It Was Successful

    We’re looking at what happened after subsidized affordable housing programs expired in the 2000s on New York’s Roosevelt Island. Some residents managed to buy in, build equity and stability. Others experienced precarious tenancy or displacement while an ongoing influx of wealthier residents is changing the face of the island. We ask the question, can Roosevelt Island’s past guide state and federal investments in multi-racial, multi-income neighborhoods for the future?

    • 1 hr 21 min
    Plot of Land - Ep. 6: Tucked Between Those Two Boroughs

    Plot of Land - Ep. 6: Tucked Between Those Two Boroughs

    New York’s Roosevelt Island was imagined as an idyllic, multi-racial, multi-income community, developed as part of the social housing movement in the 60s and 70s. But by the 1980s, socially-minded investments in housing were overtaken by neoliberal policy. We talk to current-day and displaced residents to see how this change affected them, while looking back from the point of divergence to find the decisions that created and dismantled housing as a human right.

    • 1 hr 5 min
    Plot of Land - Ep. 5: We’re Out Here at our Homeland

    Plot of Land - Ep. 5: We’re Out Here at our Homeland

    At one point Oklahoma had 50 Black townships and 1.5 million acres of Black-owned farmland. Today only 13 Black towns survive and the majority of Black farmers have retired or lost their land, discouraged–and broke–from an industry plagued by racist lending practices. What can Boley’s rise and more recent decline teach us about how biased policies have shaped who gets to own what land?

    • 1 hr 20 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
39 Ratings

39 Ratings

Elisa Marie ,

Powerful storytelling—critically important truths

This podcast should be built into school curricula all over the country. The reporters and editors did a fabulous job leveraging beautiful and sometimes heart-breaking personal stories to illustrate systemic injustices on so many levels. It could have been overwhelming, but amidst the serious information and infuriating revelations, the team managed to maintain a core of hope and a powerful call to action. Kudos to all involved.

AForestWood5 ,

Excellent Analysis of Land Issues

This show is incredibly well done telling stories of land in America through a lens of equity and inclusion as well as segregation, colonialism and environmental injustice.

Rikiki75 ,

I needed this.

Monument Lab, more like monument rad! But seriously, I miss this kind of talk. Much needed for my daily commute. Makes me have a new understanding of the invisible fabric that shapes our worlds.

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