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Hello,
Please join us and help spread the word for the first speaker of the Chicago Rarities Orchard Project 2012 Lecture Series:
Jennifer Jordan, associate professor of Sociology and Urban Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Tuesday, April 24 Haas Park Field house, 2404 N Washtenaw, Chicago
6 p.m.
Free admission
Please visit the "What's Happening" sidebar of the CROP website
for more information about the full series - www.chicagorarities.org
Lecture description:
Across Europe, the US, and elsewhere, people are paying increasing
attention to “heirlooms,” seeking to preserve endangered edible plants
and animals, but also the kinds of meanings attached to these foods.
Food is deeply intertwined with memory, and fruit is no exception. This
talk will focus on apples in particular, and the ways that apples and
other fruit capture shared understandings of the past, and the ways that
a diverse array of farmers, chefs, activists, and gardeners have been
working to preserve disappearing apples—the profound array of flavors,
colors, textures, and shapes, and well as family memories and local
histories, and biodiversity. Apples themselves, as well as the trees and
the landscapes they create, are deeply connected to shared
understandings of the past and future, and to collective memory and
identity. Farmers, gardeners, pomologists, and other passionate savers
of seeds and trees create fecund pockets of biodiversity across the
country, often off the grid, decentralized ways of holding on to the
past but also looking toward the future.
Bio: Jennifer
Jordan is an associate professor of Sociology and Urban Studies at the
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. She is the author of Structures of
Memory: Understanding Urban Change in Berlin and Beyond (Stanford, 2006)
as well as numerous articles about cities, memory, and food. She is
currently finishing a book about the heirloom food phenomenon.