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Ways of Remembering: A Racial Geography Tour of UT-Austin’s Campus

"Any kind of history is about silence," says Dr. Edmund T. Gordon. "So much more is silenced than is remembered in any form of history, but that's particularly the case of public history, because public history is always ideological ... which means that the silences are intentioned."

For more than two decades, Gordon, an associate professor of African and African Diaspora Studies and vice provost of diversity at the University of Texas, has worked to correct those silences through his Racial Geography Tour, which presents the campus as a "racialized and gendered space," pointing to remnants of the university's racist and sexist past still visible in the campus' physical landscape.

What makes the campus such a great teaching tool? "Nothing goes up on a college campus that hasn't been thought through," explains Gordon. "Everything that gets placed and gets named on a college campus has a meaning behind it."

Before the pandemic, interest in the campus' racial geography was so high that Gordon was giving more than 20 tours a semester. Although public health concerns have shut down in-person tours for now, Austinites everywhere can engage with his research remotely through the university's virtual Racial Geography Tour.

Launched in the spring of 2019, the virtual tour leads viewers through a narrated walk around campus. At each stop on the tour, an essay accompanies Gordon's narrated interpretation of the landmark. Just as with the in-person tour, the virtual version discusses the Civil War, Reconstruction, Jim Crow, desegregation, and more recent activism that has led to some campus changes.

The tour begins at the Littlefield Mansion, the former home of an infamous early UT benefactor, George Washington Littlefield. Prior to the Civil War, Littlefield owned two cotton plantations, enslaving a large number of people. During the war, he served as a Confederate officer. Following Emancipation and the South's defeat, Littlefield gave up on his plantations and became an extremely successful cattle baron.

As Gordon points out on the tour, "it's very fitting that the University of Texas' mascot is a Longhorn, as much of the wealth that created the university came from the cattle industry – although this is problematic when you think of the ways in which the wealth [of] Texas was built on the annihilation of Native Americans, the decimation of buffalo, and the expansion of industrial capitalism into the West.

"We still love our Longhorns," he adds.

Read entire article at Austin Chronicle