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    latoya eaves

  • roots

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    About Me

    Dr. Eaves, currently assistant professor of Geography at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, has been instrumental in increasing the visibility of Black Geography. In addition to her research which centers questions of race, blackness, gender, sexuality, and place — especially in terms of the US South and Southeast, Dr. Eaves founded and chaired the Black Geographies Specialty Group of the AAG. When AAG decided that Black Geographies would be a featured theme at AAG 2018, she was the president’s obvious choice for chair.

     

    In addition to her experiences in the South through her current position, Dr. Eaves was also an assistant professor and founding faculty member of the department of Global Studies and Human Geography at Middle Tennessee State University, received her PhD from Florida International University, her MS from Florida State, and her BA from North Carolina State — close to her native town of Shelby, North Carolina.

     

    Her commitment to diverse experiences and productions of the US South is reflected in her prolific record of publishing in the journal Southeastern Geographer. However, Dr. Eaves also has publications in Gender, Place, and Culture; Journal of Geography in Higher Education; Dialogues in Human Geography; Geoforum; ACME; and Progress in Human Geography. As well as a number of articles currently under review at journals such as the Annals, Tourism Geographies, and The Professional Geographer

     

    She is also an editor of two anthologies under contract, Spatial Futures: Difference and the Post-Anthropocene with Palgrave and Feminist Geographies in Action with Bristol University Press. And is also working on a book manuscript titled “Unbounded South: Race, Gender, and the Politics of Place”

     

    Recipient of numerous awards including the Ronald F. Abler Distinguished Service Honors for her transformative impact on AAG through her commitment to Black Geographies, she’s also recently received a half million dollar NSF grant for a collaborative project on Museums, Public Pedagogy, and Black Geographies in the United States. Her profoundly interdisciplinary contributions reflect her experiences training and teaching across African Studies, Women’s Studies, and Geography departments.

     

    I first came across Dr. Eaves through her emails as a member of the Black Geographies Specialty Group. In reading her recent work including “Fear of an other geography” and “interanimating Black sexualities and the geography classroom, I continue to be in awe of the way she links unbelievably complex structures and theories to the mundane ways we handle uncomfortable conversations in the classroom and beyond. Her work is particularly inspiring to me because of the way she weaves together her research and teaching; bringing the space of the classroom into theoretical conversation in ways that challenge the subsidiary treatment of teaching to research.

     

    Her contributions on the dynamics between questions of non-essentialism and embodiment — couldn’t be more timely. Dr. Eaves teaches us that Black geographies are views on the world; providing a different way to engage geography’s beloved core concepts - such as space, place, and region.

     

    Bio written by Dr. Ariel Rawson.

     

    A link to her CV is available in the navigation menu on the left.

  • routes

    research

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    Books

     

    Under Contract. Eaves, L.E., Nast, H., and Papadopoulos, A., eds. Spatial Futures: Difference and the Post-Anthropocene. Palgrave.

     

    Under Contract. Boyer, K., Eaves, L.E. and Fluri, J. eds. Feminist Geographies in Action. Bristol University Press

     

    Under Contract. Solem, M., Foote, K., O’Lear, S., Eaves, L.E., and Lee, J. Aspiring Academics: Strategies for Early Career Success in the Social and Environmental Sciences. Taylor and Francis.

     

    Journal Articles

     

    Accepted. Eaves, L.E. and Falconer Al-Hindi, K. “Intersectional Sensibilities and the Spatial Genealogies of Ida B. Wells-Barnett and Ellen Churchill Semple in the Early Twentieth Century” The Professional Geographer.

     

    Accepted. Eaves, L. E. and Purifoy, D. “We Must Situate Race”: Bobby Wilson’s Black Geographies. Southeastern Geographer

     

    2021. Shannon, J; Hankins, K.; Shelton, T.; Bosse, A.; Scott, D.; Block, D.; Fischer, H.; Eaves, L.; Jung, J.; Robinson, J.; Solís, P.; Pearsall, H.; Rees, A.; and Nicolas, A.

    “Community Geography: Toward a Disciplinary Framework.” Progress in Human Geography, 45(5): 1147–68. https://doi.org/10.1177/0309132520961468

     

    2021. Eaves, L.E., “Controversy, Feminist Pedagogies, and the Need for Revolutionary Praxis.” ACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies, 20(5), 562-568. https://acme-journal.org/index.php/acme/article/view/1935

     

    2021. Alderman, D., Perez, R.N., Eaves, L.E., Klein, P, and Muñoz, S. “Reflections on Operationalizing an Anti-Racism Pedagogy: Teaching as Regional Storytelling.” Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 45:2, 186-200,DOI: 10.1080/03098265.2019.1661367

     

    2021. Eaves, L.E., “Power and the Paywall: A Black Feminist Reflection on the Socio-Spatial Formations of Publishing.” Geoforum. 118: 207-209. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2020.04.002

     

    2020. Eaves, L.E. and Falconer Al-Hindi, K., “Intersectional Geographies and COVID-19” Dialogues in Human Geography, 10(2), 132–136. https://doi.org/10.1177/2043820620935247

     

    2020. Eaves, L.E., “Interanimating Black Sexualities and the Geography Classroom.” Journal of Geography in Higher Education. 44:2, 217-229, DOI: 10.1080/03098265.2020.1753029

     

    2020. Eaves, L.E., “Fear of (An)other Geography.” Dialogues in Human Geography, 10(1), 34–36. https://doi.org/10.1177/2043820619898901

     

    2019. Eaves, L.E. “The imperative of struggle: feminist and gender geographies in the United States,” Gender, Place & Culture, 26:7-9.

     

    2017. Bledsoe, A. Eaves, L.E. and Williams, B. 2017. “Black Geographies in and of the United States South” in Southeastern Geographer. 57(1): 6-11.

     

    2017. Eaves, L. “Black Geographic Possibilities: On a Queer Black South”. in Southeastern

    Geographer. 57(1): 80-95.

     

    2016. Eaves, L.E. “We wear the mask”. Southeastern Geographer, 56(1): 22-28.

    Organizer & Editor of Journal Special Issues

    2018. Bledsoe, A. Eaves, L.E. Bledsoe, A. Williams, B., and Wright, W., eds. “Enacting Black Geographies.” Southeastern Geographer (virtual special issue).

     

    2017. Bledsoe, A. Eaves, L.E. and Williams, B., eds.. “Black Geographies in and of the United States South.” Southeastern Geographer, 57(1).

     

    Chapters in Edited Books

     

    Forthcoming. Falconer Al-Hindi, K. and Eaves, L.E. “For an intersectional sensibility: feminisms in geography” for Handbook of Methodologies in Human Geography.

     

    2021. Eaves, L.E. “Interview with LaToya Eaves.” Feminist Geographies Unbound: Discomfort, Bodies, and Prefigured Futures. Gökarıksel, B., Hawkins, M., Neubert, C., and Smith, S.H. editors. West Virginia University Press

     

    2016. Eaves, L.E. “Outside Forces: Black Southern Sexuality”. In Queering the Countryside: New Directions in Rural Queer Studies, edited by Mary L. Gray, Colin R. Thompson, and Brian Gilley. New York: NYU Press.

     

    2013. Eaves, L.E. “Space, place, and identity in conversation: Queer black women living in the rural U.S. South.” In Sexuality/Rurality/Geography, edited by Andrew Gorman-Murray, Barbara Pini, and Lia Bryant. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books.

     

    Book Reviews

     

    2015. Eaves, L. E. A Place We Call Home: Gender, Race, and Justice in Syracuse, by K. Animashaun Ducre, Journal of Cultural Geography, 32(1): 141-142.

     

    2014. Eaves, L.E., Sites of Slavery: Citizenship and Racial Democracy in the Post-Civil Rights Imagination, by Salamishah Tillet, Emotion, Space and Society, 11: 110-111.

     

    2012. Eaves, L.E., Queer Methods and Methodologies, edited by Kath Browne & Catherine Nash, Gender, Place and Culture 19(2): 265-267.

     

    Encyclopedia Entries

     

    2020. Bledsoe, A., Eaves, L.E., Wright, W.J. “Black Geographies” International Encyclopedia of Human Geography, edited by A. Kobayashi. Elsevier.

     

     

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    black geographies

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    Black Geographies is a term used to center a Black sense of place and

    Black spatial knowledges in my approach to theory, research methods, and applications.

  • black geographies

    www.blackgeographies.org

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    An affiliate of the American Association of Geographers

    The BLACK GEOGRAPHIES SPECIALTY GROUP strives to create a global platform for: (a) promoting study of the social, political, cultural, economic, and ecological aspects of the race in/and geography; (b) encouraging critical reflection on the issues, processes, intrinsic qualities, and interconnections that shape Black lives and geographies on local, national, continental, and international scales; (c) exchanging research and teaching ideas among scholars of race in/and geography; and (d) building greater ties between geographers and the Black and Africana Studies community.

    a black sense of place

  • The Blog

    Thoughts, musings, and ruminations.