Skip to content

Details

Across the United States, people are coming together to care for overgrown cemeteries—the burial grounds of marginalized people, including African Americans, psychiatric hospital patients, and the poor. These volunteer groups pull up weeds, clean headstones, and uncover lost stories. But they are doing more than yard work. They are raising big questions: Why were these cemeteries neglected in the first place? What does it say about how some lives—and deaths—are treated as less valuable than others? And what can we do, after people’s deaths, to show them respect and care?

In this talk, Professor Adam Rosenblatt shares stories from his book Cemetery Citizens, which explores cemetery reclamation efforts in Durham, Richmond, Philadelphia, and other places. You’ll hear about the challenges volunteers face, the powerful emotions that come with uncovering forgotten histories, and how caring for the dead can help build new kinds of community. The talk also invites discussion: what does justice for the dead look like—and what can it mean for the living?

This is an event from Durham Public Library and not sponsored by the Sierra Club. Please register at https://durhamcountylibrary.libcal.com/event/16603251

Related topics

You may also like