Books & Long-Form Works
The Black Geographic: Praxis, Resistance, Futurity (2023, Duke University Press)
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Currently, geography offers few original terms to spotlight the meaningful interactions between race, place, and taste: how Blackness travels as a global cultural identity through digital technology. Using multiple methods, this chapter mines and maps a three-year longitudinal dataset of over twelve hundred events, announced online by marketing start-up Black Book LA (BBLA), to sketch the dimensions of everyday dynamic forms of cultural gatherings constituting Blackness as distinctive temporal urbanisms in the metropolitan city-region of Los Angeles. The findings suggest that Black cultural geographies are quantum: cosmopolitan, dispersed, complex, and often financially accessible. It repositions two popular yet undertheorized concepts—Afrotech and Black joy–as key traits and technologies of Black public spheres especially relevant for this digitally augmented era. It argues for three spatial understandings of Black joy that motivate new language in Black studies, geography, and information technology, or what the chapter refers to as “Afrotechtonics.”
Contributed the chapter “Need Black joy?” Mapping an Afrotechtonics in Los Angeles. The Black Geographic: Praxis, Resistance, Futurity (2023). Durham, NC: Duke University Press (https://doi.org/10.1215/9781478027249-010).
Just Urban Design: The Struggle for a Public City
Building on the lecture series with UCLA’s Luskin School, this chapter explores the environmental thinking and placekeeping strategies in Leimert Park Village with a focus on developing a notion of “publicness” that engages with freedom, spatial agency, and belongingness.
Miller, Matthew Jordan. “Building A Black Public Realm and Public Culture: Learning from Leimert Park Village.” In A. Loukaito-Sideris, K. Goh, and V. Mukhija (Eds.), Just Urban Design: The Struggle for a Public City. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press (November 2022). https://doi-org/10.7551/mitpress/13982.003.0022