EBOOK

Affrilachia
Testimonies
Chris Aluka BerrySeries: Appalachian Futures: Black, Native, and Queer Voices(0)
About
"Affrilachia," a term first coined in 1991 by Kentucky poet Frank X Walker, refers to the cultural contributions of African Americans who live in Appalachia, a largely mountainous region stretching over thirteen states from Mississippi to New York. Although Black Americans have greatly influenced the popular culture landscape in this region, their stories, trials, and triumphs are often undocumented because Appalachia is perceived as wholly white.
In this stunning visual history, photographer and curator Chris Aluka Berry gives voice to the broad spectrum of African Americans who have lived in the Appalachian region over the centuries. Berry, who spent six years in western North Carolina, northeast Georgia, and eastern Tennessee, immersed himself in the communities and lives of Black Appalachians to present the diversity and commonalities of the proud people in the region. His intimate and revealing photographs capture African Americans in various settings-churches, homes, revival services, family gatherings, and homegoing celebrations.
Completing this comprehensive collection are powerful narratives from the people who inhabit these places, and contributions from Appalachian writers Kelly Elaine Navies and Maia A. Surdam, whose poignant and powerful poems and essays offer historical perspective and broaden the book's archival importance.
The first book of its kind, Affrilachia: Testimonies is an inspired historical artifact that honors, represents, and celebrates the proud people of color whose history and existence has greatly contributed to the broad tapestry of Appalachia.
In this stunning visual history, photographer and curator Chris Aluka Berry gives voice to the broad spectrum of African Americans who have lived in the Appalachian region over the centuries. Berry, who spent six years in western North Carolina, northeast Georgia, and eastern Tennessee, immersed himself in the communities and lives of Black Appalachians to present the diversity and commonalities of the proud people in the region. His intimate and revealing photographs capture African Americans in various settings-churches, homes, revival services, family gatherings, and homegoing celebrations.
Completing this comprehensive collection are powerful narratives from the people who inhabit these places, and contributions from Appalachian writers Kelly Elaine Navies and Maia A. Surdam, whose poignant and powerful poems and essays offer historical perspective and broaden the book's archival importance.
The first book of its kind, Affrilachia: Testimonies is an inspired historical artifact that honors, represents, and celebrates the proud people of color whose history and existence has greatly contributed to the broad tapestry of Appalachia.
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Reviews
"Chris's photographs capture the cycles of life in tight-knit communities united by a shared faith, a deep-rooted history, and an enduring connection to place. These stunning images communicate the bonds of kinship that endure through the mundane and the extraordinary and in moments of joy and grief, all set against the sheer beauty of a rugged southern landscape."
Gregory Harris, curator of photography at the High Museum of Art
"Through his photography, Chris Aluka Berry documents the histories of communities as if he is examining the history of the world through a single grain of sand. He studies the land and its people to find moments when they come together to create a specific cultural landscape of earth, history, and humanity. With a single click, Berry captures the specific character of his subjects to reveal a uni
Aaron Bryant, Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of African American History & Cultu