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In 'Soil,' Camille Dungy weaves together gardening, race and motherhood

In 'Soil,' Camille Dungy weaves together gardening, race and motherhood

Released Thursday, 9th May 2024
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In 'Soil,' Camille Dungy weaves together gardening, race and motherhood

In 'Soil,' Camille Dungy weaves together gardening, race and motherhood

In 'Soil,' Camille Dungy weaves together gardening, race and motherhood

In 'Soil,' Camille Dungy weaves together gardening, race and motherhood

Thursday, 9th May 2024
Good episode? Give it some love!
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For poet Camille Dungy, environmental justice, community interdependence and political engagement go hand in hand. She explores those relationships in her book, Soil: The Story of a Black Mother's Garden. In it, she details how her experience trying to diversify the species growing in her yard, in a predominantly white town in Colorado, reflects larger themes of how we talk about land and race in the U.S. In today's episode, she tells NPR's Melissa Block about the journey that gardening put her on, and what it's revealed about who gets to write about the environment.

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