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Saskia C Cornes

Assistant Professor of the Practice of the John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute
John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute

Selected Presentations & Appearances


Milton's Manuring: Eden, Eve, Enclosure, Epic - tgiFHI · November 2018 Lecture
The Educational "Ripple Effect" of Innovative Farm Programs: CASFS 50th Anniversary Keynote Symposium · July 29, 2017 Invited Talk Center for Agroecology and Sustainable Food Systems, UCSC Farm and Garden ,

Invited speaker for the fiftieth anniversary celebration of America's oldest organic farmer training program, founded in 1967 by Alan Chadwick

Educating for the Anthropocene: Transdisciplinary Work and the Campus Farm - Sustainable Agriculture in Higher Education Conference · July 2016 International Meeting or Conference Stanford University,
Notes from the Critical Zone: Working Knowledge and the Duke Campus Farm - Against Educational Apartheids Conference · 2015 Invited Talk Heyman Center for the Humanites, Columbia University ,
Embodied Knowledge: Growing Food and the Affect of Work - Modern Language Association Special Session · 2014 International Meeting or Conference Modern Language Association, Chicago
Beyond the Field Trip: What do Collaborations Between Academics and Practitioners Look Like on the Ground? - Yale Food Symposium · 2014 International Meeting or Conference Yale University ,
Futures Past: Climate Change and the Georgic Mode · 2013 International Meeting or Conference Association for the Study of Literature and the Environment, University of Kansas

Outreach & Engaged Scholarship


Story+ Project Leader - Story+ · 2023 Projects & Field Work
Story+ Project Leader - Story+ · 2021 - 2022 Projects & Field Work
Bass Connections Faculty Team Member - Sowers and Reapers: Gardening in an Era of Change · 2018 - 2019 Projects & Field Work

Primary Theme: Energy & Environment

Gardening is often seen as an apolitical relaxation pursuit. Yet in a time when neighborhoods are rapidly changing, gardens have become a place of race and politics, where history, contention, expression, resistance and negotiation meet. At the same time, the presence of an immigrant work force—landscaping companies largely staffed by migrant Latinos—means that the country’s divided opinions over immigration are at play among the plants. There is also a hidden kind of migration in the types of plants home gardeners buy for their gardens: Home Depot, Lowe’s and other big stores import plants from Mexico, Colombia and other countries, ensuring an ecosystem shift toward non-native species. Creating a resilient garden means paying attention to the life histories of individual species and how they interact with others in the community. But just as importantly, it means understanding why, how and to what purpose humans craft gardens. How does gardening shape identity? Do gardeners see their land as expressions of creativity or history, or even resistance? Gardens have plants, but also fences and walls. Where do gardens divide? What happens when community gardens meant to serve poor populations end up in gentrified areas, with the families priced out of an area “improved” by that very garden? And how do gardeners see the global effect of climate change on their worlds, where some heirloom plants are fading and non-native species threaten to take over?

Service to the Profession


Participant - Faculty Success Program · 2023 Professional Development National Center for Faculty Development & Diversity (NCFDD),
Board Member · June 2018 Committee Service Transplanting Traditions Community Farm ,

Service to Duke


Board Member · September 2017 Other Duke Human Rights Center ,
Faculty Co-Director · September 2016 - August 2017 Other DukeEngage, Seattle