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Settler Nationalism in America

This podcast develops a settler colonial interpretation of "American Architecture" using concepts from settler colonial theory, cultural studies, and architectural history. Each episode interprets one architectural case study found in the University of Texas at Austin's Alexander Archives. This research was completed by students enrolled in an architectural history elective course in the School of Architecture.

  1. 8

    The Ninth Ward, New Orleans

    This episode examines the Lower Ninth Ward as a case study in the ongoing structure of settler colonialism and its impact on land, vulnerability, and community displacement. Rather than treating Hurricane Katrina as an isolated tragedy that impacted the Lower Ninth Ward, Shannon Lee and Gabriela Garza explore how disasters like this reveals deeper historical patterns: indigenous dispossession, racialized settlement after emancipation, political infrastructure like levees, and redevelopment policies that classify land as valuable while treating communities like expendable resources.Drawing on ideas of scholars such as Patrick Wolfe and Lorenzo Veracini, the episode argues that settler colonialism is not a past event, but a living structure that organizes land around capital, extraction, and occupation. This was first through labeling of indigenous land as vacant, then through the unequal provision of infrastructure to Black residents, and finally through post-Katrina redevelopment that frames the neighborhoods as a blank slate.The episode expands beyond New Orleans, connecting the Lower Ninth Ward to other sites of disaster and dispossession such as Houston’s 2017 floods, Maui’s 2023 fires, East Palestine, Ohio’s chemical derailment, and Port Arthur’s industrial exposure. Across these cases, the hosts highlight a recurring logic: land and capital are protected while certain communities are exposed to harm.Listeners will learn how settler colonial logics persist in policy, planning, environmental risk, and urban redevelopment, and how questioning these logic is essential for pursuing land justice and equitable rebuilding.

  2. 7

    Levitt & Sons, Levittown, PA (1952)

    In this podcast, Fiona Pravida and Olivia Brand examine the long history of Levittown, Pennsylvania to examine the ways that the racial restrictions of settler colonialism evolved into new legalized patterns of racial exclusion in the postwar period. In comparing the language of the Walking Purchase treaty of 1737 with the restrictive covenants recorded in Levittown deeds of the 1960s, Pravida and Brand find these two documents share a common racialized conception of land ownership, which "turn(s) words into boundaries." Since settler colonial ideas continue to evolve in the present, we must pay attention to what other patterns persist in subversively maintaining age-old standards of white supremacy in the American landscape.

  3. 6

    Atlantic Terra Cotta Company, New York, NY (1907-1943)

    In this episode, Lei'Aylah Anderson-Combee examines the critical role of terracotta as an ornamental material in promoting a Eurocentric conception of American character. Tracing its use in modernizing cities across Texas, Anderson-Combee compares the ways that terracotta ornament and indigenous cave painting produced diverging political interpretations of American indigeneity.

  4. 5

    Colored Carnegie Library, Houston, Texas (1913), William Sydney Pittman architect

    In this episode, Allison Frederick examines the ways that the Houston Colored Carnegie Library subversively promoted settler colonial ideas about white supremacy and Black inferiority. In her analysis, she demonstrates the ways that philanthropy, whiteness, and imperialism worked together to keep the settler narrative alive, even as Black communities became stronger and self-sufficient. Settler Colonialism doesn’t end when the land is taken, but lives within the institutions that help people live in it.

  5. 4

    P. L. Mannen Residence, San Antonio, Texas, Ayers & Ayers Architects (1926)

    In this episode, Rohan Bergfield investigates the settler colonial overtones of the L.P. Mannen Residence, a 1926 home that looks like it belongs to the romantic Spanish mission era. This home's mission aesthetic displaces the indigenous Mexican architectural identities originally found on this site with a selective, idealized image crafted to instate white ownership and belonging.

  6. 3

    Brooks County Courthouse, Falfurrias, Texas (1914), Alfred Giles architect

    In this episode, Jake Pescatore argues that English architect Alfred Giles' design for the Brooks County Courthouse was the result of a western settler-colonial mindset infecting the world of architecture towards the end of the 19th century. Following the design trends of the time, the neo-classical style should be viewed as something of an "invasive species," spreading ready-made ideas about American character around the world to rural areas of the U.S., urban developments in the U.S.-controlled Philippines, and to various other third world countries. Wherever neo-classicism manifested, local architectures could find itself being choked out, or pushed to the outskirts of the town or city that it once called home.

  7. 2

    Old Main Building at UT Austin, Austin, Texas (1882-1889), The Ruffini Brothers

    In this episode, Sriya Katanguru uses the architectural plans and first buildings created for the University of Texas at Austin's campus to analyze the relationship between land, the university, and the state. She finds that both the aesthetic choices and the commercialization of land holdings continues to support a settler colonial narrative of American education and citizenship to this day.

  8. 1

    Mission de Valero (later known as The Alamo), San Antonio, Texas, founded by Fray Antonio de San Buenaventura y Olivares (1718); restored by Ayers & Ayers Architects (1936)

    In this podcast, Joy Delight Presbre discusses they ways 19th century missionaries and 20th century travel agencies and preservationists used mission architectures to construct a white social imaginary to replace the native subjects of San Antonio with new definitions of white indigeneity.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

This podcast develops a settler colonial interpretation of "American Architecture" using concepts from settler colonial theory, cultural studies, and architectural history. Each episode interprets one architectural case study found in the University of Texas at Austin's Alexander Archives. This research was completed by students enrolled in an architectural history elective course in the School of Architecture.

HOSTED BY

University of Texas at Austin Architectural History Program

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Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Settler Nationalism in America have?

Settler Nationalism in America currently has 8 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Settler Nationalism in America about?

This podcast develops a settler colonial interpretation of "American Architecture" using concepts from settler colonial theory, cultural studies, and architectural history. Each episode interprets one architectural case study found in the University of Texas at Austin's Alexander Archives. This...

How often does Settler Nationalism in America release new episodes?

Settler Nationalism in America has 8 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to Settler Nationalism in America?

You can listen to Settler Nationalism in America on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts Settler Nationalism in America?

Settler Nationalism in America is created and hosted by University of Texas at Austin Architectural History Program.
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