Food & Memory
Spring 2025 Conference
The Conference: Food & Memory
Food & Memory is the third and final conference hosted by Rethinking Place: Bard-on-Mahicantuck. It aims to explore food systems, agricultural practices, and culinary histories as a point of entry into place-making, past, present, and future.
The conference brings together agricultural workers, chefs, food systems scholars, and artists to create fertile ground for interdisciplinary discussion. Situated on the banks of the Mahicantuck (Hudson River) at a time when current food systems, planetary health, and political and environmental instability pose existential threats to the sovereignty and wellbeing of human and non-human kin alike, Rethinking Place aims to center a diverse range of voices and histories that have touched and formed the current agricultural region in which Bard College is located.
The two prior Rethinking Place conferences, focused on emergent and disruptive archives and on Indigenous research methods, engaged themes that continue to apply to Food & Memory. Our complex food systems and their many human and non-human players – recipes and seeds, plants and care - can be seen as living archives, locations of research, and sites of knowledge production. Rethinking Place now hosts a multidisciplinary gathering to directly interrogate questions of food and memory, building on twenty-four months of work in adjacent areas. We are pleased to join our efforts in place-based inquiry with other entities on the Bard campus. For their support over the life of the Rethinking Place project, we thank the Bard Farm, the Center for Environmental Science and Humanities, the Center for Human Rights, and the Fisher Center for the Performing Arts.
Conference Schedule
Thursday
12:30pm, Olin Auditorium, Opening & Welcome
1:00pm, Olin Auditorium, Electa “Wuhwehweeheemeew” Quinney Keynote with Lucille Grignon
2:30pm, Stevenson Library, Exhibition Opening Reception & Curator Remarks (Exhibition Open 1:00-6:00)
3:00-5:30 pm, Stevenson Library, Marie Watt, Sewing Circle (space limited)
6:00pm, Finberg House Conference Room, Chop Chop Book Launch Dinner, co-hosted by BEM Bookstore (space limited)
Friday
8:30am, Olin Lobby/101, Morning Coffee & Pastries
9:00am, Olin Auditorium, Morning Movement & Sound Circle
[10:00am-6:00pm, Stevenson Library, Food & Memory Exhibition Open]
10:00am, Olin Auditorium, Taste the Revolution: The Evolution of Bengali Food Culture with Farah Momen
11:30am, Concurrent Morning Workshops
- Medicine Walk with Misty Cook (meet outside Olin)
- Land and Memory: Research protocols and investigations in colonial archives with Lucas Ondak and Frances Cathryn of Forge Project
- New Annandale House, Experimental Humanities Portable Sound Booth
1:00pm, Lunch catered by Samosa Shack, Olin Auditorium Lobby/Olin 101
2:30pm, Concurrent Afternoon Workshops
- Rethinking Place Food & Memory Fellow Presentations, Sage Liotta and Tatiana Blackhorse
- Olin 107, Place-Based Research & Zine Workshop
- Montgomery Place Kitchens, Jam Making Workshop
3:30pm, Olin Lobby, Afternoon Coffee
4:00pm, Olin Auditorium, Grow Food Not Prisons: Building a movement towards Liberation and Justice with Jalal Sabur of Sweet Freedom Farm
6:00pm, Blithewood Manor, Stone Soup Community Dinner & Storytelling, co-hosted by the Bard Farm and Fisher Center Anti-Racism Working Group with Experimental Humanities Soundbooth
Saturday
9:30am, Olin Auditorium Lobby, Pastries & Morning Coffee
10:00am, Olin Auditorium, Closing Keynote with Kenny Perkins of Akwesasne Seed Hub
[10:00am-3:00pm, Olin 102, Children’s Reading Room]
[10:00am-6:00pm, Stevenson Library, Food & Memory Exhibition Open]
11:30am, Concurrent Afternoon Workshops
- Olin Auditorium, Growing interdependence panel with Choy Commons - Stevenson Library, Maize in the Milpas: Nixtamalized Corn Masa and Cuisine in the Americas with Dr. Luis Chávez-González
- Olin 102, Children’s Story Hour
1:00pm, Olin Lobby, Lunch for all
2:00pm, Concurrent Afternoon Workshop
- Olin 107, Panel on student organizing for food justice
- Olin Auditorium, Building Land-Based Solidarity Networks
4:00pm, Finberg House, Palestine Heirloom Seed Library Traveling Kitchen, (registration limited)
Locating Our Conference: Speakers and Talk/Event Descriptions
This Storymap resource helps to situate the work of the conference and our speakers, and provides a spatial understanding of the geographical reach of our conference. However, we would like to acknowledge that this mapping platform offers a limited conception of place due to its crediting of colonial boundaries and naming. While this map highlights the origins of the work being shared at this conference, we recognize that our notions of place go beyond this map as well, and the way we locate ourselves can span different locations due to histories of migration and displacement.
In line with our land acknowledgement below, we encourage all to learn more about what Native land they exist on, through the native-land.c a site.

BardEATS

BEM Brooklyn

Tatiana Blackhorse

Frances Cathryn

Misty Cook

Choy Commons

Lucille Rosemary Grignon

Nathan Kleinman

Stephanie Lee

Sage Liotta

Farah Momen

Lana Mustafa

Lucas Ondak

Justin Paulino

Kenny Perkins

Tara Rodriguez Besosa

Jalal Sabur

Vivien Sansour

Ozoz Sokoh

Leila Stallone

Maggie Thomas

Vassar Hunger Action

Marie Watt

Williams Recovery of All Perishable Surplus (WRAPS)

Luis Chávez-González

Experimental Humanities
Land Acknowledgement
In the spirit of truth and equity, it is with gratitude and humility that we acknowledge that we are gathered on the sacred homelands of the Munsee and Muhheaconneok people, who are the original stewards of the land. Today, due to forced removal, the community resides in Northeast Wisconsin and is known as the Stockbridge-Munsee Community. We honor and pay respect to their ancestors past and present, as well as to future generations, and we recognize their continuing presence in their homelands. We understand that our acknowledgement requires those of us who are settlers to recognize our own place in and responsibilities toward addressing inequity, and that this ongoing and challenging work requires that we commit to real engagement with the Munsee and Mohican communities to build an inclusive and equitable space for all.
Bard College’s land acknowledgment was developed in dialogue with the Stockbridge-Munsee Band of Mohican Indians. To learn more about the Stockbridge-Munsee Community, please visit www.mohican.com .
Rethinking Place and Bard Center for Indigenous Studies encourage all members of the Bard community and visitors to Bard’s Campus to please consider financially supporting the ongoing and essential work of the Stockbridge Munsee Community’s Cultural Affairs Department. Donations may be made at https://smcfinancevt.securepayments.cardpointe.com/pay .
Register for the Conference
Registration link here: https://www.eventbrite.com/cc/food-memory-a-conference-by-rethinking-place-3994933
More information & Contact
Location: Bard College, 30 Campus Rd, Annandale-On-Hudson, NY 12504
Contact: cfis@bard.edu
For Further Learning- Conference Syllabus
Olson, Sara Calvosa (Karuk), Chími Nu'am: Native California Foodways for the Contemporary Kitchen
Bitsoie, Freddie (Navajo) & James O. Fraioli, New Native Kitchen: Celebrating Modern Recipes of the American Indian
Weso, Thomas Peore (Menominee tribe), Good Seeds: A Menominee Indian Food Memoir
Webster, Rebecca M. (Oneida), Our Precious Corn: Yukwanénste
Oden, Loretta Barrett (Potawatomi tribe), Corn Dance: Inspired First American Cuisine
Pesantubbee, Michelene E. (Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma) & Michael J. Zogry (editors), Native Foodways: Indigenous North American Religious Traditions and Foods
All texts are available at the Bard Stevenson Library.
Native/BIPOC-Run Food Companies, Restaurants, and Farms Database
Graphic by Liam Dwyer '26