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The Ivory Coast and the Vanishing Elephant: A History of Trade, Memory, and Survival

The Ivory Coast and the Vanishing Elephant: A History of Trade, Memory, and Survival The nation known today as Ivory Coast—officially Côte d’Ivoire—carries in its very name the memory of an animal that once defined its landscape: the elephant. The story of the Ivory Coast is not simply about geography or commerce; it is a layered history of extraction, environmental change, and human survival, where the fate of elephants and people became deeply intertwined. A Name Rooted in Trade During the 15th and 16th centuries, European traders began mapping and naming the West African coastline according to the resources they sought. Regions became known as the Gold Coast, the Grain Coast, and the Slave Coast. This particular stretch of land was called the Ivory Coast because of its abundance of elephants and the highly valued tusks they carried. Ivory was a global luxury commodity. It was carved into religious figures, jewelry, decorative objects, and later used in piano keys and fine instrument...

Echoes of the Sahel: Elephants, Ivory, and the Endurance of Human Lineage

Echoes of the Sahel: Elephants, Ivory, and the Endurance of Human Lineage There was a time when the land we now call the Sahel—stretching across the southern edge of the Sahara—was not defined by dryness and dust, but by a richer ecological rhythm. Parts of what is now Senegal held woodlands and savanna corridors where wildlife moved freely. Among them were elephants, enormous steady, shaping the land as they traveled—uprooting trees, dispersing seeds, and sustaining the balance of their environment. Today, those elephants are gone from Senegal. Their disappearance is not a mystery. It is a story tied to climate shifts, yes—but more sharply to human systems of extraction. As global demand for ivory grew, elephants across West Africa became targets. Hunting intensified, trade routes expanded, and the living animal was reduced to the value of its tusks. Over time, populations collapsed. In Senegal, they vanished. At the same time, another trade was unfolding—one even more devastating in ...

Rootwork and Rhizomes: Biological Resilience and Decentralized Wisdom in African American Heritage

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  Rootwork and Rhizomes: Biological Resilience and Decentralized Wisdom in African American Heritage ​In the study of systems thinking, the rhizome serves as a powerful metaphor for resilience. Unlike a traditional tree with a single, vulnerable taproot (the "taproot" model of leadership), a rhizomatous plant grows horizontally, sending out roots and shoots from any node. If one part is severed, the system does not die; instead, it regenerates and spreads. This biological reality provides a profound lens through which to view the survival strategies and organizational genius of African American culture. ​ The Botanical Heritage of Resistance ​The connection begins with the land. Many enslaved Africans were "forest people" who carried into the diaspora an expert knowledge of root crops and botany. In the context of the plantation, this expertise evolved into "root work." This was not merely a spiritual practice; it was a sophisticated system of undergro...

The Living Web: Interweaving Systems Thinking and Indigenous African Epistemologies

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  The Living Web: Interweaving Systems Thinking and Indigenous African Epistemologies ​Modern systems thinking, often celebrated as a 20th-century breakthrough in Western science, emerged to challenge the limitations of linear reductionism. However, for millennia, indigenous African knowledge systems have operated through holistic, relational, and non-linear frameworks. By examining these two domains, we find a profound alignment where ancient wisdom provides the biological and social architecture for what science is only beginning to formalize. ​ 1. Relational Ontologies: Beyond the Individual ​Central to many African philosophies is the concept of Ubuntu —often translated as "I am because we are." In the language of systems, this represents a sophisticated recognition of interdependence . While Western systems thinking often views the "system" as an abstract entity or a collection of nodes, African knowledge views it as a "web of relations." ​In this...

Rhizomatic Structures: Organizing Like Nature

PowerPoint presentation:  Rhizomatic Structures: Organizing Like Nature Rhizomatic structures are models of organization inspired by natural root systems known as rhizomes. Unlike traditional hierarchical systems that resemble trees—with a central trunk and branching levels—rhizomes grow horizontally, spreading in multiple directions without a single origin or center. This makes them decentralized, interconnected, and highly adaptive. The concept of the rhizome was developed philosophically by Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari in their book A Thousand Plateaus. They used it to describe systems that grow through relationships and connections rather than through hierarchy and control. Key Characteristics of Rhizomatic Systems Rhizomatic systems share several defining features. First, they are decentralized, meaning there is no single authority controlling the entire structure. Instead, decision-making is distributed across the network. Second, they emphasize connectivity. Any part of...

Rootwork: The Underground Remembers

“ Rootwork: The Underground Remembers” A Spoken Word Performance on Rhizomes and Resistance (Lights low. A slow breath. A single voice begins—steady, grounded.) They tried to map us like trees. Straight lines. Clear roots. Branches labeled, numbered, controlled. But we were never trees. We were roots that refused to be seen. (Pause. Step forward.) Beneath the soil— where silence is not absence, but strategy— we learned how to move without being caught. Not upward… but outward. Not ordered… but connected. Like something ancient whispering through the dark. (Beat.) Call it survival. Call it memory. Call it what  and  once named— the rhizome. But we didn’t need the word to know the way. (Shift tone—more rhythmic.) A knock on the door that meant run. A song in the field that meant north. A lantern in the window that meant safe. This was the language of the — not written in books, but carried in breath, in footsteps, in trust. No headquarters. No single map. No one body to break. B...

Rhizomes and Historical Underground Movements

Rhizomes and Historical Underground Movements The concept of the rhizome, developed by Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari in A Thousand Plateaus, offers a powerful way to understand underground movements throughout history. These movements often operated not as rigid hierarchies, but as decentralized, adaptive networks—much like rhizomes in nature. The Rhizome as a Survival Structure A rhizome spreads underground, hidden from view, sending out shoots in multiple directions. This makes it: difficult to control or destroy capable of regenerating after disruption able to grow quietly beneath the surface Historical underground movements adopted similar structures—not necessarily by theory, but by necessity. When visibility meant danger, invisibility became intelligence. Key Rhizomatic Traits in Underground Movements 1. Decentralization No single leader held all knowledge. Leadership was often distributed to avoid collapse if one person was captured. 2. Secrecy through fragmentation Particip...