The Southern Memory Workers Collaborative is a network of activists, organizers, and cultural workers who are dedicated to documenting, preserving and stewarding stories, traditions, and liberatory practices in the U.S. South.

Tell us about your memory work practice!

Our movements need memory workers now more than ever. However, the barriers to learning the skills associated with archival science, oral history, and related fields remain significant, especially in the Southern U.S. 

The Southern Memory Workers Collaborative is a network of organizers and cultural workers who are dedicated to documenting, preserving and stewarding stories, traditions, and liberatory practices in the U.S. South. 

The Collaborative seeks to identify and increase training opportunities for Southern movement memory workers and to deepen connections between cultural workers and memory workers across the region by conducting a survey. 

Deadline: June 13th

The work of the Collaborative will focus on the following goals:

Research

Conduct regional landscape analysis and skills assessment of southern memory work practices.

Relationships

Identify and foster relationships among partnering organizations, community groups, and individuals to further the implementation of the southern memory worker collaborative

Rooted in Place

Connect southern memory workers to folk school traditions and practices across the southeast U.S.


Meet the Advisory Committee


Ashby Combahee (s/he/they) is a memory worker and full-time librarian & archivist at the Highlander Research and Education Center. As a southern folk school archivist, Ashby’s subject matter expertise includes labor studies, LGBTQ history, southern folk culture, and Black radical tradition. They are an oral historian with Georgia Dusk: a southern liberation oral history and the Georgia Transgender Oral History. They’re also a songster and multi-instrumentalist, including the most recently learned instrument - banjo.

Margaret Lawson (they/them) is a queer community historian and public educator raised in central Mississippi. Margaret currently serves as the Director of Programming and Outreach for Invisible Histories, a nonprofit dedicated to locating, researching, and making accessible LGBTQ+ southern history. They also serve as the Director of Connections and Memory for Jxnology and the Free Folx Skool, a radical art collective and folk school project in Jackson, Mississippi. Margaret hopes to dedicate their life to making accessible stories of queer resistance and community building in the South, and in their work they strive always to close the artificial gaps created between the fields of archiving and history and the world of current activism and liberation struggles.


Maranda Perez (they/she) is Highlander Research and Education Center’s Library and Archive Collections Manager, based in New Market, Tennessee. They are a historian and movement librarian looking to make information easily accessible and usable for the purpose of collective liberation. 

Dartricia Rollins (she/her) is the Visiting Librarian for Oral History in the Rose Library at Emory University and co-founder of Georgia Dusk: a southern liberation oral history. She is an organizer with the Black Alliance for Peace and the Jericho Movement and co-host of Revolutionary African Perspectives (RAP) on WRFG 89.3.

Caroline Rubens (she/her) is a cultural worker and archivist who lives in eastern Kentucky. She recently concluded a 16-year tenure at Appalshop, where she preserved and provided access to a multimedia archive documenting Appalachian history, art, and social movements. Caroline advocates for the preservation of marginalized community histories and, in 2017, co-coordinated the conference track “Disrupting Mainstream History: Memory Keeping, Storytelling, and Archives” at the Allied Media Conference. She holds an MA in Moving Image Archiving and Preservation from NYU and believes that archives are spaces for connecting with the past, and for imagining new futures.


Sophie Ziegler (they / them) is an archivist, oral historian, parent, and aspiring juggler with over fifteen years' experience in the cultural heritage field. They are the founding director of Solidarity History Initiative, which interfaces between organizers and cultural heritage institutions. They host the podcast "What Is Solidarity History?" to explore the overlap between memory work and movement organizing. They founded the (since sunsetted) Louisiana Trans Oral History Project, co-founded Mapping Trans Joy, and run the zine library Screaming Into The Future.


Spring 2025 Tour!

In May, 2025, the Collaborative is doing a series of site-visits across the Southeast United States. This trip focuses on sites that demonstrate folk school frameworks of cultural stewardship through archival practices, artmaking, and food justice. The folk school framework involves noncompulsory, noncompetitive communal learning in a postsecondary setting. The Collaborative draws on Highlander’s tradition of folk schooling which cultivates studying as an act of challenging the existing social order for advancing democracy.


Documentarian

V Starks (he/they) is an Atlanta-based cultural worker, interdisciplinary artist, and creative facilitator committed to organizing toward a more liberated South. A storyteller at heart, they have a deep interest in community archiving and memory work. He is a prospective MLIS student and aspiring librarian / archivist. V is the founder and one of the stewards of QueerSouf, an emergent audio program and zine centered on Southern QTBIPOC (and especially Black) communities and our praxes of survival, culture-making, and world-building. The project will feature experimental storytelling, oral histories, and musical performances.


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