Brandi Summers

African American and African Diaspora Studies Department

Research Interests

Art

African-American Urban History

Inequality

Cultural Sociology

Brandi T. Summers, PhD, is an associate professor of African American and African Diaspora Studies, in the Department of African American and African Diaspora Studies at Columbia University, where she is the director of Graduate Studies. Her research engages theoretical themes that cut across multiple domains of social life. She builds on epistemological and methodological insights from Black studies, cultural and urban geography, urban sociology, and media studies by examining the cultural, political, and economic dynamics by which race and space are reimagined and reordered.

Summers’ first book, "Black in Place: The Spatial Aesthetics of Race in a Post-Chocolate City" (UNC Press, 2019), explores how aesthetics and race converge to map blackness in Washington, D.C. In it, she demonstrates the way that competing notions of blackness structure efforts to raise capital and develop land in the gentrifying city. Her second book, "Oakland Echoes: Reimagining and Reclaiming the Black City," is under contract with the University of California Press. It explores and highlights the roots and routes of resistance and reclamation, not only as a response to urban gentrification and related economic policies in her hometown, Oakland, but also as a quest to think about the past, present, and future of a Black city.

While an associate professor of Geography at the University of California, Berkeley, Summers was the principal investigator of the Mellon Foundation-supported Archive of Urban Futures (2022) in collaboration with the Oakland-based housing justice organization, Moms 4 Housing. The archive is a multimodal database of material, including documents, images, recordings, and maps that documents Oakland’s history and how it has changed over time, as well as efforts to foster emplacement and produce new worlds and urban futures. Summers also served as interim irector of the Institute for the Study of Societal Issues at UC Berkeley.

Summers is a contributing writer for Places Journal, and has published several articles and essays that analyze the relationship between race, power, aesthetics, and urbanization that appear in both academic and popular publications, including The New York Times, The Boston Globe, Urban Geography, and The Funambulist. She is on the editorial boards of SOULS, Urban Geography, City & Community, cultural geographies, Environment & Planning F, and AAG Review of Books. Summers is also a member of the Antipode editorial collective.