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Jordan Brasher

Visiting Assistant Professor
Teaching FA 2024


As a broadly trained critical human geographer, my areas of research and teaching specialization include cultural-historical geography, GIS, the politics of memory and commemoration, heritage tourism landscapes, settler colonial studies, and critical race and ethnic studies. While I am interested in the globalized and transnational dimensions of commemorative processes, having been born and raised in rural Tennessee shapes my approach and orientation to my work, which has primarily been in the southern U.S. and Brazil. My doctoral dissertation examined the politics of commemorating the migration of U.S. Southerners to Brazil after the Civil War – who came to be known as “Confederados” – to avoid the consequences of Reconstruction. My findings earned the Best Paper Award for the Journal of Heritage Tourism in 2021 and have been featured in The ConversationThe Washington PostFolha de São Paulo, and other outlets.