The Neighborhood Story Project

P5

The Neighborhood Story Project

founded in 2004
based in New Orleans

Bruce “Sunpie” Barnes and Rachel Breunlin
With Janet Sula Evans, Marie Carmel Loiseau, Nana Anoa Nantambu, Baderinwa Rolland, Luisah Teish, Barbara Trevigne, and Dolores Watson

Since their founding in 2004 The Neighborhood Story Project has used the art of collaborative ethnography to create a vast collection of community-based stories in south Louisiana and beyond. The organization, in partnership with the University of New Orleans, creates portraits of the region by working with their collaborators to move the contours, planes, and angles of a place out onto a cultural canvas. They layer creative nonfiction and in-depth interviews, artifacts, folk and fine art, photographs, and music, among other materials, to craft an immersive space for learning and examination. For many years, The Neighborhood Story Project has turned their books into exhibitions and programs where their audiences are not only observers, but participants, who are able to connect with the lives and narratives presented, and can come away with a sense of how life histories are seated in wider social and cultural contexts. The Neighborhood Story Project often revives and preserves histories which may have been overlooked by mainstream media, and of places that are otherwise at risk of disappearing. Their ethnographies form the basis for art, publications, and performances, creating a new historical record of a place.

Janet Sula Evans at her shrine, the Temple of Light Ilé de Coin Coin in the Ninth Ward. Photo by Bruce “Sunpie” Barnes

Janet Sula Evans at her shrine, the Temple of Light Ilé de Coin Coin in the Ninth Ward. Photo by Bruce “Sunpie” Barnes

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