Author and historian Dr. Timothy E. Nelson joins “Conversations Different” to discuss Blackdom, N.M., a settlement of Black pioneers that formed in southeast New Mexico in the early 1900s.
Nelson, whose book “Blackdom, New Mexico: The Significance of the Afro-Frontier, 1900-1930” was published last summer, talks about the historical context in which the settlement existed and dispels the narrative that Blackdom was a failure. He also talks about what it’s been like to write about a history that many people were previously unaware of and what he’s noticed about how people respond when new information conflicts with popular understanding.

Heidi Li Feldman on political organizing and upcoming ‘No Kings’ 3 rally in Santa Fe
38:30

Lauren Camp’s new poetry book ‘Is Is Enough’ shares tales of living with grief
36:30

A conversation with Meg Whitman on New Mexico’s economic potential and her life after politics
34:18