Reckoning with Racism: The Social Memory of the Slave Trade
This day-long symposium will showcase new directions for public institutions to engage and grapple with the history, memory and legacies of slavery and colonialism in Portugal, across Europe and throughout the Lusophone world.
As the European country with the longest historical involvement in the slave trade, and with a growing call for a public confrontation with this past and its legacies, Portugal constitutes a crucial space to host a public discussion about how a palpable silence remains in our museums, memorials and public institutions about this history and respective heritage, despite slavery having shaped our modern world.
Scholars, curators, preservationists, and museum professionals from Portugal, Angola, Brazil, Mozambique, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and the United States will explore important questions, catalyze conversations, and address questions about diversity in participation, research, and representation of this past and its presence in our present questions of social and racial justice in local, national, and global contexts.
PROGRAMME
9pm - 10.45am
SLAVERY AND MEMORY PORTUGAL
Evalina Dias, José Lino, Isabel Castro Henriques, Paulo Almeida Fernandes
Moderator Raquel Machaqueiro
10:45am - 11am - Coffee break
11am - 13pm
SLAVERY AND MEMORY IN THE LUSOPHONE WORLD
Aline Montenegro, José Andrade, Afonso Vita, Rui Gomes Coelho
Moderator Maria Vlachou
1pm - 2:30pm - Lunch
2:30pm - 3:45pm
THE SLAVE WRECKS PROJECT: BULDING A GLOBAL ARCHIPELAGO OF CONSCIOUSNESS
Kate McMahon, Stephen Lubkemann, Dave Conlin, Jay Haigler, Kamau Sadiki, Gabrielle Miller, Jaco Boshoff
3:45pm - 4pm - Coffee break
4pm - 5pm
DECOLONIAL MODELS AND INCLUSIVE APPROACHES OF COMMUNITIES IN MUSEOLOGICAL PRACTICES
Zandra Yeaman, Paul Reid, Mitchell Esajas
Moderator Paul Gardullo
© Smithsonian Museum/National Museum of African American History & Culture
Reckoning with the legacy of slavery in museums and social memory
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Other Culturgest | Auditorium Emílio Rui Vilar
Conference
07 Jan 202318h30 – 19h30
Race in the public square: the role of museums in difficult but necessary conversations