logo
Cambridge museum offers reflection room for ‘triggering' slavery exhibit

Cambridge museum offers reflection room for ‘triggering' slavery exhibit

Telegraph29-03-2025

Cambridge's leading museum has provided a reflection room for visitors 'triggered' by an exhibition about the slave trade.
The university's Fitzwilliam Museum has launched a flagship exhibition titled Rise Up Resistance, Revolution, Abolition, which explores the fight to end transatlantic slavery.
The show's accompanying book has caused an academic row at Cambridge over claims that Prof Stephen Hawking benefited financially from slavery.
In addition to a content warning on entry to the exhibition, curators have provided a room for those who 'may feel overwhelmed or triggered by this subject matter'.
The Fitzwilliam will also host events designed to facilitate dialogue and centre on key themes in the exhibition.
The first of these will cover issues including the 'transmission of cultures by people of the African diaspora in response to empire, colonialism and the slave trade'.
The room in the Fitzwilliam provides pamphlets to guide visitors to 'wellbeing' material and other resources.
These include the websites of mental health charities, including specialists with the Black African and Asian Therapists Network, and curriculum material covering black history. The guide also directs visitors to citizens' advice.
The large room is furnished with tables and soft chairs and filled with books covering issues of race, including volumes by TV historian David Olusoga.
Also available is Richard Dyer's set of essays, White, which looks at the 'representation of whiteness by whites in Western visual culture'.
The Fitzwilliam website states that the exhibition is suitable for children and 'for everyone' because 'all live with the consequences of transatlantic slavery, and we cannot understand today's world or the legacies of structural racism and inequalities without knowledge of it'.
It covers everything from abolition movements to modern-day racist injustices and has an accompanying book-length catalogue.
A central claim in the catalogue is that 'slave trade financial instruments shaped the intellectual life of the university by supporting the country's most renowned mathematicians and scientists'.
This states that men including Hawking, Charles Darwin's scientist son George, and physicist Arthur Eddington benefited financially from the slave trade.
It says that their professorships were paid for through an initial request in 1768 of £3,500 from a mathematician and university vice-chancellor named Robert Smith.
This was from stock bound up in 'South Sea Annuities', stock the Fitzwilliam has claimed was linked to investments in the slave trade.
Leading British men of science are therefore linked to what the book exhibition terms 'dark finance'.
However, the research has been disputed by leading historians, including Lord Andrew Roberts, Sir Noel Malcolm, and Cambridge professors David Abulafia, Lawrence Goldman, and Robert Tombs.
Prof Tombs criticised the work of Cambridge to attach historic guilt, saying that 'we are sadly accustomed to seeing our great institutions damaging themselves and the country that supports them'.
'This case is doubly dispiriting as a great university institution shows itself resistant to argument and indifferent to evidence.'
The Rise Up exhibition was launched in February to document the history of black and white abolitionists, particularly those linked to Cambridge.
It offers an overview of life on plantations and the move toward abolition and states that some African merchants participated in the slave trade.
The book created for the exhibition contains a number of academic contributions on the slave trade and opens with a statement that the 'fight for true equality, justice and repair continues'.
The Fitzwilliam said the research was correct and important.
A spokesman said: 'The Rise Up reflection space gives the opportunity for visitors to explore, create, read, learn and reflect after viewing the exhibition.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Powys couple mark 65th wedding anniversary with celebration
Powys couple mark 65th wedding anniversary with celebration

Powys County Times

time3 hours ago

  • Powys County Times

Powys couple mark 65th wedding anniversary with celebration

A couple in Llanfair Caereinion who moved there shortly after getting married celebrated their 65th wedding anniversary. Ken and Sheila Wynne, who have lived in Llanfair Caereinion for more than six decades, marked their milestone anniversary with a party at the Goat Hotel in Llanfair on Saturday, June 14. The couple first met in primary school in Alberbury, Shropshire, before eventually marrying on June 11, 1960. In the year Ken and Sheila were married, The Beatles were performing their first shows in Liverpool and Hamburg, John F Kennedy became US President after defeating Richard Nixon in the November election, Alfred Hitchcock's iconic thriller Psycho premiered, and 17 African nations declared independence from colonial powers like Britain and France. READ MORE At 18 years old, Ken was called up for three years national service in the Royal Air Force (RAF). Then from age 21 until retirement he was a postman in the Llanfair Caerainion area, as well as serving as an on-call fireman for Llanfair Caereinion Fire Station. He also enjoyed painting and decorating. Sheila worked at Llanfair Caereinion High School as a cook and dinner lady with Powys catering until retiring but also volunteered as a member of the local Women's Institute and Mother's Union. They are both keen gardeners and active members of Llanfair dominoes league for many years. More than sixty years after getting married, they now have three children, seven grandchildren and six great grandchildren.

Friends and Spider-Man star dies in his sleep aged 96 after 60-year Hollywood career
Friends and Spider-Man star dies in his sleep aged 96 after 60-year Hollywood career

Scottish Sun

timea day ago

  • Scottish Sun

Friends and Spider-Man star dies in his sleep aged 96 after 60-year Hollywood career

STAR GONE Friends and Spider-Man star dies in his sleep aged 96 after 60-year Hollywood career LEGENDARY actor Jack Betts, known for his roles in Friends and Spider-Man, has died aged 96. The Hollywood star died in his sleep at his home in Los Osos, California, on Thursday. 2 Jack Betts has died 2 Actress Doris Roberts and Jack Betts arrive at the party celebrating the 200th Episode of 'Everybody Loves Raymond' Credit: Getty Betts befriended Everybody Loves Raymond star Doris Roberts and shared a home with her. Born in Miami, Florida, in 1929, the legend first began his career on Broadway, in an adaptation of William Shakespeare's Richard III. He then went on to an incredibly successful career, playing various characters across TV shows and movies. Betts had a cameo in the Batman Forever movie in 1995 and Batman & Robin two years later. But after appearing as Hunt Powers across the Italian Spaghetti Western films, his career rocketed. The legend had bluffed his way into the 1966 Franco Giraldi's Sugar Coat starring role and he held it for 12 consecutive films - ending in 1972. Speaking to the Dev Show in 2021, he said: "In the hotel next to mine was Clint Eastwood. "He'd go up to his mountain and do his Western and I'd go up to my mountain and do my Western. "But while his films had distribution all over the world, my films were distributed [everywhere] except Canada and America." Betts then went back to Broadway and starred as Dracula between 1977 to 1980. More to follow... For the latest news on this story, keep checking back at The U.S. Sun, your go-to destination for the best celebrity news, sports news, real-life stories, jaw-dropping pictures, and must-see videos. Like us on Facebook at TheSunUS and follow us on X at @TheUSSun

Hit musical Mamma Mia! returns to Glasgow in summer 2026
Hit musical Mamma Mia! returns to Glasgow in summer 2026

Glasgow Times

timea day ago

  • Glasgow Times

Hit musical Mamma Mia! returns to Glasgow in summer 2026

The show will tour the UK, stopping at the King's Theatre from August 13 to 29, 2026. Tickets will be available from today, Friday, June 20, at 12pm via The casting for the tour has yet to be announced. (Image: Supplied) The musical, which started in the West End, features ABBA's songs in a tale about a mother, her daughter, and three possible fathers on a Greek island. Now in its 26th year, MAMMA MIA! has been seen by more than 11 million people and has played over 10,000 performances in London's West End. Read more: Man dies on beach after 'taking unwell' Date of first Rangers vs Celtic 2025/26 Scottish Premiership fixture confirmed Glasgow will be as hot as Ibiza today - here's the forecast It has also toured internationally, performing in 42 countries in the past 20 years, and has been seen by more than 7.3 million people. The musical became the ninth longest-running show in Broadway history and was the first Western musical to be staged in Mandarin in China. (Image: Supplied) Globally, more than 70 million people have seen MAMMA MIA! live on stage. The musical's success also translated to the big screen. Produced by Judy Craymer, MAMMA MIA! the movie became the highest-grossing live-action musical film of all time upon its release in 2008. A sequel, MAMMA MIA! Here We Go Again, released in July 2018, also achieved significant success. Both films featured stars like Meryl Streep, Christine Baranski, Julie Walters, Pierce Brosnan, Colin Firth, Amanda Seyfried, and Dominic Cooper. The second film also included performances by Lily James, Andy Garcia, and Cher. MAMMA MIA! features music and lyrics by Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus. The musical is written by Catherine Johnson, directed by Phyllida Lloyd, and choreographed by Anthony Van Laast. The production is designed by Mark Thompson, with lighting by Howard Harrison, sound by Andrew Bruce and Bobby Aitken, and musical supervision and additional material by Martin Koch.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store