Latest news with #transatlanticSlaveTrade


BBC News
a day ago
- Entertainment
- BBC News
Essex artist Elsa James opens British slavery exhibition
A renowned Essex-based artist is looking to reflect on three centuries of Britain's involvement in the transatlantic slave trade through her new James recently launched It Should Not Be Forgotten at Firstsite museum in Colchester, with the intention of "exposing the atrocities of this history".The collection of work features colonial archive records alongside photography, soundscapes and a mixture of media."The work is melding all of those fragmented bits of history together using new media," James told the BBC. "It's a response to what this history has done to people in the African diaspora - that rupture and erasure." Within the exhibition, James presents a series of text screen prints that give a voice to two enslaved women that were featured in the journals of the British plantation enslaver Thomas said: "I tried to give the women a voice that wasn't abused, but a voice of their own."As humans, I've given them back their humanity and womanhood."Visitors can also explore a large-scale photographic installation that draws inspiration from American academic Christina Sharpe, larger-than-life-sized images created in collaboration with choreographer Seke Chimutengwende, and a collection of drawings, photomontages and said: "It urges audiences to reflect on three centuries of Britain's involvement in the trafficking of African people - recognising it as a crime against humanity that has led to racist ideologies that still impact Black people today." Follow Essex news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.


Arab News
09-06-2025
- General
- Arab News
What We Are Reading Today: Worlds of Unfreedom by Roquinaldo Ferreira
In 'Worlds of Unfreedom,' Roquinaldo Ferreira recasts West Central Africa as a key battleground in the struggle to abolish the transatlantic slave trade between the 1830s and the 1860s. Ferreira foregrounds the experiences and agency of enslaved Africans, challenging Eurocentric narratives that marginalize African participation in abolition efforts. Drawing on archival research, he shows how enslaved people resisted the oppressive systems that sought to commodify their lives. He integrates microhistorical analysis with broader world history.