Tag: colonialism

  • Nation & World

    How to liberate African art

    In a Harvard Center for African Studies workshop, scholar Ciraj Rassool urges fuller reckoning with colonial legacies.

    4 minutes
    Ciraj Rassool and Emmanuel K. Akyeampong.
  • Nation & World

    What to keep

    Professors Ana Lucia Araujo of Howard University and Mame-Fatou Niang of Carnegie Mellon University discussed movements to remove or rebrand public memorials commemorating historical figures associated with slavery and colonialism during “Race and Remembrance in Contemporary Europe,” presented by the Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies.

    5 minutes
    Robert Milligan Statue.
  • Nation & World

    A day of reckoning

    We ask members of the Harvard community: “Is this the end of Columbus Day and how can America best replace it?”

    10 minutes
    Beheaded Columbus Statue.
  • Nation & World

    ‘Indian Sex Life’ and the control of women

    The intellectual questions Durba Mitra asks are formed both from her research and from her conversations with women on their experiences of social judgment.

    16 minutes
    Durba Mitra.
  • Nation & World

    Picking at the seams of Western hand-me-downs in Africa

    Joana Choumali, a Côte d’Ivoire-based artist noted for her work embroidering directly on photographs, has been named the Peabody’s 2020 Robert Gardner Fellow in Photography.

    4 minutes
    Embroidered photo of three people looking at cityscape and sunset across body of water.
  • Nation & World

    Getting to the why of British India’s bloody Partition

    Harvard’s South Asia Institute is examining the history and ramifications of the violent Partition of British India in 1947 into what would eventually become India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh.

    7 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Real talk

    Playwright and director Ifeoma Fafunwa brings the hopes and challenges of Nigerian women to Harvard with “Hear Word!,” making its U.S. premiere at the Harvard Dance Center this weekend.

    5 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Reflections on justice delayed

    Harvard History Professor Caroline Elkins discusses last week’s $30 million settlement in the long-running Mau Mau case, in which the British government apologized for colonial-era atrocities during Kenya’s Mau Mau rebellion.

    7 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Illuminating an unseen history

    In his new book, “Revolt: An Archaeological History of Pueblo Resistance and Revitalization in 17th Century New Mexico,” Assistant Professor of Anthropology Matthew Liebmann offers a first-of-its-kind look at how the Pueblo people lived during their brief independence from Spain.

    3 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Strong evidence

    The work of a Harvard history professor has bolstered the case of a group of elderly Kenyans who are seeking reparations from the British government for rape, castration, beatings, and other abuses that they say occurred during colonial-era efforts to suppress Kenya’s Mau Mau uprising.

    6 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Documenting a colonial past

    A Harvard doctoral student and two recent graduates worked in Kenya this summer with Harvard history professor Caroline Elkins to lay the foundation for a collaboration with Kenyan scholars to record the African nation’s experience gaining independence from Britain.

    4 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Johnson at 300

    Harvard’s Houghton Library, home to a comprehensive collection related to 18th century English literature, sponsored a three-day international literary celebration of lexicographer, poet, essayist, and moralist Samuel Johnson, born 300 years ago this year. His work has inspired centuries of scholarship and generations of fervent ‘Johnsonians.’

    3 minutes