Longlisted for the 2024 Berger Prize.
An important illustrated history of the relationship between Cambridge and the Black Atlantic.
Between 1400 and 1900, European powers, not least Britain, colonised the Americas and transported over 12.5 million people from sub-Saharan Africa as slaves. The contested space, formed by the interactions of multiple people and cultures, both Black and white, we now call the Black Atlantic. Cambridge and Cambridgeshire played a key role in this international narrative - a story of commerce, profit and colonialism, of opinion-forming, and of struggle.
Through the lens of historic artworks, artefacts and natural history specimens, this book and the exhibition it accompanies analyse the rise and growth of enslavement, the profits made by Dutch and British traders and plantation-owners, the power of images, the knowledge produced by enslaved people, histories of resistance movements and the consequences of these events today. Works by contemporary makers challenge long-held assumptions, address erasures, and create alternative narratives of repair, freedom and justice.
ISBN: | 9781781301234 |
Publication date: | 7th September 2023 |
Author: | Fitzwilliam Museum |
Publisher: | Philip Wilson Publishers an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing (UK) |
Format: | Paperback |
Pagination: | 192 pages |
Genres: |
Exhibition catalogues and specific collections Colonialism and imperialism Slavery and abolition of slavery Historiography History of art European history African history Museology and heritage studies |