Cannibal Museology. Escaping categories to disrupt technologies of conquest

Cannibal Museology. Escaping categories to disrupt technologies of conquest Material and bodily relations and interactions are of fundamental importance for framing cannibalism of the technologies of conquest and of ethnographic museums specifically. The museum instead is not seen as an institution but as part of the bigger continuum of conquest and it’s embodiment by the Western powers. The body is not seen as a monad, as a discrete and spatially limited category, but as a source, a force and an opportunity, as a site of otherness within oneself but also as limited by difference.

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27.09.2024 | by Ekaterina Golovko

Amilcar Cabral and decolonization today

Amilcar Cabral and decolonization today This year marks the 50th anniversary of the Portuguese Revolution and the centenary of the birth of one of the most influential leaders of the African decolonization movement. Transatlantically, Cuba played an important part militarily and politically in ejecting the colonizers, while Brazilian educator Paolo Freire was influenced by Cabral’s education for the people. Their ideas are very relevant today.

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10.09.2024 | by Graham Douglas