Please note: our upcoming meetings for Semester II have all been cancelled. However, our mailing list is still open (feel free to DM if you need to sign up) & we hope to share more readings that may be useful to get us through the #coronavirus#COVID19#coronakindness stay safe x
"My hope resides in the fact that significant space has been cleared; my fear resides in the fact that we've proved ourselves really bad at holding the space we've cleared." My conversation with Paul Gilroy @bungatuffie https://t.co/PDvqJ6a83q Listen in.
Tracing Black Ancestry: Secrets of the 1817 Slave Registers Uncovered
31 July
ONLINE EVENT
Join Paul Crooks for this captivating account of how he traced his Black Caribbean ancestors enslaved on a sugar plantation in Jamaica, 200 years ago.
https://t.co/mbkThM6GRR
An Afternoon at The Digital Museum: #SCOTLAND and #SLAVERY
18 JUNE
ONLINE EVENT
How did Scots become involved? Who were the slave masters? How did Scotland benefit? How did we forget? What can we do now?
https://t.co/uXzQcp4c7w
@peggybrunache@ChristineHWhyte
@DJHamilton72
Doctoral Research Position available in the Project "James Baldwin's 21st-Century Career" at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven @KU_Leuven . Deadline 15 July 2020. https://t.co/stFXzCnuoh
'Getting Back the Land: Anticolonial and Indigenous Strategies of Reclamation', edited by Shiri Pasternak and Dayna Nadine Scott, a special issue of South Atlantic Quarterly @DukePress (119:2), is freely available in its entirety to the end of July! https://t.co/BAGoZpTIFN
This piece by @garyyounge on the realities of systemic racism is brilliant: https://t.co/p0YGSpRgLO
We spoke to Gary in 2016 about his book Another Day in the Death of America, still as sadly relevant today as it was then. You can listen here: https://t.co/9DP2du9dzM
Our Audio Long Reads podcast is currently republishing episodes from the archives. This week’s piece was written by Gary Younge in 2015, but the events in Minneapolis and across America this week show it remains as grimly relevant as ever.
Listen now on your favourite app.
VIRTUAL Black Abolitionist Walking Tour
26 May
9 June
24 June
ONLINE EVENT
90min walking tour in central London highlighting 6 sites where African American activists made an important impact on the British landscape
https://t.co/8m38BTQIiS
Exploring youth and violence 'in a world that’s sinking': Interesting interview between 'Hurricane Seasons' author Fernanda Melchor and translator Sophie Hughes @GrantaBooks https://t.co/nyBy1cdf5W
#FromtheArchive thread
This week we would like to use our archives post to foreground previous work by black British and Caribbean writers and thinkers in light of the ongoing George Floyd protests in America and solidarity protests taking place across the world.
1/4
"Your silence will not protect you."
We're reading Audre Lorde to celebrate the first day of #PrideMonth! Throughout June we’ll be celebrating incredible LGBTQ+ writers, but to get started we want to know your favourite LGBTQ+ writers and activists? #ReadMoreWomen
Virtual talk by Esthie Hugo 'Pain, Pleasure, and the World-Food-System', Thursday, June 4, 2020 at 4 PM – 5 PM. Hosted by Durham Uni's Centre for Culture and Ecology and READ: Research in English At Durham . Email organiser Prof. Kerstin Oloff to receive the talk link.
We real cool. We
Left school. We
Lurk late. We
Strike straight. We
Sing sin. We
Thin gin. We
Jazz June. We
Die soon.
- from We Real Cool by Gwendolyn Brooks #ReadMoreWomen )
@Routledge_JPW after ppl to write short 550 word reviews of the many exciting postcolonial/world lit academic titles coming out just now.
Trying to build up a roster of reviewers. If interested please email with broad research interests at [email protected].
Pls RT!
"I've learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel."
American poet, singer, memoirist, and civil rights activist, Maya Angelou died #OnThisDay in 2014 #ReadMoreWomen