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Statues: the UK s plan to retain and explain problem monuments is a backwards step

When Black Lives Matter protesters in Bristol tore down the statue of a slave trader in summer 2020, it sparked public debate about how the UK handles and presents the darker parts of its history. In response to this, numerous museums and heritage bodies have taken a look at their collections’ links to slavery and empire and the best way to handle them. Unhappy about the way some have called for removal of contentious items, names and monuments, particularly statues, the government has announced a new “retain and explain” policy. This aims to protect controversial monuments and artefacts from removal, instead asking for more information to be provided about them. As culture secretary Oliver Dowden put it, the policy is an attempt to “defend our culture and history from the noisy minority of activists constantly trying to do Britain down”.

Decolonizing Museums: A Roundtable Discussion with Dr Dan Hicks, Dr Ruba Kana an, and curator Chaédria LaBouvier

Decolonizing Museums: A Roundtable Discussion with Dr Dan Hicks, Dr Ruba Kana an, and curator Chaédria LaBouvier
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The Brutish Museums by Dan Hicks review — should we return looted artefacts?

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Frances Larson: Undreamed Shores review – journeys without maps

Frances Larson: Undreamed Shores review - journeys without maps | reviews, news & interviews Frances Larson: Undreamed Shores review - journeys without maps Frances Larson: Undreamed Shores review - journeys without maps How the first female anthropologists found freedom far from home by Boyd TonkinTuesday, 02 March 2021 To the ends of the earth: Frances LarsonGemma Clarke Beatrice Blackwood had lived in a clifftop village between surf and jungle on Bougainville Island, part of the Solomon archipelago in the South Pacific. She hunted, fished and grew crops with local people as she studied their social and sexual lives; she joined the men on risky forays into other communities “that had never seen a white person before, but she never recorded any animosity from them”. Later, in 1936, she relocated to the remote interior of New Guinea.

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