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This CFP is also available in Welsh.
Following the success of our previous events in London, Liverpool, Bristol, Preston, Huddersfield and Leicester, we would like to invite you to the twelfth of the Black British History Workshops (WHBBHXII), which will be held at Bangor University in North Wales on Thursday 30th April 2020. The Institute of Commonwealth Studies is delighted that the event will continue to be co-sponsored by our fellow institute at the School of Advanced Study, the Institute of Historical Research. The aim of the series is to foster a creative dialogue between researchers, educationalists (mainstream and supplementary), artists and writers, archivists and curators, and policy makers. It seeks to identify and promote innovative new research into the history of people of African origin or descent in the UK and facilitate discussion of the latest developments in the dissemination of Black British history in a wide variety of settings including the media, the classroom and lecture hall, and museums and galleries, thus providing an opportunity to share good practice. We welcome proposals for papers and presentations on a wide variety of themes relating to the history of people of African origin or descent in the UK. As we will be in Wales, proposals relating to Black Welsh History are particularly welcome. We would be delighted to hear from researchers, educationalists, archivists and curators or others interested in offering a presentation, lasting for 15-20 minutes. Please submit a title and a brief description of your presentation (no more than 300 words) as an attached Word document also stating your name, contact details, and, if you have them, Institution and Twitter handle to Professor Philip Murphy at [email protected] by Monday 16th March 2020. In addition, we would be happy to consider proposals for a complete panel. The panel should have a coherent unifying theme, and the proposal should include the abstracts of three related presentations and the names and affiliations of the presenters. We would also be very interested in providing A-level students, undergraduates or graduate students with an opportunity to give presentations on projects relating to Black British History. The day will run from 11am to 6.00pm, followed by a Reception. There will be a registration fee of £24 (£12 for students/unwaged) which includes lunch and refreshments. We are able to offer a small fee and travel bursaries to those speakers without institutional affiliation or support. Please register at https://commonwealth.sas.ac.uk/events.
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I'm really looking forward to What’s Happening in Black British History? XI, which will be at the University of London on Thursday 14th November 2019. It's a full day event- running from 10am- 6pm, followed by a Drinks Reception. We're opening with a special Retrospective session In Memoriam of Ian Duffield and Imtiaz Habib, two pioneers in the field, and supporters of WHBBH, who have sadly passed away in the last year. We're delighted that some of their peers and co-collaborators, Barbara Bush, Audrey Dewjee, Duncan Salkeld and Marika Sherwood are able to join us for a panel discussion to reflect on their work, its impact, and how far Black British History has come since they began their careers. Then onto our regular slot highlighting New Publications, where we'll hear about the updated 2nd edition of Stephen Bourne's Black Poppies: Britain's Black Community and the Great War; Rodreguez King- Dorset book on Black Classical Musicians and Composers, 1500-2000; Robin Walker's Black History Matters and the inclusion of 24 New Black Lives in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. After lunch we have a session on Queer Black British History, a topic we have long wanted to include in the WHBBH programme. Shaun Wallace will speak about Black Queer Artistic production in the UK from 1980-to the Present; then Veronika Mackenzie, Director at Reel Brit Productions, and Sue Lemos will give complimentary presentations on BAME LGBTQ+ Political Activism in the 1980s and the Black Lesbian Movement in Britain. Next we have a session on Engaging with the Community, hearing from Melissa Bennett and Iyamide Thomas about how they included objects belonging to Krios Londoners in the Museum of London exhibition on The Krios of Sierra Leone; Jasmine Breinburg and Frankie Chappell on how the Young Historians Project has uncovered the Hidden History of African Women and the British Health Service and Olivia twitter.com/oliviawyatt1999Wyatt on how she is telling the stories of Caribbean women and the Leeds “riots” of 1975 and 1981, both using oral history; and finally Machel Bogues on Engaging Young Londoners through the Bernie Grant Trust’s Marginalised No More Project. We'll finish with the usual final reflections session, chaired by Michael Ohajuru, where we will invite the audience to contribute their thoughts too. And the discussion and networking will continue informally at our Drinks Reception - always a highlight! Really hope you can join us for what looks to be a really thought provoking and stimulating day. You can find the booking form and full agenda here. If you can't make it, we'll be live-tweeting @BlackBritHist #WHBBHXI throughout the day... Call for Papers:What's Happening in Black British History? XI -deadline 16th September 201929/7/2019 Following the success of our previous events in London, Liverpool, Bristol, Preston, Huddersfield and Leicester, we would like to invite you to the eleventh of the Black British History Workshops (WHBBHXI), which will be held at Senate House, University of London on Thursday 14th November 2019. The Institute of Commonwealth Studies is happy to announce that the event will be co-hosted by our fellow institute at the School of Advanced Study, the Institute of Historical Research.
The aim of the series is to foster a creative dialogue between researchers, educationalists (mainstream and supplementary), artists and writers, archivists and curators, and policy makers. It seeks to identify and promote innovative new research into the history of people of African origin or descent in the UK and facilitate discussion of the latest developments in the dissemination of Black British history in a wide variety of settings including the media, the classroom and lecture hall, and museums and galleries, thus providing an opportunity to share good practice. We welcome proposals for papers and presentations on a wide variety of themes relating to the history of people of African origin or descent in the UK. This time we are particularly interested in featuring Queer Black British History, the role of Food in Black British History, and projects that digitise Black British History, making it more accessible to the public online. We would be delighted to hear from researchers, educationalists, archivists and curators or others interested in offering a presentation, lasting for 15-20 minutes. Please submit a title and a brief description of your presentation either in writing (in which case, of no more than 300 words) or in some other form (for example a clip or podcast) to Dr. Miranda Kaufmann at [email protected] by Monday 16th September 2019. In addition, we would be happy to consider proposals for a complete panel. The panel should have a coherent unifying theme, and the proposal should include the abstracts of three related presentations and the names and affiliations of the presenters. We would also be very interested in providing A-level students, undergraduates or graduate students with an opportunity to give presentations on projects relating to Black British History. The day will run from 11am to 6.00pm, followed by a Reception. There will be a registration fee of £24 (£12 for students/unwaged) which includes lunch and refreshments. Thanks to new sponsorship from the Institute of Historical Research, we are now able to offer a small fee and travel bursaries to those speakers without institutional affiliation or support, and you can register at https://commonwealth.sas.ac.uk/events/event/20183 So, in just under a month, I'll be in Jamestown, Virginia, speaking about Black Tudors at an event on Saturday 10th August programmed to mark the 400th anniversary of the first arrival of Africans in the first English colony in North America, and particularly to honour Angelo, the first named African woman in Virginia.
Captured during warfare in the Angolan kingdom of Ndongo, Angelo (also referred to as “Angela”) arrived in 1619, just days after the arrival of Virginia’s first documented Africans, described as numbering “20. and odd.” Not much is known about her life in the colony, but her name is recorded in the 1625 “Muster of the Inhabitants of Virginia,” (illustrated above) on loan from The National Archives for the first time in 400 years (so we'll both be crossing the Atlantic!). Angelo's story is also being told as part of Jamestown Settlement’s special exhibition “TENACITY: Women in Jamestown and Early Virginia” – a legacy project of the 2019 Commemoration, American Evolution. The full schedule for the day is listed below. In my talk, Before Virginia: Free Africans in Tudor and Stuart England, I'll be explaining that when the first Africans arrived in Virginia in August 1619, there had already been Africans living freely in England for over one hundred years. Just five months previously, a free African sailor, John Anthony of Dover, had set out for Virginia aboard the Silver Falcon. The ship only made it as far as Bermuda, but a few months later, John Anthony successfully petitioned for his wages, and was paid with interest to compensate for the delay. I''l be showing how his experience, and those of over 300 Africans I've identified living in England between 1500 and 1640, provides a fascinating contrast to the well- established (and yet still contested) narrative of the African experience in Colonial Virginia. I'll be exploring the lives of these Black Tudors and Stuarts; how they came to England, what occupations and relationships they found there and how they were treated by its church, its law courts and its people. So, if you happen to be in the area that weekend, or know anyone who will be, do come along/spread the word! You can read more about the event and buy tickets via the Jamestown Settlement website. I'm also very excited to visit Historic Jamestown and Colonial Williamsburg while I'm there. I'll try to find time to blog again when I get home and tell you all about it... EVENT DETAILS: Finding Angelo: Honoring the First African Women in Virginia Saturday August 10, 2019 • 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. 9:30 a.m. ○ Check-In/Coffee at the Group Arrivals Atrium, follow the signs at front of museum. • ROBINS FOUNDATION THEATER • 10 a.m. ○ “Before Virginia: Free Africans in Tudor and Stuart England” morning lecture by Dr. Miranda Kaufmann, senior research fellow at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of London. Dr. Kaufmann is the author of the critically acclaimed book, Black Tudors: The Untold Story, which was shortlisted for both the Wolfson History Prize and the Nayef Al-Rodhan Prize for Global Cultural Understanding in 2018. 11:10 a.m. ○ “Fugitives Politics, Gender and the World of Seventeenth-Century Angola” lecture by Dr. Jessica Krug, assistant professor of history at George Washington University. A historian of Black politics, imagination, gender and cultural practices, with a particular interest in West Central Africa and maroon societies and Black transnational cultural studies, Dr. Krug is the author of Fugitive Modernities: Kisama and the Politics of Freedom, which is currently a finalist for the Harriet Tubman Book Prize. 12:10 p.m. ○ Lunch on your own or with pre-ordered box lunch. 1:15 p.m. ○ “What’s in a Name” afternoon presentation by Katherine Egner Gruber, special exhibition curator at the Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation. One of the brains behind Jamestown Settlement’s “TENACITY: Women in Jamestown and Early Virginia” special exhibition, Gruber introduces the historical documents that bear Angelo’s name and explores what they tell us about her world. 1:30 p.m. ○ “Between Two Shores: The Heart of Angela” living-history performance by Valarie Gray Holmes, whose research informs a moving portrayal of “Angela” and her world. 2 p.m. ○ “American Heartbreak: American Memory and Racial Amnesia” presentation by Mark Summers, public historian for Preservation Virginia. Summers situates the commemoration of Jamestown within the civil rights struggle to acknowledge black history, revealing why “Angela’s” story is only now emerging, 400 years after she arrived at Jamestown. 3 p.m. ○ Break and opportunity to view “TENACITY” special exhibition. 3:45 p.m. ○ Panel discussion with the day’s presenters, moderated by Barbara Hamm Lee, executive producer and host of WHRV-FM’s Another View. Book signings by Dr. Miranda Kaufmann, author of Black Tudors, and Dr. Jessica Krug, author of Fugitive Modernities, will follow the panel discussion, with both books available for purchase. Throughout the Day ○ Interpretive portrait of Angelo created ‘real-time’ by artist Austin Miles, in view of attendees and informed by ongoing presentations. A graduate of VCUarts who was first introduced to murals in 2017 while collaborating on Richmond’s first mural created by and specifically for black girls, Austin’s work embodies her own stories and aims to contribute to the conversation surrounding black female experiences. What's in store at 'What's Happening in Black British History?' X in Leicester on 2nd May...17/4/2019 It's that time of year again, and I'm really looking forward to What’s Happening in Black British History? X, which will be at the University of Leicester on Thursday 2nd May 2019. It's a full day event- running from 11am- 6pm, followed by a Drinks Reception.
We'll kick the day off with what is becoming a regular slot: New Books, where we'll get a glimpse of the latest publications in the field. This time we'll be hearing about: Black British History: New Perspectives from the Roman Times to the Present Day, edited by Hakim Adi; Kate Morrison's A Book of Secrets and Thinking Black: Britain, 1964-1985 by Rob Waters. Then we'll move on to hear about the exciting new Archeological Evidence of Africans in Britain. Naoise Mac Sweeney will take us From Carthage to Cornwall to learn about the Africans in Ancient Britain; Mathew Morris - the archeologist who found Richard III's body under a Leicester car park in 2013 - will discuss the evidence for Africans in Roman Leicester. Then Rebecca Redfern from the Museum of London will take us to Medieval London, before Jess Scorrer and Katie Faillace discuss the new findings of North African ancestry amongst the Skeletons of the Mary Rose. After lunch, we'll be exploring the Dual Heritage Experience in Britain, starting with Liam McCarthy on the American 'occupation' of Leicester in the Second World War; then Sue Bishop will talk about Black Caribbean and white British romantic relationships in postwar Leicester; Annabelle Gilmore will discuss Parallels of mixed-race identity in the eighteenth and twenty-first century and Paul Ian Campbell will address the topic through the prism of local football in Leicester c 1970-2010, with a focus on Cavaliers FC. Last, and certainly not least, we'll have our Keynote, delivered by Kennetta Hammond Perry, the Director, of the new Stephen Lawrence Research Centre at De Mortford University in Leicester, followed by Q&A and the usual final reflections session, where we will invite the audience to contribute their thoughts too. And the discussion and networking will continue informally at our Drinks Reception - always a highlight! Really hope you can join us for what looks to be a really thought provoking and stimulating day. You can find the booking form and full agenda here. If you can't make it, we'll be live-tweeting @BlackBritHist #WHBBHX throughout the day... Ever since I first became involved in the world of Black British History, I have, like everyone else in the field, been passionate about getting the subject taught in schools. Back in 2012, I spoke at the Department of Education about this, and the following year, when Michael Gove threatened to remove Olaudah Equiano and Mary Seacole from the curriculum, I wrote in The Times that we 'need to retell the story of our island, taking the new perspectives of Britons of all skin colours into account'. So I was absolutely thrilled in 2018, when a group of secondary school teachers responded to one of my tweets saying they'd like to work with me to figure out how to get the histories I'd written about in my book Black Tudors: The Untold Story into the classroom. In September 2018, we all got together for a Teaching Black Tudors workshop, kindly hosted by Jason Todd at the Department of Education in Oxford, and supported by the Historical Association. We began with a short talk on Black Tudors from me, then three teachers (Josh Garry, Chris Lewis and Gemma Hargraves) showed us the lessons they were already teaching. Then we had some thoughts from Jason and veteran of the cause Martin Spafford on the reasons why it was important to include these histories (which Jason has written up here), before workshop-ing how this would work in practice. The day was a real highlight of my career to date. I was blown away by the enthusiasm of everyone involved, how they were already using my work in ways I couldn't have imagined, and seriously excited about how we could work together to bring the work into many more classrooms across the country. Work at King Edward's School for Girls, Birmingham Since then, the teachers have continued to teach Black Tudors. Chris Lewis has written about how he does this at Brookfield Community School in Southampton in the December issue of Teaching History- one of the Historical Association's magazines (you can read his articles on his rationale here and the details of his lesson plans here). One of the great things about what Chris is doing is that he incorporates the stories of Africans in Tudor England into all his lessons on the Tudors, rather than "doing" them as a one-off. And of course, I particularly enjoyed the homework he set his students to write a letter to the BBC explaining why they should commission me to make a documentary about Black Tudors! One angle I didn't expect was that Black Tudors is being used in English lessons too- Wendy Lennon is giving her students at Brockington College, Leicester the short fictional paragraphs I wrote at the beginning of each chapter imagining a moment in each Black Tudor's life to read and then asking them to continue the story in their own words! The next step was sharing what we're doing with the wider teaching community, which we did at a series of conferences in spring and summer 2019. Kerry Apps and Josh Garry spoke at a Historical Association Teaching the Tudors Day in York last month; Jason Todd and Chris Lewis ran a workshop on 'Bringing the Untold Stories of Black Tudors into the classroom' at the Historical Association Annual Conference in Chester on Saturday 18th May and I gave a keynote on 'Teaching Black Tudors: bringing untold stories into the history classroom' at the Schools History Project Summer Conference in Leeds on Saturday 6th July, which was followed by a workshop on 'Using Miranda Kaufmann’s Black Tudors to refresh the teaching of the Early Modern World' led by Josh Garry and Wendy Lennon. So, if you're keen to learn more, check out the resources shared by some of the teachers I'm working with, who are already teaching Black Tudors on this Shared Google Drive. We'd love you to give us your feedback, and/or add your own lesson plans to the drive. I'm delighted that the Schemes of Work and lesson plans inspired by Black Tudors that we started work on back in 2018 have now been published by Hodder Education. I have also collaborated recently with OUP on this "How Can We Find Out About the lives of Black Tudors?" enquiry. Other relevant resources include the Our Migration Story site, which I contributed this piece to, and the Institute of Historical Research's guide to over 100 resources for teaching Race, Migration and Empire. Excitingly, for teachers who was to do some CPD and develop a really in-depth knowledge of the history, I have recently launched a free, online, 6 week Black Tudors: The Untold Story course with FutureLearn. If you want to be kept informed of all things Teaching Black Tudors, please enter your email address in the form below. Following the success of our previous events in London, Liverpool, Bristol, Preston and Huddersfield, we would like to invite you to the tenth of the Institute of Commonwealth Studies’ Black British History Workshops (WHBBHX) at the University of Leicester, on Thursday 2nd May 2019. The aim of the series is to foster a creative dialogue between researchers, educationalists (mainstream and supplementary), artists and writers, archivists and curators, and policy makers. It seeks to identify and promote innovative new research into the history of people of African origin or descent in the UK and facilitate discussion of the latest developments in the dissemination of Black British history in a wide variety of settings including the media, the classroom and lecture hall, and museums and galleries, thus providing an opportunity to share good practice. We welcome proposals for papers and presentations on a wide variety of themes relating to the history of people of African origin or descent in the UK. As we will be in Leicester local and regional or family histories from Leicester and the Midlands will be especially welcome. And, taking inspiration from Leicester archaeologists’ famous identification of the skeleton of Richard III, we would be particularly interested to hear from anyone using archaeology or anthropology to unearth medieval or earlier Black British History or to identify African skeletons. We would be delighted to hear from researchers, educationalists, archivists and curators or others interested in offering a presentation, lasting for 15-20 minutes. Please submit a title and a brief description of your presentation either in writing (in which case, of no more than 300 words) or in some other form (for example a clip or podcast) to Dr. Miranda Kaufmann at [email protected] by 15th March 2019. In addition, we would be happy to consider proposals for a complete panel. The panel should have a coherent unifying theme, and the proposal should include the abstracts of three related presentations and the names and affiliations of the presenters. We would also be very interested in providing A-level students, undergraduates or graduate students with an opportunity to give presentations on projects relating to Black British History. The day will run from 11am to 6.00pm, followed by a Reception. There will be a registration fee of £24 (£12 for students/unwaged) which includes lunch and refreshments. Registration is open now, here.
So, back in early November, a play by Rex Obano, called The Moors of England, was broadcast on BBC Radio 3.
The play imagines the life of Fortunatus, a black servant of Sir Robert Cecil's, during the period at the end of Elizabeth I's reign, when Cecil was being lobbied by Sir Thomas Sherley and Caspar Van Senden to allow them to transport 'Blackamoors' out of the realm. (You can read about the history of this episode here.) I was honoured when Rex asked me to introduce the play and when you listen (below), you'll hear my 60 second intro at the start. We also persuaded the director that it would be good to record a discussion between us exploring the wider context of the play, as much of this history is new to audiences. You can listen to our 20 minute discussion on BBC Sounds here, and read more about the Black Tudors in my book. And, Rex and I are continuing to work together to dramatise the lives of the Black Tudors. He has been selected, alongside Catherine Johnson, to work with Silverprint Pictures on developing my book into a TV Drama series - very exciting! I'll be meeting up with them in the New Year to talk about potential storylines- watch this space for more news on that front! In the meantime, I hope you enjoy listening to The Moors of England... It's that time of the year again, and, as always, I'm really looking forward to heading to Senate House, London on Thursday 8th November to hear all the latest news, research and views on Black British History. I thought I'd just whet your appetite by going through a few of the highlights...
NEW for WHBBH9 is our New Publications session where authors of recently published books get ten minutes each to tell us about them- a quick and easy way to make sure you're up with the latest cutting edge research and writing. Then on to Dramatising Black British History, which actually could have been called 'Dramatising Black Tudor History', because all three writers have tackled 16th century stories: those of Catalina, the Moorish maid to Katherine of Aragon; John Blanke the Tudor court trumpeter, and Fortunatus, servant to Sir Robert Cecil. So you can guess why I'm particularly keen to hear from these writers! These three plays, by Hassan Abdulrazzak, Ade Solanke and Rex Obano respectively, have been performed at Ovalhouse and Colchester Arts Centre, at Hampton Court Palace and on Radio 3 ('The Moors of England' is due to be broadcast on Sunday 4th November at 19.30). It will be fascinating to hear what inspired them to tell these stories, the challenges of working with fragmentary historical sources, and how their work has been received. We couldn't let 2018 pass without contemplating Windrush: 70 years on. This session will be chaired by historian and activist Patrick Vernon, who has campaigned for full government recognition of the contribution of the Windrush Generation, and of migrants more broadly. We will hear from Wendy Webster how many of the so-called 'Windrush Generation' were actually returning to Britain, having played a significant role in the Second World War; Peggy Warren and Joan Welsh will explore the testimonies of Black British Women about their struggles within the NHS; and Beverley Cooper-Chambers will share her analysis of how Caribbean families are (mis)represented on television. Bringing us right up to date, Clare Anyiam-Osigwe will be talking about the insights she gained through interviews for her short documentary, Windrush Stories. Our third panel will explore the experiences of those giving Guided Tours of Black British History. Janet Couloute, an art historian and gallery guide at Tate Britain, was standing near an artwork by Lubaina Himid one day when someone asked her "Are you part of the exhibit?" Because of course a woman of colour standing in the middle of an art gallery is much more likely to be a work of art than an authority figure! Her presentation will explore the challenge of contesting such assumptions in the art world, and will be complemented by the perspectives of Lisa Williams, who has recently started conducting Black History Tours in Edinburgh, and Tony Warner, of the hugely successful London-based Black History Walks. To mix up the traditional final thoughts panel, we will be seeking thoughts and comments from the audience, so be ready! The day will end with a Drinks Reception, where we will launch Kwaku's new book: Disrupting African British Histories? I very much hope to see you there. For the full agenda and booking details go to the ICWS event page, or to book straight away click here. I'm delighted to announce that Oneworld Publications, who did such a fantastic job with Black Tudors, will be publishing my next book, working title: Heiresses: The Caribbean Marriage Trade.
In Heiresses, I will tell the controversial and fascinating stories of the women whose vast inherited fortunes – colonial wealth, generated by the labour of enslaved people in the Caribbean – were imported by marriage into British society. Their inheritances not only enabled them to marry into the top tiers of the aristocracy, but also attracted impoverished naval officers, soldiers, writers and, on occasion, unscrupulous fortune-hunters. The book will explore the source of their wealth, what happened to the women after they married and how the tainted money was spent on everything from country houses and paintings to foreign travel and paying off gambling debts. I've been intrigued by the subject even since I encountered Elizabeth Vassall, the larger-than-life heiress to three Jamaican sugar plantations, who married Sir Godfrey Webster of Battle Abbey while I was researching English Heritage properties' links to slavery and abolition back in 2006. As I told The Bookseller: "It’s fantastic to be given the opportunity to investigate these fascinating women, and expose how their slave-produced wealth came to all corners of Britain, under cover of matrimony. I’ve already found stories of arranged marriages, elopements, great love affairs, adultery, divorce, compulsive gambling, outrageously opulent entertaining, political intrigue, bankruptcy, insanity and suicide. I’m delighted to be working with the outstanding, supportive team at Oneworld again, and looking forward to sharing what I find with the world." My editor at Oneworld, Sam Carter added: "We are thrilled to be publishing the brilliant and committed Miranda Kaufmann again, and in these stories of real-life Mrs Rochesters she’s found her perfect subject." Watch this space to find out more as my research progresses... If you think the book sounds interesting, you may also be interested in the Colonial Countryside project I'm working on with the National Trust, Peepal Tree Press and Corinne Fowler at the University of Leicester, using both children and adult's creative writing to explore ten National Trust properties' links with Caribbean slavery and the East India Company. |
AuthorDr. Miranda Kaufmann is a historian of Black British History living in North Wales. You can read a fuller bio here, and contact her here. Related Blogs/SitesMichael Ohajuru's Black Africans in Renaissance Europe blog
Temi Odumosu's The Image of Black website The UCL Legacies of British Slave-ownership project Database and blog The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Database The Black Presence in Britain Jeffrey Green's website, on Africans in 19th and early 20th Century Britain Untold Theatre Categories
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