Tuesday, 30 April 2019
Sunday, 28 April 2019
Sour lemons, sweet lemonades
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| National Portrait Gallery, Washington (Photo: Ben Hines) |
In a training course
for culture professionals last month, I showed the photo of a two-year-old
black girl admiring the portrait of Michelle Obama at the National Portrait
Gallery in Washington. She seemed awestruck and she reportedly told her mother
that the woman on the painting was a queen and that she wanted to be a queen
too. The point I wanted to make was that black people, or other so-called
minorities, rarely do they see people looking like them as part of the
mainstream narratives presented in museums; rarely do they come across the
stories of people who look like them and who achieved something in their lives;
people they could look up to.
Saturday, 23 March 2019
The great privilege of public life
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| Poster image of "The Coat", presented in 2017 by the Grupo de Teatro da Nova in Lisbon. |
The recent blackface
episode at a school in northern Portugal and the kind of comments it attracted
was another indicator of the worrying lack of (non-virtual) meeting spaces for
dialogue. Many did not understand the racism criticism of an initiative aimed
at celebrating cultural diversity (from "countries" such as Africa,
China and Brazil) and ended up accusing the critics of racism and hate speech.
The exchange of comments on the Facebook page Blackface Portugal is revealing
of the incomprehension, and even of the ignorance, around this matter. But can
we say that we were shocked or surprised? Is this not a reality known to us on
which, no matter how much we feel like saying "they should have known
better", we cannot turn our backs? We cannot, because it continues to
influence the education, thinking and notions which big part of our society holds
on this matter and several others. It is these notions that end up conditioning
the freedom of many citizens and perpetuating all kinds of racism and, in some
cases, violence.
Monday, 26 November 2018
Where do we go from here? This is the real dope
My presentation at the ICOM Europe | ICOM Germany conference "Museums, Borders and European Responsibilities - 100 Years from WWI". Read here.
Saturday, 15 September 2018
Sunday, 2 September 2018
Who’s welcome to your home and at your table?
To Lambrina and Sam, Eleni and Nikos
To good friends and good discussions
Last June, Sarah
Huckabee Sanders, the White House Press Secretary, was asked to leave the Red
Hen restaurant. The request was made by the restaurant owner.
In mid-August, the
invitation to Marine Le Pen, former French
presidential candidate and leader of the National Rally political party,
to attend the Web Summit in Lisbon was followed by public outcry. The
invitation was eventually withdrawn.
Both incidents raised
questions regarding freedom of speech; whether one can fight extremist
political views and address the roots of the rise of the far-right by banning
or ignoring certain viewpoints; and whether by excluding some people you don’t
also become like them yourself.
Saturday, 4 August 2018
How easy is it to put your children in a boat?
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| The fire in Mati (Greece, 2018; image taken from Facebook) |
“Do you see how easily
you put your children in a boat when in despair or in danger?”, someone wrote
on Twitter on 26 July, when the whole of Greece was in profound shock after the
tragic fire that claimed so many lives. As the personal stories of those who
perished and those who survived, tried to save their loved ones or people they
didn’t know at all were emerging, turning the tragedy into something less and
less abstract, someone made this connection between the people who put their
children in boats to be taken to safety during the fire and the refugees who
attempt the perilous, often deadly, crossing of the sea. How many people made
that connection? What kind of people made that connection? Would this
connection ever occur to someone with a negative attitude towards refugees and
migrants? Would this tweet be enough to make someone reconsider?
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