Britain and Slavery, 1562-1916 HIST-UA 9572L01.
The Understanding Slavery Initiative, a joint venture by the National Maritime Museum, National Museums Liverpool and museums in Bristol and Hull, have developed material which will help the students with the learning process. Poverty is a aspect which causes slavery and forced labor. One in five people in our world today as we know it, are living in poverty. Since 1997 the UK has doubled its.
The use of African slave labour was not new. The Spanish and Portuguese had been using African slaves since the 16th century. However, the Atlantic slave trade of the 18th century was a new kind.
Liverpool University Press is the UK's third oldest university press, with a distinguished history of publishing exceptional research since 1899.: Revisioning French Culture brings together a remarkable group of leading intellectuals and scholars to explore new avenues of research in French and Francophone Studies. Covering the medieval period through the twenty-first century, this volume.
Finally, we will visit a museum exhibit on slavery (possibly even the International Slavery Museum in Liverpool) and students will give group presentations on the memory of slavery (or, in some cases, lack thereof) in museums and historic sites in the Netherlands and elsewhere. Finally, we will make a field trip to a museum exhibit on slavery (possibly even the International Slavery Museum in.
Liverpool John Moores University has opted into the TEF and received a Silver award. Find out more about the TEF. Informed by internationally important research, the BA (Hons) History of Art and Museum Studies programme is taught in our award-winning John Lennon Art and Design Building and offers exciting international internship opportunities.
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The International Slavery Museum in Liverpool is comprehensively studied in Richard Benjamin’s “Museums and Sensitive Histories,” New York’s often buried slave history is successfully unearthed in Kathleen Hulser’s “Exhibiting Slavery at the New York Historical Society,” and the complications innate to remembering difficult aspects of American slavery is addressed by Regina Faden.