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Anti-racist Pedagogy in Art and Museums captions transcript

Anti-racist Pedagogy in Art and Museums

Video recording featuring guest panelists, Stephanie A. Johnson-Cunningham, and Kelli Morgan, Ph.D., this third installment of the 2044 series frames Afrofuturism and futurist thinking in museum practice to examine the roles museums play in maintaining and recreating anti-blackness and white supremacy. Panelists discuss how museum educators and curators can practice anti-racist pedagogy and thinking. Racist and colonial practices of museums need greater racial equity and recognition. Through the use of visual imagery, Afrofuturism as a framework may be a viable strategy for community building, imagination, and expression. Recognizing that museums are rooted in white colonial narratives that have been and continue to be oppressive to Black and people of color, museums can amplify Black experiences and narratives while pointing out the need for systemic change in the sector. From the periphery of colonial violence and commodification to the centrality of visibility and recognition, museum education can provide opportunities to “analyze how racism shapes how we view, discuss, create, and engage multiple audiences within the museums.”
Date: April 9, 2021
Creator: Brown, Kathy J.; Cross, Lauren E.; Johnson-Cunningham, Stephanie A. & Morgan, Kelli
Object Type: Video
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gullah Geechee Visuality as Protest Art, Contemplative Practice, and Anti-Racist Pedagogy (open access)

Gullah Geechee Visuality as Protest Art, Contemplative Practice, and Anti-Racist Pedagogy

This article centers two fabric assemblage pieces the author created in response to the Black Lives Matter protests of the summer 2020.
Date: April 19, 2022
Creator: Brown, Kathy J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library