Geographies of slavery heritage tourism: places of remembrance and dialogue

Geographies of slavery heritage tourism: places of remembrance and dialogue

A University of Exeter Business School Black History Month event

By University of Exeter Business School

Date and time

Wed, 14 Oct 2020 08:00 - 09:00 PDT

Location

Online

About this event

We are delighted to invite you to attend 'Geographies of slavery heritage tourism: places of remembrance and dialogue' by Dr. Emmanuel Akwasi Adu-Ampong, Assistant Professor in Cultural Geography Wageningen University & Research, The Netherlands focused on How do the practices and performances of slavery heritage tourism across places provide new narratives about slavery’s past and present?

Following the talk will be an opportunity for Q&A with the audience.

Online event details

Date: Wednesday 14 October 2020

Time: 16:00-17:00 BST

Location: This webinar series is hosted online, a link with joining instructions will be sent within the confirmation of registration email.

In an increasing multicultural society, the stories we tell of the past can bring us together or push us further apart. Through travel and tourism we encounter new cultures and perspectives on such stories of the past in certain places. The stories of slavery as told through slavery heritage tourism, is not merely ready-made but actively produced being open to misunderstanding and contestations. However, little is known about the cultural work of tourism in producing slavery heritage spaces and how it contributes to the ensuing transformations of contested narratives about the past.

This lecture focuses on the diverse forms of tourism practices and performances at slavery heritage sites across different geographical locations: Elmina Castle in Ghana, Gorée Island in Senegal, Liverpool Slavery Trail, Bristol Transatlantic Slavery Walk, Slavery & the City Walk in London, Black Heritage Tours in Amsterdam, Black Pioneers Tour in the Hague, Plantation Tours in the US and Plantation Tours in the Caribbean among other places.

The lecture starts from developing the conceptual notion of the embodied absence of the past to refer to the physical presence but narrative absence of the shared history and role of people of African descent in European societies. The aim is to illustrate the cultural work of slavery heritage tourism in making visible and challenging this embodied absence of the past. A key aim of this lecture is therefore to highlight the transformative potential of tourism in stimulating remembrance and dialogue about the effects of slavery in contemporary societies.

The speaker, Dr. Emmanuel Akwasi Adu-Ampong is an Assistant Professor in Cultural Geography at Wageningen University and Research, The Netherlands. His research interest span across slavery heritage tourism, sustainable tourism development policy and planning, cultural heritage management and innovations in qualitative research methodology & methods.

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Registration

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Organised by

We’ve taken just over a decade to establish the University of Exeter Business School as one of the UK’s leading institutions. We’ve achieved this by striving to be the best we can be, bringing together inspirational and internationally-respected business teachers from around the world in an environment that combines historical and intellectual heritage with modern facilities.

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