加入对赔偿的重新解释

IF 0.7 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Marla R. Miller, Karen Sánchez-Eppler
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1752年,摩西和伊丽莎白·波特在马萨诸塞州西部康涅狄格河沿岸,在诺诺塔克和其他土著居民耕种了数千年的土地上建立了一个农场。这处房产在家族中保存了200年,1949年成为博物馆。几十年来,波特-菲尔普斯-亨廷顿博物馆一直是一个传统的历史建筑博物馆,最近,它将重点转移到该遗址的奴隶、土著和雇佣劳工上。更具包容性的故事讲述是必要的,但博物馆也寻求更直接的影响。2021年春季,博物馆合作开展了一个修复农业项目,使索马里难民能够种植自己的作物。博物馆计划将这个试点项目扩展为有色人种社区的永久项目——建立种族正义和环境正义之间的联系。这个共同创作的挑衅将这个初出茅庐的项目置于更大的解释性谱系中,表明小型博物馆可以开始面对他们所叙述的殖民、奴役和流离失所的历史。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Joining reinterpretation to reparations
ABSTRACT In 1752, on land cultivated by Nonotuck and other Indigenous people for millennia, Moses and Elizabeth Porter established a farmstead along the Connecticut River in Western Massachusetts. This property remained in the family for 200 years, becoming a museum in 1949. A traditional historic house museum for decades, more recently the Porter-Phelps-Huntington Museum has shifted focus to the site’s enslaved, indigenous, and hired laborers. More inclusive storytelling is necessary, but the museum also seeks more direct impacts. In spring 2021 the museum collaborated on a Reparative Farming project enabling Somali refugees to grow their own crops. The museum plans to expand this pilot-project into a permanent program for communities of color – enacting links between racial and environmental justice. This co-authored provocation situates this fledgling project within larger interpretive genealogies, suggesting ways small museums can begin to confront the histories of colonization, enslavement, and displacement they narrate.
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CiteScore
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