The organization says this event is designed to let participants:
- Explore the history of African and Indigenous/Native American peoples in New England.
- Be able to distinguish between different forms of forced labor, and how and when they were used.
- Discuss the history and usage of America’s most important and problematic race-related terminology. This includes how to use these terms appropriately in programs and exhibit labels.
- Learn about the development of racial ideologies in America and how that impacts the work of front-line interpreters and museums as a whole today.
- Gain or refine race dialogue strategies with colleagues from around New England.
- Draft and practice leading a brief tour or program on the racial history of your site. Receive real-time feedback on your draft.
- Receive immediate feedback on your ideas or current projects from local experts and new colleagues during the unconference.
- Locate local resources including interpreters, trainers, scholars, and books to help you or your organization progress in your work interpreting the racial history of New England.
- Creating or leading programs on slavery or local racial narratives for kids and teens
- Exhibiting artifacts related to the slave trade
- Strategies for partnering with descendants, local communities, neighbors/property owners, other institutions or across racial lines
- Attracting new audiences
- Other ways to help museums, historic houses or independent tour guides improve the way they engage New England’s history of slavery and/or Black and Indigenous narratives
There will also be “unconference” sessions in the afternoons. Those are scheduled but informal discussions on such topics as “frustrating visitor comments, problematic objects, confusing terminology, thorny questions, ‘Aha’ moments, big discoveries and fresh research.” A week before the event, registered attendees will be invited by email to propose topics for an unconference session.
The scheduled speakers include:
- Elon Cook Lee, Program Director and curator for the Center for Reconciliation, a consultant on interpreting slavery and race for historic sites around the country.
- Joanne Pope Melish, Ph.D., author of Disowning Slavery: Gradual Emancipation and “Race” in New England, 1780-1860.
- Marjory O’Toole, Managing Director of the Little Compton Historical Society.
- Maria Madison, Ph.D., Board President and co-founder of the Robbins House in Concord, Massachusetts, and Associate Dean of Diversity and Inclusion at Brandeis University.
(The picture above shows Elizabeth Freeman, also called “Mumbet,” a crucial figure in the ending of legal slavery in Massachusetts.)
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