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In this week's episode of (Un)doing Geography, I will be joined by fellow Goldsmiths Student Angela Billings who undertook a research placement at Pitt Rivers Museum, Oxford which examined the public's responses to the removal of human remains from open display in the summer of 2020. In today's show we discuss the research project, the emotional responses to this process and Angela's own journey thinking with and about decolonisation, systems of power and the pluriverse. I would like to thank the Pitt Rivers Museum for their contribution to this week's episode. Their sector leading approach to addressing the difficult histories of the museum's colonial legacy embrace hope, reconciliation and redress; bringing fresh, new voices into the conversation.
This week's recommendation for geographers is the Pitt Rivers Museum webinar series Matters of Care: Futures in Times of Planetary Precarity.
By Summer HalyIn this week's episode of (Un)doing Geography, I will be joined by fellow Goldsmiths Student Angela Billings who undertook a research placement at Pitt Rivers Museum, Oxford which examined the public's responses to the removal of human remains from open display in the summer of 2020. In today's show we discuss the research project, the emotional responses to this process and Angela's own journey thinking with and about decolonisation, systems of power and the pluriverse. I would like to thank the Pitt Rivers Museum for their contribution to this week's episode. Their sector leading approach to addressing the difficult histories of the museum's colonial legacy embrace hope, reconciliation and redress; bringing fresh, new voices into the conversation.
This week's recommendation for geographers is the Pitt Rivers Museum webinar series Matters of Care: Futures in Times of Planetary Precarity.