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Catherine Hall in conversation with Lonnie Bunch

29 October 2018, 12:00 pm–1:00 pm

Bellfield slave register

Catherine Hall will be in a lunchtime conversation with Lonnie Bunch on Monday 29 October at the UCL Institute of Advanced Studies.

Event Information

Open to

All

Availability

Yes

Organiser

Cecile Bremont

Location

IAS Common Ground. Ground Floor, South Wing,
UCL Wilkins building
Gower street
London
WC1E 6BT

A unique opportunity to hear Catherine Hall in conversation with Lonnie Bunch.

Catherine will start the conversation with Lonnie asking him to talk about the project of building the collection for the African American Museum and the political work involved. She will also ask him about his sense of how things are in the UK and any observations he may have about the comparative situations in the US and the UK.

The event is free, but booking is essential. The lecture will be followed by a drinks reception.

The event will be hosted by CCHS and the UCL Institute of Advanced Studies.

Register here

Links

About the Speakers

Lonnie Bunch

Director at Smithsonian African American Museum of Washington

As the Director of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Lonnie Bunch promotes the museum’s mission to help audiences see African American history as American and human history. One of the recent exhibits, ‘Through the African American Lens: Selections from the Permanent Collection’, opened on 8 May 2018. In addition, the museum’s travelling exhibition, ‘Changing America’, will be exhibited at 50 venues across the US during 2018. Lonnie Bunch also established the programme ‘Save Our African American Treasures’ featuring day-long workshops where participants work with conservation specialists and historians to learn to identify and preserve items of historical value.

Before his July 2005 appointment as Director of the National Museum of African American History and Culture, Bunch served as the president of the Chicago Historical Society (2001–2005). A prolific and widely published author, Lonnie Bunch has written on topics ranging from the black military experience, the American presidency and all-black towns in the American West to diversity in museum management and the impact of funding and politics on American museums. In 2010, he published the award-winning book, Call the Lost Dream Back: Essays on Race, History and Museums. In 2017, he authored for the World Economic Forum in Davos Agenda (blog), ‘America, Slavery and how Museums can help to heal Fractured Societies’. Lectures and presentations to museum professionals and scholars have taken him to major cities in the United States and many nations abroad, including Australia, China, Ghana, Italy, Japan, South Africa, Sweden and the UK.

Bunch received undergraduate and graduate degrees from The American University in Washington, D.C. in African American and American history. In 2017, Bunch was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He has received honorary doctorates from universities, including Princeton University, Brown University, Dominican University, Georgetown, Roosevelt University, Rutgers University and his alma mater, American University.

More about Lonnie Bunch

Catherine Hall

Emerita Professor of Modern British Social and Cultural History at UCL

Since 2009, she has been Professor of Modern British Social and Cultural History at University College London. Her work explores the interrelation between metropole and colony in an attempt to rewrite the narrative of certain aspects of 'British history' in the mid-nineteenth century empire period.

Link

More about Catherine Hall