Revised wall labels that highlight the "discursive strategies of silencing the history of slavery in Brazil" and how museums have been complicit in the process of silencing.
Sculpture made by A.D. Bressae in 1871, a boy carries in one hand a sign that read "Honor to Dom Pedro II" and a broken chain in the other. It is a typical example of how artistic representations of historical events distort reality by celebrating…
In the picture: Dr. Leandro Santanna (director of MUHCAB), Dr. Aline Montenegro (former director of the Museu Historico Nacional), Dr. Monica Lima (professor of History at the UFRJ), Hermann von Hesse, Molly Morgan, Lynne Lee
Pedra do Sal (Rock of Salt) was originally the site of a quilombo village, and today, an association called the Community Descendents of the Quilombos of Pedra do Sal lives there. Historically, it has also been the center of samba and choro music,…
Map of various sites in Rio related to the history of slavery and Afro-Brazilian communities. Provided by the IPN (Instituto de Pesquisa e Memória Pretos Novos).
The Valongo Wharf was the main port of arrival of enslaved Africans in the Americas from 1811 until 1831, with an estimate of about one million people landing there. Many of them died shortly after disembarkment, and those who had survived the…
From left to right: William Polley, Shannon Smith, Catherine Jalbert, James Sidbury, Anthony Pinn, Jeffrey Fleisher, Angela Pfeiffer, Chris Eliott, Sam Collins, Molly Morgan, Brett Cruse, Hermann von Hesse
On the descriptive panel in front of this site: "Eighteen slave cabins once stood near this spot, forming a small community separate from the "big house" across the creek. The slaves would have had their own small vegetable gardens and hunted small…