McCrum Theatre, Bene't Street, Cambridge CB2 3QN
About
A Global Humanities Institute lecture, hosted by Professor Esra Özyürek
With a collection born of the East India Company and material whose origins stretch across the British Empire, the ethics and practice of restitution is of growing importance to the Victoria and Albert Museum. In this lecture, historian and V&A Director Dr Tristram Hunt argues that museums should be less concerned about becoming sites of ‘transitional justice,’ adjudicating on the colonial past, and focus more on detailed, trans-national provenance research.
Through biographies of objects with so-called ‘contested heritage,’ Dr Hunt will explain the V&A strategy of Renewable Cultural Partnerships and how museums can engage with, and shape, the coming era of restitution and collections equity between the Global North and South.
About the speaker
Dr Tristram Hunt is the director of the Victoria & Albert Museum in London. Historian, journalist and former Labour MP, he is author of books including Ten cities that made Europe, The frock-coated communist: The revolutionary life of Friederich Engles, and The radical potter: The life and times of Josiah Wedgwood.
Schedule and practicalities
The lecture will be followed by a conversation with Professor Shruti Kapila.
Registration is required.