Camden Black Radicals: Race, Class, Abolition and Social Reform
24 October 2024, 7pm-9pm
SOAS Brunei Gallery Lecture Theatre
Pay What You Can donation
24 October 2024, 7pm-9pm
SOAS Brunei Gallery Lecture Theatre
Pay What You Can donation
Camden Council’s Culture Team are thrilled to announce historian and author Professor Olivette Otele will be delivering the keynote Camden Black Radicals lecture focussing on early activism, social reform and abolition.
Professor Otele will be joined afterwards for an ‘in conversation’ with Charmaine Simpson (CEO Black History Studies) and Sandra Shakespeare (Founder of the Black British Museum Project).
The event will be chaired by Athian Akec (social activist and author). To celebrate Camden’s role as a hub for Black radical activism from 1770 – 1900, we are profiling the work of key activists living and/or working in the borough at this time, their significant impact and what this means for people and their lived experiences in Camden today.
Robert Wedderburn, Olaudah Equiano, William Cuffay and Sarah Parker Remond were concerned with the experiences of people with African Heritage and the immoral injustice of enslavement, calling for abolition. Furthermore, many of these activists also considered the plight of the English working classes, highlighting the injustice of all forms of oppression and the connections between race and class.
This lecture will explore their influential work, its global effect and the ripples of radical social activism which can still be felt in Camden today.
This event is British Sign Language (BSL) interpreted
How to book
Part of Camden Council's Black History Season which runs from October - December, to celebrate the incredible and wonderful achievements and contributions of Black people across Camden and the UK.
The majority of the events listed in our programme are free, with a small number of events having a Pay What You Can with proceeds going to support the brilliant work of The Black Curriculum.