Afterlives of History
Portugal is home to one the largest Afro-diasporic communities in Europe, related to Lusophone countries such as Cabo Verde, Angola, São Tomé and Príncipe, Guinea-Bissau, and Mozambique. As the original western colonial empire, Portugal set a blueprint for today’s global inequalities.
It is this and the persistent crisis the country faces that condition the international visibility of Portugal’s Afro-diasporic community. This series, “Afterlives of History,” spotlights its artists in all their variety and complexity.
38 artículos

Sampling the City: Tristany Mundu’s Cypher with Linha de Sintra

El entrelazamiento entre migración, pueblos originarios y colonialismo

Las temporalidades estratificadas de Cabo Verde emergen en el trabajo de César Schofield Cardoso

Cabo Verde’s Layered Temporalities Emerge in the Work of César Schofield Cardoso

Llamado a la historia

Unidigrazz: A Collective Practice and a Holding Place

Filipa Bossuet: Performance as Conversation, Intimacy as Power

Aline Motta: el archivo como parte de la ancestralidad

A Reader on Post-Colonialism and Decolonial Practices

Fatima El-Tayeb: Reclaiming Nefertiti

The Jumbee Sea

Artistas en tránsito en la década de 1960-1970

Entre las memorias y los múltiples yos

“Hay más deseo de igualar al Norte que de redefinirlo”

Exponer la memoria de las identidades africanas

Dawit L. Petros: Spazio Disponibile

Memorial en Lisboa: rescate de una historia que se volvió invisible

Afro-Argentina o la necesidad de las historias alternativas

What Collective Remembrance Is For
