Frictions of space: the generative tensions of slavery and colonial heritage tourism
The FRICTIONS project investigates how tourism shapes narratives around slavery and colonial heritage, addressing societal tensions and promoting inclusivity through interdisciplinary research.
Projectdetails
Introduction
Tourism is a pervasive phenomenon as are the contemporary global dialogues about slavery and colonial heritage. Globally, the tangible and intangible remnants of slavery and the colonial past generate tensions that can yield both productive and destructive outcomes. In such locations, visceral narratives and experiences that evoke these tensions are being crafted for visitors.
Project Overview
The FRICTIONS project will unravel how tourism transforms and narrates this heritage while navigating the ensuing contestations and tensions. In our increasingly diverse society at risk of polarization, the stories we tell about our history can directly address challenges such as racism, discrimination, and inclusion.
Research Focus
FRICTIONS develops an interdisciplinary theory of cultural memories linked to slavery and colonial heritage tourism. The project employs an innovative and rigorous qualitative methodological research design to explore the tensions arising from slavery and colonial heritage tourism within three key geographical contexts:
- Ghana-Suriname-Netherlands
- Angola-Brazil-Portugal
- Namibia-Brazil-Germany
Research Objectives
FRICTIONS will map and examine:
- To what extent and under which conditions sites of slavery and colonial heritage are transformed into tourism products, practices, and performances.
- The ways in which such transformations create frictions of space.
- How these frictions influence broader societal narratives concerning the collective heritage of slavery and colonial heritage.
Significance of the Project
FRICTIONS is an ambitious project combining insights from cultural geography, tourism studies, and heritage and memory studies to advance conceptual knowledge that renders the transformative role of tourism into wider societal discussions of slavery and colonial heritage beyond specific places. Such insights inform ongoing societal debates on dealing with this shared heritage. This is important and urgent for charting a path towards a truly inclusive and just global society.
Financiële details & Tijdlijn
Financiële details
Subsidiebedrag | € 1.499.975 |
Totale projectbegroting | € 1.499.975 |
Tijdlijn
Startdatum | 1-4-2025 |
Einddatum | 31-3-2030 |
Subsidiejaar | 2025 |
Partners & Locaties
Projectpartners
- WAGENINGEN UNIVERSITYpenvoerder
Land(en)
Vergelijkbare projecten binnen European Research Council
Project | Regeling | Bedrag | Jaar | Actie |
---|---|---|---|---|
Moving Bodies and Memories of African Slavery in South AmericaThe MOVING project aims to explore and reclaim the legacy of Africa-originated slavery through a multi-disciplinary, body-focused methodology in Brazil, Chile, and Colombia. | ERC Advanced... | € 2.499.958 | 2025 | Details |
City tales: an art-based participatory framework for studying migration-related diversityThis project explores Afro-European artists' narratives in Lisbon and Rotterdam to redefine migration-related diversity through urban storytelling and community engagement. | ERC Starting... | € 1.499.353 | 2024 | Details |
Voices of Resistance: A Global Micro-Historical Approach to Enslavement across the Atlantic and Indian OceanThis project analyzes colonial court records to explore how different modes of enslavement influenced resistance, treatment, and trade patterns across the Indian Ocean and Atlantic regions. | ERC Consolid... | € 1.999.999 | 2024 | Details |
Afroeurope and Cyberspace: Imaginations of Diasporic Communities, Digital Agency and Poetic Strategies. Unravelling the TexturesThis project investigates how Afrodiasporic communities in Europe use the internet to reclaim their narratives and create alternative public spheres, addressing racialization and cultural identity. | ERC Starting... | € 1.499.864 | 2024 | Details |
Beyond Restitution: Heritage, (Dis)Possession and the Politics of KnowledgeBEYONDREST investigates the impact of art dispossession on heritage knowledge, emphasizing absence over restitution to transform understanding of cultural loss and its ongoing implications. | ERC Consolid... | € 2.000.000 | 2022 | Details |
Moving Bodies and Memories of African Slavery in South America
The MOVING project aims to explore and reclaim the legacy of Africa-originated slavery through a multi-disciplinary, body-focused methodology in Brazil, Chile, and Colombia.
City tales: an art-based participatory framework for studying migration-related diversity
This project explores Afro-European artists' narratives in Lisbon and Rotterdam to redefine migration-related diversity through urban storytelling and community engagement.
Voices of Resistance: A Global Micro-Historical Approach to Enslavement across the Atlantic and Indian Ocean
This project analyzes colonial court records to explore how different modes of enslavement influenced resistance, treatment, and trade patterns across the Indian Ocean and Atlantic regions.
Afroeurope and Cyberspace: Imaginations of Diasporic Communities, Digital Agency and Poetic Strategies. Unravelling the Textures
This project investigates how Afrodiasporic communities in Europe use the internet to reclaim their narratives and create alternative public spheres, addressing racialization and cultural identity.
Beyond Restitution: Heritage, (Dis)Possession and the Politics of Knowledge
BEYONDREST investigates the impact of art dispossession on heritage knowledge, emphasizing absence over restitution to transform understanding of cultural loss and its ongoing implications.