Remembering Iconic, Marginalised and Forgotten Presences
Remembering Iconic, Marginalised and Forgotten Presences: Local, National and Transnational Memorial Sites in the Black Atlantic
Alan Rice
Abstract
This essay looks at sites of public and private memory in Britain, the Caribbean and
America and discusses the cultural politics of these locations. It starts with a discussion
of memorialisation around key public and private sites in America, specifically public
buildings in Washington DC and the birthplace of Frederick Douglass at the Wye
Plantation in Maryland before moving to a discussion of public and private memorialisation
around Sambo’s Grave at Sunderland Point near Lancaster. The literary responses to
what Pierre Nora has called “sites of memory” are discussed through the black British
poet Dorothea Smartt’s poetic response to Sambo’s Grave and the Bajan poet EK
Brathwaite’s prose description of labour and landscape in his description of a woman
sweeping her yard. Both are used to show the importance of the local in nuancing Paul
Gilroy’s discussion of the black Atlantic. The final section discusses public memorialisation
in Europe through the examples of Amsterdam and Lancaster. Both cities have recently
raised memorials to victims of the slave trade and the essay discusses the meaning of such
willed acts of memorialisation in the context of previously unpublished remarks by the
black British artist Lubaina Himid.
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