Drew Hayden Taylor’s play satirically explores the racialization and violent appropriation of an indigenous community in Canada by two white Germans.
Browsing: cultural appropriation
Japanese and US-American rhythm machines of the 50s and 60s, products of the so-called “China trade” or the colonial phantasm of a railroad line between Hamburg and Baghdad – these are only three examples of discourses, things and narratives that the “Museum of our Transcultural Present” gathers in an exhibition and tries to relate to each other.
“Struggles for Reparations for Colonialism and the Enslavement Trade.” Under this motto, the blog gathered contributions in the form of texts, videos, links or event notes from October 2015 to December 2016.
In her clear and pointed textual contribution “Cultural Appropriation and Colonial Violence” for Missy Magazine, scholar Noa Ha lays out…
Forget Winnetou! Going beyond native stereotype in Germany is a documentary film project by Red Haircrow about the image…
The Institute for the Situational Approach (ISTA) has published a brochure in its series “KiDs” that contains suggestions for a…
“Seven different families show us their homes: Juli and Caspar have a baby, Jaroslaw and Claudia already have a crisis…
The book Amazing Grace by Mary Hoffman is an empowering reading experience for Black girls* ages five to nine. The…
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N-p8dOqf3P4 Decoded ist eine Serie von kurzen Erklärfilmen zu Rassismus mit Franchesca Ramsey auf MTV. Von gängigen Abwehrmechanismen über rassistische…
On her Beyond Buckskin website on Native fashion, Dr. Jessica R. Metcalfe blogs very interestingly on cultural appropriation as well…
On her blog Native appropriations – representations matter, Dr. Adrienne Keene discusses current representations, stereotypes, and cultural appropriation of Native…
On his blog Red Haircrow regularly publishes exciting poems, articles and interviews. Like, for example, here, again and again about…