- History Showcase
- U-M HistoryLabs
- Michigan in the World
- Reverb Effect Podcast
-
- Season 1, Episode 1: Street Harassment, Then and Now
- Season 1, Episode 2: Recording the Family: In Search of the Sonic Archive
- Season 1, Episode 3: Evidence of Absence: Lilli Segal, the KGB, and the AIDS Crisis
- Season 1, Episode 4: Archive Magic: Assembling History, One Clue at a Time
- Season 1, Episode 5: Capacity Matters: Immigrant Prisons in the United States
- Season 1, Episode 6: Policing Gold: Law Enforcement in the Shadow of the LA Olympics
- Season 1, Episode 7: Archie Bunker for President!
- Season 2, Episode 1: Revival and Reckoning: A Colonial Museum in Postcolonial Italy
- Season 2, Episode 2: The Unnatural Vice: King Henri III, Sodomy, and Modern Masculinity
- Season 2, Episode 3: Envisioning Eternity: Women and Purgatory in the Seventeenth-Century Spanish World
- Season 2, Episode 4: Mother Caravan: Disappearance and Resistance along the Migrant Trail
- Season 2, Episode 5: A Prison by Any Other Name: Imagining Childhood Criminality in 1920s Chicago
- Season 2, Episode 6: Surviving Patriarchal Violence at Home: Incest Victims in the Progressive Era
- Season 3, Episode 1: Music Time in Africa
- Season 3, Episode 2: Navigating Pregnancy: A Century of Prenatal Care
- Season 3, Episode 3: The Real Housewives of Medieval London
- Season 3, Episode 4: The Two Monsieurs
This year marks the opening of Il Museo Italo Africano, “Ilaria Alpi” or the Iliaria Alpi Italo-African Museum in Rome, Italy. A revival of the former Italian Colonial museum (1923-1971), it has been renamed for its present-day reinstallation. Colonial museums and their collections are tangible representations of the historic and unequal relationships between people, communities, and nations. What does this particular museum and its collection tell us about Italy and its former African colonies?
Timnet Gedar traces the history of this museum’s collection, including “human zoos,” in Italy and the looting of north and east African nations. This context demonstrates the role of museums in the colonial project and the power of knowledge production, raising questions about the implications of this history for the contemporary reopening of the museum. She asks us to consider the current Mediterranean migration crisis as a reflection of the ongoing, uneven power relations between Italy and its former African colonies and how past and present are linked, even in (or especially in) museums and their collections.
Subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, Google Podcasts, or stream directly above.
View the full episode transcript.
Share your thoughts about Reverb Effect by messaging reverb.effect@umich.edu.
Visit the Reverb Effect homepage for the full archive of podcast episodes.
Historian Biographies
Timnet Gedar is a PhD candidate in the History Department at the University of Michigan. She holds a graduate certificate in Museum Studies, a graduate certificate in African Studies from the Department of Afro American and African Studies (DAAS), and an MSc in Social Development Practice from the University College London. She is currently a fellow in the Rackham-Mellon Program in Engagement in the Humanities.
Production Credits
Episode Producer: Timnet Gedar
Episode Contributors: Emma Bond, Medhin Paolos
Voice Actor: Giordano Mormone
Host and Season Producer: Hayley Bowman
Executive Producer: Gregory Parker
Editorial Board: Hayley Bowman, Gregory Parker, Taylor Sims, Melanie Tanielian
Presented by the University of Michigan Department of History
© 2020 Regents of the University of Michigan