Tylar Campbell’s article in special issue of Museum Anthropology

MCL PhD candidate Tylar Campbell has just published his article “Deep Roots, Bama Soil: Narrative Multimodal Anthropology and Fugitive Histories” in a forthcoming special issue of the journal Museum Anthropology on Black Museum Anthropology, edited by Deborah Johnson.

Congratulations Tylar on this exceptional contribution! Read the open access article here.

Fig. 9. Tylar Campbell discovers his relative’s name among the red steel beams at the immersive exhibition in the at the National Memorial for Peace and Justice, Montgomery Alabama.

Abstract:

This article explores the concept of fugitive histories through narrative multimodal anthropology in Black memory spaces. The aim of this research was to understand how multimodal anthropology and fugitive histories can be used to preserve and re-imagine narratives that counteract erasure. This article presents a narrative multimodal podcast I produced exploring my personal connection to racial violence, in conversation with a visit to the National Memorial for Peace and Justice and Legacy Museum to consider the ways in which narrative multimodal production and curation may benefit the health and well-being of Black communities, with a focus on Black fugitivity refusal, and reclamation as a strategic application of the Black Radical Tradition.