Feeding Black: Community, Power & Place
The Feeding Black display at the Museum of London Docklands spotlights four businesses and their owners central to diasporic African and Caribbean communities, exploring how they are much more than the services and goods they provide.
Listen to the stories of Kaleema & Kareema, Eugene, Tafeswork, and Junior interspersed with the sounds of markets in south London and Jamaica. These interviews are longer versions of the excerpts available in the display space.
Stops
Feeding Black Display, London Sugar and Slavery Gallery
Feeding Black Display, London Sugar and Slavery Gallery
Feeding Black Display, London Sugar and Slavery Gallery
Feeding Black Display, London Sugar and Slavery Gallery
Feeding Black Display, London Sugar and Slavery Gallery
Feeding Black Display, London Sugar and Slavery Gallery
Feeding Black Display, London Sugar and Slavery Gallery
Feeding Black Display, London Sugar and Slavery Gallery
Feeding Black Display, London Sugar and Slavery Gallery
Feeding Black Display, London Sugar and Slavery Gallery
Credits
Photographs by Jonas Martinez
Soundscape recording by Kayode 'Kayodeine' Gomez, with thanks to DTA Live Radio Department, Decolonising The Archive
Oral history recordings by Museum of London
With thanks to Lucy Isaiah, CEO & Founder of Black Female Entrepreneurs Greenwich (BFEG)
This work has been supported by public funding from Arts Council England.