@BarbicanStories
Barbican Stories 📒
Barbican Stories 📒
Libraries, public records & archives 📚📚📚
Libraries, public records & archives 📚📚📚
If you would like to suggest a library or an archive for us to donate Barbican Stories to, please drop the details below! We will do our best to donate as widely as possible. If you run or are an administrator for a library or archive that would like a copy of Barbican Stories, please drop your details below. Thank you!
Barbican Stories Press Release 📧
Barbican Stories Press Release 📧
Barbican Stories is a collection of firsthand and witnessed accounts of racism and discrimination at the Barbican Centre. The book has been written anonymously by current and former Barbican employees from Global Ethnic Majorities. The making of the book was triggered by the Barbican Centre's inadeq
GUARDIAN ARTICLE 📰
GUARDIAN ARTICLE 📰
Book details more than 100 instances of alleged prejudicial behaviour at the arts organisation
gal-dem ARTICLE 📣
gal-dem ARTICLE 📣
New Statesman ARTICLE 🗞️
New Statesman ARTICLE 🗞️
Welcome to the Barbican on Decolonial Hacker ⚒️
Welcome to the Barbican on Decolonial Hacker ⚒️
Decolonial Hacker critically examines cultural institutions, their alliances, interests and behaviour. Born of a desire to entrench more consistent and collective engagement with institutional critique, Decolonial Hacker operates through a web browser extension that “hacks” institutions’ URLs with commissioned criticism, and an online platform that archives these texts. The extension activates when a user logs onto an institution’s website, dissolving their webpage to reveal an article that analyses certain problematics of that place informed by decolonial politics at large – for instance, pillaged colonial objects, funding sources and labour conditions.
TWITTER
TWITTER
INSTAGRAM
INSTAGRAM
Decolonial Hacker Chrome/Firefox Extension
Decolonial Hacker Chrome/Firefox Extension
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