Lecture: Liberating Labels. Decolonizing Language Use in Historical Collection Management and Data Contextualization, 22.04.26, online
We invite you to the lecture, organised as part of the seminar series ‘Legal History Meets Digital Humanities’ at the Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory and held online on 10 April 2026 from 10:00 to 11:30.
History writing, archiving and museum practices are at a critical crossroads in confronting their colonial inheritances, particularly in the realm of language. Key knowledge objects such as terminology and metadata, once considered neutral and objective, are now recognised as carriers of hidden coloniality, prompting the development of decolonization guidelines, glossaries and archival advice across the heritage sector. This presentation held by Juliette Huygen, Manjusha Kuruppa, Phạm Thùy Dung from the Huygens Institute, Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences interrogates how viable these frameworks are in practice, drawing on two concrete case studies: the Words Matter Project (National Museum of World Cultures), which set a precedent for addressing discriminatory and colonial language in heritage contexts, and the Globalise Project (Huygens Institute, Amsterdam), which is building a thesaurus to define and contextualise terminology in the Dutch East India Company archives. Through these examples, the presentation reveals that transplanting guidelines across disciplinary contexts raises new challenges, and that decolonization remains a complex matter of praxis rather than a problem solved by theory alone.
Please find more information and the registration here.
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