Домой United States USA — Science Harvard profits from early photos of slaves, lawsuit says

Harvard profits from early photos of slaves, lawsuit says

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Harvard University has
BOSTON — Harvard University has «shamelessly» turned a profit from photos of two 19th-century slaves while ignoring requests to turn the photos over to the slaves’ descendants, according to a lawsuit filed Wednesday.
Tamara Lanier, of Norwich, Connecticut, is suing the Ivy League school for «wrongful seizure, possession and expropriation» of images she says depict two of her ancestors. Her suit, filed in Massachusetts state court, demands that Harvard immediately turn over the photos, acknowledge her ancestry and pay an unspecified sum in damages.
Harvard spokesman Jonathan Swain said the university «has not yet been served, and with that is in no position to comment on this complaint.»
At the center of the case is a series of 1850 daguerreotypes, an early type of photo, taken of two South Carolina slaves identified as Renty and his daughter, Delia. Both were posed shirtless and photographed from several angles. The images are believed to be the earliest known photos of American slaves.
They were commissioned by Harvard biologist Louis Agassiz, whose theories on racial difference were used to support slavery in the U. S. The lawsuit says Agassiz came across Renty and Delia while touring plantations in search of racially «pure» slaves born in Africa.
«To Agassiz, Renty and Delia were nothing more than research specimens,» the suit says. «The violence of compelling them to participate in a degrading exercise designed to prove their own subhuman status would not have occurred to him, let alone mattered.»
The suit attacks Harvard for its «exploitation» of Renty’s image at a 2017 conference and in other uses. It says Harvard has capitalized on the photos by demanding a «hefty» licensing fee to reproduce the images.

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