Re-Boot(h) - Whitechapel Gallery

Re-Boot(h)

  • UKLSE_DL1_CB01_004_001_0031_0001

    Hand Coloured Map Descriptive of London Poverty 1898-1899 Sheet 63 – Spitalfields, Whitechapel, Mile End New Town, St George’s in the East. Charles Booth Archive.

Fri 28 Aug, 3-5pm

Clore Creative Studio

Monday Closed
Tuesday 11am–6pm
Wednesday 11am–6pm
Thursday 11am–9pm
Friday 11am–6pm
Saturday 11am–6pm
Sunday 11am–6pm

Access Information

Workshop
Re-Boot(h): Community Mapping event showcase with local audience participation

A workshop reimagining the Charles Booth London poverty maps with contemporary lived experience insights and entries from local young people.

Unlike the original Charles Booth London poverty maps, which were produced largely by social researchers in the late 19th and early 20th Century, this project is grounded in co-production and community expertise and brings mapping of the E1 and E2 area into the 21st Century. However, this activity does not replicate the Booth maps by auditing socio-economic, work status, education and other measurable features relating to each street in the area but instead breathes life into the mapping process by working together with residents in creating a ‘living map’ that charts social commentary, identification of meaningful places, lived experiences and particular memories of place.

Working closely with young peer researchers at Toynbee Hall, the project seeks to create a map that reflects lived experience, memory, and meaning according to the lives lived in the E1-3 area. Through stories, visual materials, and place-based insights, the map will articulate what this part of the city represents to those who live, move, and seek support within it.

This interactive workshop, delivered by the young peer researchers and project lead will present some initial mapping already completed from this ongoing four-year project and will offer an opportunity for local residents to contribute their entries.

This event is part of Backyard Biennial.

Centre for the Sciences of Place and Memory, University of Stirling

The project is led by Professor Paula Reavey on behalf of the Leverhulme funded Centre for the Sciences of Place and Memory at the University of Stirling. Anchored in Philosophy and housed in the Faculty of Arts and Humanities, the Centre draws on cognitive sciences, social sciences, and the arts to break new ground in the study of spatial thinking, disorientation, and remembering. It connects the sciences of space and memory with contemporary practical concerns about memory, cognition, emotion, and place. placememory.net