Curating Discomfort - Meet the Team

Community Curators

Arunima Bhattacharya

Postdoctoral research assistant, School of History, University of Leeds

Dr Arunima Bhattacharya is a postdoctoral research assistant on a AHRC funded project titled, The Other from Within: Indian Anthropologists and the Birth of a Nation at the School of History in the University of Leeds. This project involves academics from the Universities of Leeds, Edinburgh and Manchester and focuses on the contributions made by Indian anthropologists to global networks of research that aspired towards the reinvention of anthropology as a cosmopolitan, transnational discipline, and contributed to the process of decolonisation in India. She has completed her PhD in English Literature from the University of Leeds and was the Anniversary Fellow at Institute of Advanced Studies in Humanities (IASH) at the University of Edinburgh. Arunima is interested in Scottish imperial heritage, particularly in South Asia and has worked as a project support officer on the LAHRI funded 'Curating/Creating a decolonial classroom' project at Leeds.

Yvonne Blake

Racial Justice Activist, Migrants Organising for Rights and Empowerment (MORE), Community Historian, Glasgow, doing a Master’s in Community Development

Black Voices on Climate Justice and COP26
Why Climate Justice means Migrant Justice
More Glasgow website

 

Nelson Cummins

Photograph of Nelson CumminsCommunity Campaigns Officer, Coalition for Racial Equality and Rights (CRER), Glasgow

Nelson Cummins is the Communities and Campaigns Officer at the Coalition for Racial Equality and Rights (CRER), a role he has held since March 2021. In the role he co-ordinates CRER’s work on Black History and involves working within communities in Glasgow. Some of the organisations and projects he is involved in include Glasgow Voluntary Race Equality Network and Black History Month (making it all year round). Nelson got involved in the Hunterian to embed anti-racism in the museum.

Esraa Husain

Photograph of Esraa HusainCreative Writer, Community Organiser, and PhD Researcher, University of Glasgow

Esraa Husain (they/she/he) is a non-binary and multi-ethnic creative writer, academic and community organiser based in Scotland. Esraa is currently a PhD researcher at the University of Glasgow focusing on Black Scottish writing, migrancy, political agency and postcolonial theory. Their creative writings, and photography have been featured in Gutter, Scottish BAME Writers Network, The Bottle Imp, Somewhere For Us, Kohl كحل Journal, Causeway/Cabhsair and more. They are the founder and director of UBelong Glasgow: a multilingual community platform that features BPOC, LGBT+ and disabled creatives. 

UBelong Glasgow

Churnjeet Mahn

Reader in English at the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow

Churnjeet Mahn is Reader in English at the University of Strathclyde. Her research investigates the history and practice of travel with reference to race, sexuality, and nationalisms. Her early work investigated the competing discourses of Orientalism, Hellenism and Philhellenism in Greece in the wake of its independence from the Ottoman Empire. After this, she worked on a project about histories of creativity and resistance in post-Partition Punjab. Churnjeet is currently working on a book about queer travel writing which investigates the history of queer travel to, and from, the ‘Orient’. She is currently PI on a British Academy grant entitled Cross-Border Queers: The Story of South Asian Migrants to the UK and is an AHRC EDI Leadership Fellow on a project entitled EDI in Scottish Heritage in partnership with Museums and Galleries Scotland.

Mary Osei-Oppong

Photograph of Mary Osei OppongSecondary School Teacher and qualified Chartered Teacher, Chair of African Caribbean Women’s Association (ACWA), Glasgow

Mary Osei-Oppong is a qualified secondary school teacher of Business Studies, Computing Science, Religious Education, also, a qualified Chartered Teacher. She taught for 22 years in Scotland and took early retirement on 10 August 2020. Mary has lived in Scotland for almost 40 years to the year 2021. Mary has been an activist from a young age, throughout her career and will continue to fight for equal opportunity issues till it is not physically possible for her to do so. She has made an impactful contribution to Scottish Education and had integrated well in Scottish society. Mary is the author of the book 'For The Love of Teaching; The Anti-Racist Battlefield in Education'.