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El. knyga: Palgrave Handbook on Rethinking Colonial Commemorations

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  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Jun-2023
  • Leidėjas: Palgrave Macmillan
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783031286094
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Jun-2023
  • Leidėjas: Palgrave Macmillan
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783031286094

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The Palgrave Handbook on Rethinking Colonial Commemorations explores global efforts, particularly from Indigenous and Bla(c)k communities, to dismantle colonial commemorations, monuments, and memorials. Across the world, many Indigenous and Bla(c)k communities have taken action to remove, rectify and/or re-imagine colonial commemorations. These efforts have had the support of some non-Indigenous and white community members, but very often they have faced fierce opposition. In spite of this, many have succeeded, and this work aims to acknowledge and honour these efforts. As a current and much-debated issue, this book will present fresh findings and analyses of recent and historical events, including #RhodesMustFall, Anzac Day protests, and the transferral of confederate monuments to museums.









Comprising of chapters written by Indigenous, Bla(c)k and non-Indigenous authors, from a wide variety of locations, backgrounds and purposes, this topical volume is atimely and important contribution to the fields of memory studies, Indigenous Studies, and cultural heritage.
Chapter
1. Introduction.- Part I: RECOGNITION & REMEMBERING.- Chapter
2.
Memorials to settler colonialism in Australia: racism, colonialism and white
power.- Chapter
3. Koro and the statue: disrupting colonial amnesia and white
settler sovereignty in Aotearoa New Zealand.- Chapter
4. Space and place:
cultural heritage and colonial commemoration at Australian tertiary
institutions.- Chapter
5. Toppling the racist Anglo-Saxon politics of Cecil
Rhodes.- Chapter
6. The dark side of Canadian history: a two-eyed seeing
approach.- Chapter
7. Its not a day for you: Indigenous Australians and
the disruption of Anzac Day.- Chapter
8. Reflections on Representation,
Remembrance and the Memorial.-Chapter
9. Lest we forget: the Tunnerminnerwait
and Maulboyheenner saga.- Chapter
10. Unwanted Endeavours and the
reconstruction of Cooks world.- Chapter
11. How churches are framed and
presented in the contemporary Sįmi homeland of Finland to maintain colonial
discourses.- Chapter
12. Colonial histories and artefacts: which way
gender?.- Chapter
13. Monumental copper and coal: the case for including
extractivism in the rethinking of colonial commemorations.- Part II:
RESISTANCE & REIMAGINING.- Chapter
14. Holding dissonance, while disrupting
narratives.- Chapter
15. Reason and reckoning: provocation and conversations
about re-imaging Samuel Griffiths University.- Chapter
16. Comedic
interventions: toppling monuments and dismantling myths in Rutherford
Falls.- Chapter
17. Confederates and colonial commemoration in the United
States: collective memory and counter-histories.- Chapter
18. The art of
Daniel Boyd: decolonising Banks and Cook, challenging colonial
commemoration.- Chapter
19. Asserting Indigenous agencies: constructions and
deconstructions of James Cook in Northern Queensland.- Chapter
20. Futuring
ruins: the grassroots design activism of the Department of Homo
Affairs.- Chapter
21. Its just always been there: Rutherford Falls,
monuments and settler colonial hegemony.- Part III: REMOVAL &
RECTIFICATION.- Chapter
22. The need for context: archaeologys contribution
to the statue wars.- Chapter
23. Dis-placing white supremacy: intersections
of Black and Indigenous struggles in the removal of the Roosevelt statue at
the American Museum of Natural History.- Chapter
24. Edifying: the
Deathscapes Project and the landscape of settler-colonial monumentality in
Australia.- Chapter
25. The problem and potential of anti-Black monuments in
museums.- Chapter
26. Local Empire: George Framptons Leeds Queen Victoria
Memorial.- Chapter
27. The struggle continues down south: dismantling of
colonial monuments and symbols of colonialism and white supremacy.- Chapter
28. Standing strong: the renaming of Toronto Metropolitan University.-Chapter
29. The Crowther Reinterpreted project.- Chapter
30. You can handle the
truth: Aboriginal peoples, colonial commemorations and the unfinished
business of truth-telling.
Professor Bronwyn Carlson is an award-winning Aboriginal author, researcher and academic who lives on Dharawal Country in New South Wales. Bronwyn is the author of The politics of identity: who counts as Aboriginal today? (2016) and a well-known commentator on the place of colonial monuments. She is a co-author of Monumental Disruptions: Aboriginal People and Colonial Commemorations in So-Called Australia (2023). She is the founder and editor of The Journal of Global Indigeneity and the Director of the Centre for Global Indigenous Futures, Head of the Department of Indigenous Studies at Macquarie University and a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities.

Dr Terri Farrelly is an Adjunct Fellow and Postdoctoral Research Associate with the Department of Indigenous Studies at Macquarie University. She is a settler researcher and author whose work has been dedicated to Aboriginal suicidologies and addressing racism and discrimination through truth-telling. She is a co-author of Monumental Disruptions: Aboriginal People and Colonial Commemorations in So-Called Australia (2023).