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Sites of imperial memory : commemorating colonial rule in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries / edited by Dominik Geppert and Frank Lorenz Müller.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Studies in imperialismPublication details: Manchester : Manchester University Press, 2015.Description: 1 online resource (xvi, 280 pages) : illustrationsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781526111890
  • 1526111896
  • 1526111888
  • 9781526111883
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Sites of imperial memory.DDC classification:
  • 325/.3 23
LOC classification:
  • JV105 .S57 2015
Online resources:
Contents:
1. Beyond national memory. Nora's Lieux de Mémoire across an imperial world -- Dominik Geppert and Frank Lorenz Müller PART I: Monuments. 2. Transmissible sites: monuments, memorials and their visibility on the metropole and periphery -- Xavier Guégan. 3. Politics, caste and the remembrance of the Raj: the Obelisk at Koregaon -- Shraddha Kumbhojkar. 4. The thirteen martyrs of Arad: a monumental Hungarian history -- James Koranyi. 5. Heroes, victims, and the quest for peace: war monuments and the contradictions of Japan's post-imperial commemoration -- Barak Kushner. PART II: Heroes and villains. 6. From the penny press to the plinth: British and French 'heroic imperialists' as sites of memory -- Berny Sèbe. 7. Jan Pieterszoon Coen: a man they love to hate. The first governor-general of the Dutch East Indies as an imperial site of memory -- Victor Enthoven 8. The memory of Lord Clive in Britain and beyond: imperial hero and villain -- Richard Goebelt. 9. David Livingstone, British protestant missions, memory and empire -- John Stuart. 10. Freedom fighter and anti-tsarist rebel: Imam Shamil and imperial memory in Russia -- Stefan Creuzberger. PART III: Remembering and forgetting. 11. From Nehruvian neglect to Bollywood heroes: the memory of the raj in post-war India -- Maria Misra. 12. 'Forgive and forget'? The Mau Mau uprising in Kenyan collective memory -- Winfried Speitkamp. 13. Exploration and exploitation: German colonial botany at the Botanic Garden and Botanical Museum Berlin -- Katja Kaiser. 14. Recollections of rubber -- Frank Uekötter. Select bibliography. Index.
Summary: Europe's great colonial empires have long been a thing of the past, but the memories they generated are still all around us. They have left deep imprints on the different memory communities that were affected by the processes of establishing, running and dismantling these systems of imperial rule, and they are still vibrant and evocative today. This volume brings together a collection of innovative and fresh studies exploring different sites of imperial memory - those conceptual and real places where the memories of former colonial rulers and of former colonial subjects have crystallised into a lasting form. The volume explores how memory was built up, re-shaped and preserved across different empires, continents and centuries. It shows how it found concrete expression in stone and bronze, how it adhered to the stories that were told and retold about great individuals and how it was suppressed, denied and neglected. -- Provided by publisher.
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 266-273) and index.

Print version record.

1. Beyond national memory. Nora's Lieux de Mémoire across an imperial world -- Dominik Geppert and Frank Lorenz Müller PART I: Monuments. 2. Transmissible sites: monuments, memorials and their visibility on the metropole and periphery -- Xavier Guégan. 3. Politics, caste and the remembrance of the Raj: the Obelisk at Koregaon -- Shraddha Kumbhojkar. 4. The thirteen martyrs of Arad: a monumental Hungarian history -- James Koranyi. 5. Heroes, victims, and the quest for peace: war monuments and the contradictions of Japan's post-imperial commemoration -- Barak Kushner. PART II: Heroes and villains. 6. From the penny press to the plinth: British and French 'heroic imperialists' as sites of memory -- Berny Sèbe. 7. Jan Pieterszoon Coen: a man they love to hate. The first governor-general of the Dutch East Indies as an imperial site of memory -- Victor Enthoven 8. The memory of Lord Clive in Britain and beyond: imperial hero and villain -- Richard Goebelt. 9. David Livingstone, British protestant missions, memory and empire -- John Stuart. 10. Freedom fighter and anti-tsarist rebel: Imam Shamil and imperial memory in Russia -- Stefan Creuzberger. PART III: Remembering and forgetting. 11. From Nehruvian neglect to Bollywood heroes: the memory of the raj in post-war India -- Maria Misra. 12. 'Forgive and forget'? The Mau Mau uprising in Kenyan collective memory -- Winfried Speitkamp. 13. Exploration and exploitation: German colonial botany at the Botanic Garden and Botanical Museum Berlin -- Katja Kaiser. 14. Recollections of rubber -- Frank Uekötter. Select bibliography. Index.

Europe's great colonial empires have long been a thing of the past, but the memories they generated are still all around us. They have left deep imprints on the different memory communities that were affected by the processes of establishing, running and dismantling these systems of imperial rule, and they are still vibrant and evocative today. This volume brings together a collection of innovative and fresh studies exploring different sites of imperial memory - those conceptual and real places where the memories of former colonial rulers and of former colonial subjects have crystallised into a lasting form. The volume explores how memory was built up, re-shaped and preserved across different empires, continents and centuries. It shows how it found concrete expression in stone and bronze, how it adhered to the stories that were told and retold about great individuals and how it was suppressed, denied and neglected. -- Provided by publisher.

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