On both sides of the Atlantic, states have tended to react nervously to reparative claims for slavery, just as they have tended to be wary of making apologies of any kind. In the absence of more radical gestures, public history has taken on an added significance, not least as a way of providing some kind of recompense for past suffering. But to what extent can public history be used to repair historical wrongs? This essay sets out to explore this question, taking as its point of departure the bicentenary of the abolition of the British slave trade (2007). In particular, it focuses on three inter-related areas of activity: heritage funding, museums and, finally, monuments and memorials. The 2007 commemorations generated a wide range of publi...
This article offers new perspectives on the commemorative events organized around the UK in 2007 to ...
How should we as Britons remember transatlantic slavery? How has slavery been remembered in the past...
How should we as Britons remember transatlantic slavery? How has slavery been remembered in the past...
On both sides of the Atlantic, states have tended to react nervously to reparative claims for slaver...
On both sides of the Atlantic, states have tended to react nervously to reparative claims for slaver...
On both sides of the Atlantic, states have tended to react nervously to reparative claims for slaver...
On both sides of the Atlantic, states have tended to react nervously to reparative claims for slaver...
On both sides of the Atlantic, states have tended to react nervously to reparative claims for slaver...
The year 2007 marked the bicentenary of the Act abolishing British participation in the slave trade....
Although slavery played a major role in the British economy starting in the seventeenth century, it ...
This article offers new perspectives on the commemorative events organized around the UK in 2007 to ...
This article offers new perspectives on the commemorative events organized around the UK in 2007 to ...
This article offers new perspectives on the commemorative events organized around the UK in 2007 to ...
This article offers new perspectives on the commemorative events organized around the UK in 2007 to ...
This article offers new perspectives on the commemorative events organized around the UK in 2007 to ...
This article offers new perspectives on the commemorative events organized around the UK in 2007 to ...
How should we as Britons remember transatlantic slavery? How has slavery been remembered in the past...
How should we as Britons remember transatlantic slavery? How has slavery been remembered in the past...
On both sides of the Atlantic, states have tended to react nervously to reparative claims for slaver...
On both sides of the Atlantic, states have tended to react nervously to reparative claims for slaver...
On both sides of the Atlantic, states have tended to react nervously to reparative claims for slaver...
On both sides of the Atlantic, states have tended to react nervously to reparative claims for slaver...
On both sides of the Atlantic, states have tended to react nervously to reparative claims for slaver...
The year 2007 marked the bicentenary of the Act abolishing British participation in the slave trade....
Although slavery played a major role in the British economy starting in the seventeenth century, it ...
This article offers new perspectives on the commemorative events organized around the UK in 2007 to ...
This article offers new perspectives on the commemorative events organized around the UK in 2007 to ...
This article offers new perspectives on the commemorative events organized around the UK in 2007 to ...
This article offers new perspectives on the commemorative events organized around the UK in 2007 to ...
This article offers new perspectives on the commemorative events organized around the UK in 2007 to ...
This article offers new perspectives on the commemorative events organized around the UK in 2007 to ...
How should we as Britons remember transatlantic slavery? How has slavery been remembered in the past...
How should we as Britons remember transatlantic slavery? How has slavery been remembered in the past...