Can we engage in the discussion around colonial monuments if we not are prepared to engage in potentially uncomfortable conversations about our shared history? This commentary asks this and questions why we velementally defend colonial monuments? Is it about history or something else
Coloniser and colonised were produced as subjectivities through power relations mediated through obj...
Why did Charlottesville’s confederate monuments, which had been of little interest to white national...
In an era of reconciliation and truth-telling, many have questioned the symbolic power of statues. A...
This contribution considers the current debates about the place of monuments, such as the statue of ...
Following work on a master’s thesis about relocating monuments, the author reflects on the way that ...
This article explores some of the recent debates over statues, memorials and cultures of commemorati...
Ultimately, dialogical memorialisation is a way to promote critical thinking and engagement with the...
Understanding History’s history requires reading and analysing the texts it has produced across time...
Understanding History’s history requires reading and analysing the texts it has produced across time...
Memorials to white explorers and pioneers long stood (virtually) unchallenged in the heart of Austra...
The following is a longer version of a paper presented at the Northern Great Plains History Conferen...
In working on this edition Keira Lindsay and Mariko Smith have asked ‘whether monuments should be d...
The past decade has seen an international wave of public debate regarding monuments and commemorativ...
In recent years, the removal of monuments which glorify historical figures associated with racism an...
In Australia, calls for the removal of memorials to white colonists escalated during 2020, as the in...
Coloniser and colonised were produced as subjectivities through power relations mediated through obj...
Why did Charlottesville’s confederate monuments, which had been of little interest to white national...
In an era of reconciliation and truth-telling, many have questioned the symbolic power of statues. A...
This contribution considers the current debates about the place of monuments, such as the statue of ...
Following work on a master’s thesis about relocating monuments, the author reflects on the way that ...
This article explores some of the recent debates over statues, memorials and cultures of commemorati...
Ultimately, dialogical memorialisation is a way to promote critical thinking and engagement with the...
Understanding History’s history requires reading and analysing the texts it has produced across time...
Understanding History’s history requires reading and analysing the texts it has produced across time...
Memorials to white explorers and pioneers long stood (virtually) unchallenged in the heart of Austra...
The following is a longer version of a paper presented at the Northern Great Plains History Conferen...
In working on this edition Keira Lindsay and Mariko Smith have asked ‘whether monuments should be d...
The past decade has seen an international wave of public debate regarding monuments and commemorativ...
In recent years, the removal of monuments which glorify historical figures associated with racism an...
In Australia, calls for the removal of memorials to white colonists escalated during 2020, as the in...
Coloniser and colonised were produced as subjectivities through power relations mediated through obj...
Why did Charlottesville’s confederate monuments, which had been of little interest to white national...
In an era of reconciliation and truth-telling, many have questioned the symbolic power of statues. A...