This article takes as its point of departure the recent wave of contestations relating to colonial-era monuments in Europe. While the toppling of monuments has long been a part of political regime change, recent attacks on monuments need to be understood instead, not as celebrations of a change that has already occurred, but as attempts to affect ‘mnemonic regime change’ as part of a larger struggle for racial equality and social justice. Monuments are materialisations of larger narratives that operate within a broader culture of memory; at the same time, they have a particular role to play in mnemonic contestations since they offer a physical platform for public performances of adherence to, or dissent from, dominant understandings of coll...
This article examines public monuments in London and their relationship to slavery and abolition, a ...
On 9 March 2015, Chumani Maxwele, a student at the University of Cape Town (UCT) in South Africa, th...
Richards’s article is a reflection on comparative history inspired by the pulling down of the statue...
This article takes as its point of departure the recent wave of contestations relating to colonial-e...
The toppling of the Edward Colston statue by Black Lives Matter protestors in Bristol became one of ...
This is a video essay delivered at the AMPS online conference Dec 2020. It can be watched on YouTube...
This paper considers the fall of the statue of Edward Colston in long historical perspective and ref...
The toppling of slave trader Edward Colston’s statue in Bristol on 7th June 2020, and its dispatch i...
Much public protest in recent years has been directed towards monuments to controversial figures who...
During the protests that occurred in Bristol in June 2020, in the name of Black Lives Matter, the st...
This paper considers the fall of the statue of Edward Colston in long historical perspective and ref...
The Fall of Monuments: a Public History Monuments have, for a few years now, been hitting the headli...
In June 2020 Black Lives Matter had become prominent in the USA and was taken further in various cou...
Forgetfulness is not a trait generally associated with museums. In principle, they endeavour to cult...
This book investigates memorials and monuments to slavery throughout the African diaspora, but with ...
This article examines public monuments in London and their relationship to slavery and abolition, a ...
On 9 March 2015, Chumani Maxwele, a student at the University of Cape Town (UCT) in South Africa, th...
Richards’s article is a reflection on comparative history inspired by the pulling down of the statue...
This article takes as its point of departure the recent wave of contestations relating to colonial-e...
The toppling of the Edward Colston statue by Black Lives Matter protestors in Bristol became one of ...
This is a video essay delivered at the AMPS online conference Dec 2020. It can be watched on YouTube...
This paper considers the fall of the statue of Edward Colston in long historical perspective and ref...
The toppling of slave trader Edward Colston’s statue in Bristol on 7th June 2020, and its dispatch i...
Much public protest in recent years has been directed towards monuments to controversial figures who...
During the protests that occurred in Bristol in June 2020, in the name of Black Lives Matter, the st...
This paper considers the fall of the statue of Edward Colston in long historical perspective and ref...
The Fall of Monuments: a Public History Monuments have, for a few years now, been hitting the headli...
In June 2020 Black Lives Matter had become prominent in the USA and was taken further in various cou...
Forgetfulness is not a trait generally associated with museums. In principle, they endeavour to cult...
This book investigates memorials and monuments to slavery throughout the African diaspora, but with ...
This article examines public monuments in London and their relationship to slavery and abolition, a ...
On 9 March 2015, Chumani Maxwele, a student at the University of Cape Town (UCT) in South Africa, th...
Richards’s article is a reflection on comparative history inspired by the pulling down of the statue...