Decolonizing German and European History at the Museum
Format:Paperback
Publisher:The University of Michigan Press
Published:6th Dec '21
Should be back in stock very soon
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Decolonizing German and European History at the Museum examines efforts by European museums to investigate colonialism as part of an unprocessed past, confront its presence, and urge repair. A flurry of exhibitions and the overhaul of numerous large museums in the last decade signal that an emergent colonial memory culture is now reaching broader publics. Exhibitions pose the question of what Europeans owe to those they colonized.
Decolonizing German and European History at the Museum shows how museums can help visitors mourn historic violence and identify the contemporary agents, beneficiaries, victims, survivors, and resisters of colonial presence. At the same time, the book treats the museum as part of the racialized power relations that activists, academics, and artists have long protested against. This book asks whether museums have made the dream of activists, academics, and artists to build equitable futures more acceptable and more durable—or whether in packaging that dream for general audiences they curtail it. Confronting colonial violence, this book argues, pushes Europeans to face the histories of racism and urges them to envision antiracism at the global scale.
"An excellent work of critical scholarship."
—CHOICE
"This rich and stimulating study balances hugely informative contextualizations with illuminating discussions of specific exhibitions: Sieg's attention to gesture and posture yields especially insightful observations. It presents a significant amount of information—historical, theoretical, and analytical—in an admirably clear and accessible way, making this book an extremely important intervention in the fields of memory studies, museum studies, and decolonisation, but also a highly informative point of entry into current debates on sovereignty, cosmopolitanism, colonialism, and the politics of memory in the German and European context."
—Monatshefte
"Sieg’s book nonetheless offers a cogent analysis of the role of the history museum that places colonialism, race, and racism at the center of the analysis rather than the periphery. . . With the GHM now closed for a much-needed updating of its permanent collection, it remains to be seen whether what reopens in 2025 will reflect Sieg’s hopeful vision for what a history museum can do."
-- The German Quarterly, Maureen O. GallaISBN: 9780472055104
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
326 pages