房间里的殖民大象:迈克尔Parekōwhai的灯塔和詹姆斯·库克船长

Alanna O'Riley
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摘要

长期以来,帝国统治一直是通过建立纪念碑来支持的。然而,在我们当前动荡的政治和失败的社会制度的气候下,这些纪念碑占据越来越不稳定的基础。鉴于反对纪念性雕像的运动愈演愈烈,公众对迈克尔Parekōwhai灯塔中的詹姆斯·库克船长雕像(Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland, Aotearoa New Zealand, 2017)的沉默令人震耳欲聋。在新西兰的奥特罗阿,詹姆斯·库克船长是一个熟悉的、尽管存在分歧的人物。对一些人来说,库克是著名的英国航海家、探险家和制图师;他是国家的缔造者,是当地人的朋友,有着开明的科学动机。对土著居民来说,库克是小偷、杀人犯和绑架者,他来到太平洋,故意传播疾病,目的是为英国王室寻找充足的土地进行殖民。本文探讨了灯塔内库克雕像的意义,特别是与殖民纪念碑和纪念活动的遗产有关。在《灯塔》中,雕塑家Michael Parekōwhai将库克重塑为个人和集体身份的复杂象征,突出了地点、遗产和主权问题。Parekōwhai修改了殖民纪念碑的角色,重新将库克作为平衡历史和国家叙事的工具。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Colonial Elephant in the Room: Michael Parekōwhai’s The Lighthouse and Captain James Cook
Imperial rule has long been supported by the establishment of monuments. However, in our current climate of tumultuous politics and failing social systems, these monuments occupy increasingly shaky ground. Given a growing crusade against monumental statues the public silence on Michael Parekōwhai’s statue of Captain James Cook in The Lighthouse (Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland, Aotearoa New Zealand, 2017) is deafening. In Aotearoa New Zealand, Captain James Cook is a familiar, albeit divisive, figure. To some, Cook is known as a British navigator, explorer, and cartographer; a founder of nations, friend to natives, with enlightened and scientific motivations. To indigenous communities, Cook was the thief, murderer, and kidnapper who knowingly spread disease when arriving in the Pacific with the intent to find ample land for the British Crown to colonise. This essay explores the significance of the statue of Cook within The Lighthouse, particularly in relation to the legacy of colonial monuments and memorialisation. In The Lighthouse, sculptor Michael Parekōwhai recasts Cook as a complex emblem of personal and collective identity, highlighting issues of place, legacy, and sovereignty. Parekōwhai revises the role of the colonial monument, reclaiming Cook as an instrument in the balancing of historical and national narratives.
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