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引用次数: 1
摘要
摘要:本文探讨了纪念实践与当代公共空间非殖民化诉求之间的冲突关系。本文以起源于南非开普敦的罗德必须垮台运动为例,展示了纪念建筑的非殖民化审讯如何影响纪念的空间性。塞西尔·约翰·罗兹(Cecil John Rhodes, 1853-1902)是一位标志性的英国商人和政治家,因其种族偏见而闻名,他在南非历史上发挥了如此重要的作用。在后殖民时代的背景下,对他的纪念活动已经成为发掘和探索挥之不去的殖民和种族主义话语的场所。因此,纪念的做法和空间因其长期坚持的扭曲的历史叙述而受到严厉的批评。这篇文章展示了非殖民化的实践和意识形态是如何影响公众对那些长期用来纪念罗兹的纪念建筑的看法的。
Killing Rhodes: decolonization and memorial practices in post-apartheid South Africa
ABSTRACT This article investigates the conflicted relationship that exists between practices of memorial commemoration and contemporary calls for the decolonization of public space. Drawing on the example of the Rhodes Must Fall movement that originated in Cape Town, South Africa, this article demonstrates how the spatiality of commemoration is affected by decolonizing interrogations of memorial structures. Within a postcolonial context, commemorations of Cecil John Rhodes (1853–1902), the iconic British businessman and politician who was well known for his race-based prejudices and who played such an important role in the history of South Africa, have become sites where lingering colonial and racist discourses are unearthed and explored. As such, the practices and spaces of memorialization have come under severe criticism for the distorted historical narratives they have long upheld. This article demonstrates how decolonizing practices and ideologies affect public perceptions of those commemorative structures that have long served to memorialize Rhodes.
期刊介绍:
Folk Life: Journal of Ethnological Studies is a journal devoted to the study of all aspects of traditional ways of life in Great Britain and Ireland. The journal publishes original, high quality, peer-reviewed research in the form of unsolicited articles, solicited papers (which are usually selected from those read at the Society"s annual conference) and of members" papers (which are usually short reports of work in progress). Work published in Folk Life may include, for example, papers dealing with the traditional ways of life of other countries and regions, which may be compared to or contrasted with those of Great Britain and Ireland.