----- 重思殖民主义:澳大利亚,加拿大,新西兰及南非历史与记忆
List of figures Notes on Contributors Acknowledgements Introduction: Memory and History in Settler Colonialism - Annie E. Coombes SECTION ONE: Colonial Culture: Institutions and Practices 1. Active Remembrance: Testimony, memoir and the work of reconciliation - Gillian Whitlock 2. Solly Sachs, the Great Trek and Jan van Riebeeck: Settler Pasts and Racial Identities in the Garment Workers Union, 1938 - 1952 - Leslie Witz 3. From Prisoners to Exhibits: Representations of 'Bushmen' of the Northern Cape, 1880-1900 - Martin Legassick SECTION TWO: The Ordering of Culture : New Nations for Old. 4. Taonga, Marae,Whenua - Negotiating Custodianship: A Maori tribal response to Te Papa: Museum of New Zealand - Paul Tapsell 5. Auckland's Centrepiece: Unsettled Identities, Unstable Monuments - Leonard Bell 6. Show Times: De-Celebrating the Canadian Nation, Decolonising the Canadian Museum. 1967-1992 - Ruth B. Phillips 7. The Uses of Captain Cook: Early exploration in the public history of Aotearoa New Zealand and Australia - Nicholas Thomas 8. Selective Memory: The British Empire Exhibition and National Histories of Art - Christine Boyanoski SECTION THREE: Engagement and Resistance 9. Challenging the Myth of Indigenous Peoples' 'Last Stand' in Canada and Australia: Public discourse and the conditions of silence - Elizabeth Furniss 10. Being Indian the South African Way: The Development of Indian Identity in 1940s Durban - Parvathi Raman 11. "An Education in White Brutality: Anthony Martin Fernando and Australian Aboriginal rights in global context - Fiona Paisley SECTION FOUR: New Subjectivities and the Politics of Reconciliation. 12. New World Poetics of Place: Along the Oregon Trail and and in the National Museum of Australia - Deborah Bird Rose 13. Subjectivities of Whiteness - Sarah Nuttall 14. Facing History: Artists' Pages : Brook Andrew, 'Ignoratia' Lisa Reihana, 'Native Portraits n.19897, Berni Searle, 'Profile' Selected bibliography
{{comment.content}}