Visual Redress in Africa from Indigenous and New Materialist Perspectives

Visual Redress in Africa from Indigenous and New Materialist Perspectives portes grátis

Visual Redress in Africa from Indigenous and New Materialist Perspectives

Costandius, Elmarie; de Villiers, Gera

Taylor & Francis Ltd

06/2023

254

Dura

Inglês

9781032368535

15 a 20 dias

Descrição não disponível.
Introduction: Originating, (re)creating and (re)futuring visual redress Part I: Theoretical perspectives on visual redress 1. Engaging in Indigenous anti-colonial knowledge production 2. Feminist new materialism and visual redress Part II: Visual Redress in Africa 3. "Africanising" a modern art history curriculum in Nigerian universities: Development and constraints 4. Reflecting on post-apartheid heritage redress: From unsettled pasts to unsettled presents and uncertain futures 5. Change and stasis in the semiotic landscape of a school for young offenders in Eswatini: Towards a decolonial space 6. Visual redress at Stellenbosch University, South Africa 7. Whatever happened to Cecil?: Monuments commemorating Rhodes before and after #RhodesMustFall 8. Postcolonial monuments in Bamako, Mali: Encoding heritage, history and modernity 9. Landscapes of memory: Ake Centenary Hall and the making of Egba identity, 1934-1999 10. The art of (de)colonisation: Memorials, buildings and public space in Maputo around independence. 11.The Faidherbe statue and memory making in Saint-Louis-du-Senegal, 1887-2020 12. The removal of colonial names, symbols and monuments in Uganda 13. From Rhodesia to Zimbabwe: Renaming of places and streets in Zimbabwe Part III: Visual redress abroad 14. From the monument to the museum: Controversy and diversity in dealing with toxic monuments in Germany 15. Reclaiming the Monument: Processes towards dismantling symbols of oppression in Richmond, Virginia 16. Dreaming of destruction: From direct action to speculative iconoclasm in Aboriginal protest, Australia, 1970-2021 Postscript
decolonial theory;heritage transformation;indigenous epistemology;postcolonial monuments;semiotic landscapes;feminist materialism;colonial public art removal