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Informationen zum Autor Annie E. Coombes is Professor of Material and Visual Culture at Birkbeck College, London. Klappentext Rethinking settler colonialism focuses on the long history of contact between indigenous peoples and the white colonial communities who settled in Australia, Aotearoa New Zealand, Canada and South Africa. In each of these countries these communities were displaced, marginalised and sometimes subjected to attempted genocide through the colonial process. Recently these groups have renewed their claims for greater political representation and autonomy. The essays and artwork in this book insist that an understanding of the political and cultural institutions and practices which shaped settler-colonial societies in the past can provide important insights into how this legacy of unequal rights can be contested in the present.It will be of interest to those studying the effects of colonial powers on indigenous populations, and the legacies of imperial rule in postcolonial societies. Zusammenfassung Focuses on the long history of contact between indigenous peoples and the white colonial communities who settled in Australia! Aotearoa New Zealand! Canada and South Africa. This title interrogates how histories of colonial settlement have been mythologised! narrated and embodied in public culture in the twentieth century. Inhaltsverzeichnis List of figuresNotes on contributorsAcknowledgementsIntroduction: Memory and history in settler colonialism - Annie E. CoombesArtists pages: Lisa Reihana, Berni Searle and Brook AndrewPart I: Colonial culture: institutions and practices1. 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, 1938-52 - Leslie Witz3. From prisoners to exhibits: representations of 'Bushmen' of the Northern Cape, 1880-1900 - Martin Legassick Part II: The ordering of culture: new nations for old4. Taonga, Marae,Whenua - Negotiating custodianship: a Maori tribal response to Te Papa: Museum of New Zealand - Paul Tapsell5. Auckland's centrepiece: unsettled identities, unstable monuments - Leonard Bell6. Show times: de-celebrating the Canadian nation, decolonising the Canadian Museum. 1967-92 - Ruth B. Phillips7. The uses of Captain Cook: early exploration in the public history of Aotearoa New Zealand and Australia - Nicholas Thomas8. Selective memory: the British Empire Exhibition and national histories of art - Christine BoyanoskiPart III: Engagement and resistance9. Challenging the myth of indigenous peoples' 'last stand' in Canada and Australia: public discourse and the conditions of silence - Elizabeth Furniss10. 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 PaisleyPart IV: New subjectivities and the politics of reconciliation12. New World poetics of place: along the Oregon Trail and in the National Museum of Australia - Deborah Bird Rose 13. Subjectivities of Whiteness - Sarah NuttallSelect bibliographyIndex...