Emerging Memory
Photographs of Colonial Atrocity in Dutch Cultural Remembrance
Author(s)
Bijl, Paul
Collection
Knowledge Unlatched (KU); Dutch Research Council (NWO)Number
101341Language
EnglishAbstract
This incisive volume brings together postcolonial studies, visual culture and cultural memory studies to explain how the Netherlands continues to rediscover its history of violence in colonial Indonesia. Dutch commentators have frequently claimed that the colonial past and especially the violence associated with it has been 'forgotten' in the Netherlands. Uncovering 'lost' photographs and other documents of violence has thereby become a recurring feature aimed at unmasking a hidden truth.
The author argues that, rather than absent, such images have been consistently present in the Dutch public sphere and have been widely available in print, on television and now on the internet. Emerging Memory: Photographs of Colonial Atrocity in Dutch Cultural Remembrance shows that between memory and forgetting there is a haunted zone from which pasts that do not fit the stories nations live by keep on emerging and submerging while retaining their disturbing presence.
Keywords
History; History; Aceh; Colonialism; De Jong; Dutch East Indies; Dutch people; Gotfried Coenraad Ernst van Daalen; J. B. van Heutsz; NetherlandsDOI
10.5117/9789089645906ISBN
9789048522019OCN
1030821187Publisher
Amsterdam University PressPublisher website
https://www.aup.nl/Publication date and place
Amsterdam, 2016-03-01Grantor
Series
Heritage and Memory Studies,Classification
Colonialism and imperialism