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Decolonizing Heritage
Time to Repair in Senegal

£75.00

Part of The International African Library

  • Date Published: March 2022
  • availability: Available
  • format: Hardback
  • isbn: 9781316514535

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About the Authors
  • Senegal features prominently on the UNESCO World Heritage List. As many of its cultural heritage sites are remnants of the French empire, how does an independent nation care for the heritage of colonialism? How does it reinterpret slave barracks, colonial museums, and monuments to empire to imagine its own national future? This book examines Senegal's decolonization of its cultural heritage. Revealing how Léopold Sédar Senghor's philosophy of Négritude inflects the interpretation of its colonial heritage, Ferdinand de Jong demonstrates how Senegal's reinterpretation of heritage sites enables it to overcome the legacies of the slave trade, colonialism, and empire. Remembering and reclaiming a Pan-African future, De Jong shows how World Heritage sites are conceived as the archive of an Afrotopia to come, and, in a move towards decolonization, how they repair colonial time.

    • Offers insights into how an independent nation goes about decolonising its UNESCO World Heritage sites to imagine a national future
    • Analyses the appropriation of heritage to repair the wounds of colonialism
    • Examines themes of race, restitution and reconciliation in sites such as the House of Slaves and the Museum of Black Civilisations in Senegal
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    Reviews & endorsements

    'This is a timely and fascinating book. De Jong understands the political urgency of connecting the contemporary debates around persistent racism and decolonisation represented by the Black Lives Matter and Rhodes Must Fall movements with a deep historical understanding of the nuances of how these same debates have resurfaced in Senegal. Through a meticulous analysis of the complex allegiances, identifications and resistances to French colonialism, De Jong tracks the re-emergence of forms of Négritude and Pan-Africanism in contemporary heritage developments in Senegal while arguing convincingly, that museums and memorial sites are a form of repair against the damage engendered through the trauma of colonialism.' Annie E. Coombes, Birkbeck College, University of London

    'Decolonizing Heritage opens us to a clear understanding of our time when statues are falling under the force of decolonization. This attentive, well informed, and enlightening reading of the postcolonial realities of Senegal is, more generally, a powerful demonstration that to reclaim one's heritage is to forge one's future.' Souleymane Bachir Diagne, Columbia University

    'A fascinating and detailed account of how one nation has navigated its colonial past and how the materiality of heritage might offer new possibilities to reclaim and repair human dignity. A timely intervention into intellectual and political life in Senegal, interwoven with sites and stories that reflect broader regional histories and international initiatives, from the Pan African project to UNESCO's World Heritage List. De Jong makes an important contribution to our most pressing discussions about race, slavery, monuments, and memory.' Lynn Meskell, University of Pennsylvania

    'What is the legacy of a bygone decolonial vision revived in the present? De Jong's timely and perceptive analysis of the notion of heritage and the politics of time in Senegal addresses this question. A must-read for anyone interested in the aesthetics of contemporary African politics.' Peter Probst, Tufts University

    'Decolonizing Heritage: Time to Repair in Senegal is a canny foray into the culture politics of the young nation of Senegal struggling to renew and maintain its implicated but sovereign presence in the world. De Jong cleverly weaves a Senegalese story of repair of the injustices of slavery and colonization at the intersection of global ideologies and local praxis, all neatly imbricated in ruinations and monuments where is staged the future of Negritude and pan Africanism.' Ibrahima Thiaw, IFAN - Université Cheikh Anta Diop

    'In this powerful and innovative contribution to the scholarship on heritage and memory in Africa, De Jong reveals the multiple temporalities embedded in Senegalese heritage sites and practices. By unearthing pasts, futures and past futures, he traces histories of decolonization in heritage while resisting easy answers about what colonial legacies or post-colonial politics entail.' Sarah Van Beurden, The Ohio State University

    'The book asks important questions about the meaning and politics of cultural heritage, and I found the introduction particularly strong and insightful. The work is well-referenced, building on a diversity of publications in history and anthropology, in French and English, and by African and North-Atlantic authors.' Mayke Kaag, Anthropos

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    Product details

    • Date Published: March 2022
    • format: Hardback
    • isbn: 9781316514535
    • length: 292 pages
    • dimensions: 235 x 158 x 23 mm
    • weight: 0.589kg
    • availability: Available
  • Table of Contents

    Introduction: Temporalities of repair
    1. History and testimony at the house of slaves
    2. The door of no return: Framing race and reconciliation
    3. Shining lights and their shadows
    4. Prayer of emergency: Black subjects and sufi spirituality
    5. Recycling recognition: The monument as Objet Trouvé
    6. Ruins of utopia: 'Ponty' and the university of the African future
    7. The museum of black civilisations: Race, restitution, repair
    Coda: Untimely Utopia
    Notes
    Bibliography
    Index.

  • Author

    Ferdinand De Jong, Freie Universität Berlin
    Ferdinand De Jong is Associate Professor at the University of East Anglia. He is the author of Masquerades of Modernity: Power and Secrecy in Casamance, Senegal (2007), and, with Michael Rowlands, editor of Reclaiming Heritage: Alternative Imaginaries of Memory in West Africa (2007). He has published widely on the colonial archive and the need for its decolonization.

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