Confronting Colonial Objects: Histories, Legalities, and Access to Culture: Cultural Heritage Law and Policy
Autor Carsten Stahnen Limba Engleză Hardback – 13 oct 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780192868121
ISBN-10: 0192868128
Pagini: 592
Dimensiuni: 164 x 242 x 38 mm
Greutate: 1.04 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Cultural Heritage Law and Policy
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0192868128
Pagini: 592
Dimensiuni: 164 x 242 x 38 mm
Greutate: 1.04 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Cultural Heritage Law and Policy
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
This rich and engaging book addresses the heritage of empire. It illuminates current debates over cultural objects displaced by colonial powers. Professor Stahn presents not only the historical and legal context of these debates but also proposes a nuanced account of relational cultural justice to navigate the dilemmas faced by cultural institutions. This is a profound contribution to cultural heritage scholarship.
This is a dynamic and insightful contribution to the growing literature on cultural colonial takings in law that takes seriously the complexity and urgency of multifaceted demands for colonial reparations. It is breathtaking in its coverage, and an expansive and nuanced reference text that is essential reading for anyone interested in law as a site of decolonial praxis.
A strong record of crimes and violations that have defined and determined a rapacious world order on which the soul and conscience of humanity are anchored. Professor Stahn exposes the forensic and legal blind-spots on which the imperial and colonial world powers relied to whitewash and legitimize the conquest and objectification of people, cultures, and civilizations for imperial/colonial self-glorification, racial superiority, and wealth. The book provides a sound multidisciplinary platform and tools for the decolonization of international law, the restitution of cultural heritage, and payment of reparations to affected communities world-wide. As an intergeneration victim of German colonial crimes against the Bangwa Kingdom and an advocate of justice for colonial and historical crimes, I strongly endorse this book.
Carsten Stahn's Confronting Colonial Objects systematizes, problematizes, and adds important theoretical heft to a debate that often eludes us for lacking those three things, ending up in the 'too difficult' box. It contributes to an essential reckoning. Its insights form a terrific platform from where to launch a much more grounded and better guided conversation with (and among) decolonized and post-colonial peoples and communities about what they want to happen to their own heritage.
Just as colonized peoples resisted colonialism by using the occupier's law to claim some rights, so they now use law to reclaim their cultural artefacts and human remains in western museums after winning independence. In this comprehensive and exacting study, Carsten Stahn traces this long-term process, and proposes 'relational cultural justice' principles to inform current restitution controversies. Sensitive to the voices 'from below' and conscious of the legal dilemmas confronting western institutions, Confronting Colonial Objects is essential reading for all parties.
Stahn's appealing approach in dealing with claimed cultural objects set out in Confronting Colonial Objects....the reader has been treated to 524 pages of a comprehensive factual and legal predicate that logically sets up and supports what I consider the gem of this book...I highly recommend Confronting Colonial Objects Histories, Legalities, and Access to Culture. It is a brilliant academic treated on the subject.
This is a dynamic and insightful contribution to the growing literature on cultural colonial takings in law that takes seriously the complexity and urgency of multifaceted demands for colonial reparations. It is breathtaking in its coverage, and an expansive and nuanced reference text that is essential reading for anyone interested in law as a site of decolonial praxis.
A strong record of crimes and violations that have defined and determined a rapacious world order on which the soul and conscience of humanity are anchored. Professor Stahn exposes the forensic and legal blind-spots on which the imperial and colonial world powers relied to whitewash and legitimize the conquest and objectification of people, cultures, and civilizations for imperial/colonial self-glorification, racial superiority, and wealth. The book provides a sound multidisciplinary platform and tools for the decolonization of international law, the restitution of cultural heritage, and payment of reparations to affected communities world-wide. As an intergeneration victim of German colonial crimes against the Bangwa Kingdom and an advocate of justice for colonial and historical crimes, I strongly endorse this book.
Carsten Stahn's Confronting Colonial Objects systematizes, problematizes, and adds important theoretical heft to a debate that often eludes us for lacking those three things, ending up in the 'too difficult' box. It contributes to an essential reckoning. Its insights form a terrific platform from where to launch a much more grounded and better guided conversation with (and among) decolonized and post-colonial peoples and communities about what they want to happen to their own heritage.
Just as colonized peoples resisted colonialism by using the occupier's law to claim some rights, so they now use law to reclaim their cultural artefacts and human remains in western museums after winning independence. In this comprehensive and exacting study, Carsten Stahn traces this long-term process, and proposes 'relational cultural justice' principles to inform current restitution controversies. Sensitive to the voices 'from below' and conscious of the legal dilemmas confronting western institutions, Confronting Colonial Objects is essential reading for all parties.
Stahn's appealing approach in dealing with claimed cultural objects set out in Confronting Colonial Objects....the reader has been treated to 524 pages of a comprehensive factual and legal predicate that logically sets up and supports what I consider the gem of this book...I highly recommend Confronting Colonial Objects Histories, Legalities, and Access to Culture. It is a brilliant academic treated on the subject.
Notă biografică
Carsten Stahn is Professor of International Criminal Law and Global Justice at the Leiden Law School and Queen's University Belfast. He is former Legal Officer at the ICC and author/editor of 17 books and over 80 articles in international law and international justice. He holds a PhD and Habilitation from Humboldt University Berlin. He received the Ciardi Prize of the International Society for Military Law and multiple research grants from the Dutch Science Foundation (NWO) on Post-Conflict Justice and jus post bellum.