Landscape of Memory: Commemorative monuments, memorials and public statuary in post-apartheid South Africa: Afrika-Studiecentrum Series, cartea 15
Autor Sabine Marschallen Limba Engleză Paperback – 13 dec 2009
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004178564
ISBN-10: 9004178562
Pagini: 410
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.68 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Afrika-Studiecentrum Series
ISBN-10: 9004178562
Pagini: 410
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.68 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Afrika-Studiecentrum Series
Cuprins
Contents
List of photographs ix
Acknowledgements xi
Abbreviations and acronyms xiii
Introduction 1
Interdisciplinary perspectives on monuments 4
Monument and memorial 11
Structure of this book 12
1 Cultural heritage conservation and policy 19
Introduction 19
Biased heritage landscape 20
Monuments and the ‘soft revolution’ 23
Developing conservation policy in a ‘new’ South Africa 28
Respecting the symbolic markers of the old order 29
The need for old monuments as points of reference 32
New heritage legislation 34
2 Paying tribute: The first public memorials to the victims of the
liberation movements 41
Introduction 41
Competition ANC – PAC 43
Mamelodi township 46
Umkhonto memorial 47
Contestation 49
PAC memorial initiative 5
Pointing to the dead 52
Rival stakeholders in the representation of the past 55
Conclusion 57
3 Coming to terms with trauma: The TRC and memorials to the victims of apartheid violence 61
Introduction 61
Apartheid violence and its victims 62
Symbolic gestures of reconciliation 72
The need for truth and reconciliation 75
Material and symbolic reparations 77
The role of memorials in individual and group mourning 80
Acknowledging loss and suffering 82
Dealing with trauma 84
Discomforting memories 90
Conclusion 95
4 Imagining community through bereavement: The institutionalisation of traumatic memory 97
Introduction 97
Upgrading Solomon Mahlangu square 99
Public holidays and ‘shrines of the nation’ 102
Sharpeville Human Rights Precinct 104
The Hector Pieterson Memorial and Museum 109
Remembering June 16: Pars pro toto 112
Design and symbolism of the memorial 115
The Museum 118
Memorials turned monuments? 119
Commodification 121
Party-political appropriation 123
Community identification with newly installed heritage 128
Conclusion 134
5 Dealing with the commemorative legacy of the past 137
Introduction 137
Destruction, damage and vandalism 138
The removal of Verwoerd statues and busts 140
Relocating monuments 144
Dealing with soviet-era statues in post-communist societies 146
The concept of statue parks in post-apartheid South Africa 152
Re-interpretation 156
Case study: The Terrorism Memorial in Pretoria 158
Recasting personalities 160
Re-positioning the VTM 164
Conclusion 172
6 Defining national identity with heritage: The National Legacy Project 175
Foundation myth of the post-apartheid nation 176
The National Legacy Project: Constitutive phase 182
Portfolio of Legacy Projects and Consultation 187
Three priority legacy projects 192
Finalising the canon 196
Proposed New Legacy Projects 200
Conclusion 204
7 Freedom Park as national site of identification 209
Early conceptualisation 211
The symbolism of the site 214
Design and consultation 215
Site orientation and Isivivane 220
The Sikhumbuto and the Wall of Names 226
Designing an authentic African monument? 228
Inclusion/exclusion 230
Contestation and counter monuments 233
Who will visit Freedom Park? 237
Conclusion 239
8 Celebrating ‘mothers of the nation’: The Monument to the Women of South Africa in Pretoria 243
Introduction 243
Historical background of the 1956 Women’s March 244
Nasionale Vrouemonument in Bloemfontein 247
Historical background of the Pretoria monument initiative 250
Countering the Vrouemonument 252
Inclusions/exclusions 255
Under-representation of women’s contributions 259
Criteria for heroism 262
Commemorating remarkable women throughout the nation 263
Humility and other visual characteristics of women’s memorials 269
Conclusion 272
9 Africanising the symbolic landscape: Post-apartheid monuments as ‘critical response’ 275
Introduction 275
The Battle of Blood River and its commemoration 278
Blood River museum initiative 280
Ncome’s inclusion in the National Legacy Project 284
Ncome as a symbol of reconciliation 286
Ncome as response to Blood River 289
Museum exhibition 291
Ncome: Success or failure? 295
Multiple interpretations 296
Countering contested heritage 298
Monuments as critical response versus ‘counter-monuments’ 300
Imitating western models of commemoration 301
Some examples of monuments as critical response:
battlefield memorials 307
Public statuary as critical response 310
Conclusion 315
10 Commodification, tourism and the need for visual markers 317
Introduction 317
Tourism, heritage and identity 318
Tourism as a lifeline for contested heritage 321
Spirit of eMakhosini: Intangible heritage and the
need for visual markers 322
Nelson Mandela as a tourist attraction:
Freedom Statue in Port Elizabeth 328
Other Mandela statue initiatives 333
Monuments and the symbolic reshaping of the urban environment 339
Statues and name changes: Tshwane 340
Conclusion 345
Conclusion 347
References 355
Table of post-apartheid monuments 387
Index 401
List of photographs ix
Acknowledgements xi
Abbreviations and acronyms xiii
Introduction 1
Interdisciplinary perspectives on monuments 4
Monument and memorial 11
Structure of this book 12
1 Cultural heritage conservation and policy 19
Introduction 19
Biased heritage landscape 20
Monuments and the ‘soft revolution’ 23
Developing conservation policy in a ‘new’ South Africa 28
Respecting the symbolic markers of the old order 29
The need for old monuments as points of reference 32
New heritage legislation 34
2 Paying tribute: The first public memorials to the victims of the
liberation movements 41
Introduction 41
Competition ANC – PAC 43
Mamelodi township 46
Umkhonto memorial 47
Contestation 49
PAC memorial initiative 5
Pointing to the dead 52
Rival stakeholders in the representation of the past 55
Conclusion 57
3 Coming to terms with trauma: The TRC and memorials to the victims of apartheid violence 61
Introduction 61
Apartheid violence and its victims 62
Symbolic gestures of reconciliation 72
The need for truth and reconciliation 75
Material and symbolic reparations 77
The role of memorials in individual and group mourning 80
Acknowledging loss and suffering 82
Dealing with trauma 84
Discomforting memories 90
Conclusion 95
4 Imagining community through bereavement: The institutionalisation of traumatic memory 97
Introduction 97
Upgrading Solomon Mahlangu square 99
Public holidays and ‘shrines of the nation’ 102
Sharpeville Human Rights Precinct 104
The Hector Pieterson Memorial and Museum 109
Remembering June 16: Pars pro toto 112
Design and symbolism of the memorial 115
The Museum 118
Memorials turned monuments? 119
Commodification 121
Party-political appropriation 123
Community identification with newly installed heritage 128
Conclusion 134
5 Dealing with the commemorative legacy of the past 137
Introduction 137
Destruction, damage and vandalism 138
The removal of Verwoerd statues and busts 140
Relocating monuments 144
Dealing with soviet-era statues in post-communist societies 146
The concept of statue parks in post-apartheid South Africa 152
Re-interpretation 156
Case study: The Terrorism Memorial in Pretoria 158
Recasting personalities 160
Re-positioning the VTM 164
Conclusion 172
6 Defining national identity with heritage: The National Legacy Project 175
Foundation myth of the post-apartheid nation 176
The National Legacy Project: Constitutive phase 182
Portfolio of Legacy Projects and Consultation 187
Three priority legacy projects 192
Finalising the canon 196
Proposed New Legacy Projects 200
Conclusion 204
7 Freedom Park as national site of identification 209
Early conceptualisation 211
The symbolism of the site 214
Design and consultation 215
Site orientation and Isivivane 220
The Sikhumbuto and the Wall of Names 226
Designing an authentic African monument? 228
Inclusion/exclusion 230
Contestation and counter monuments 233
Who will visit Freedom Park? 237
Conclusion 239
8 Celebrating ‘mothers of the nation’: The Monument to the Women of South Africa in Pretoria 243
Introduction 243
Historical background of the 1956 Women’s March 244
Nasionale Vrouemonument in Bloemfontein 247
Historical background of the Pretoria monument initiative 250
Countering the Vrouemonument 252
Inclusions/exclusions 255
Under-representation of women’s contributions 259
Criteria for heroism 262
Commemorating remarkable women throughout the nation 263
Humility and other visual characteristics of women’s memorials 269
Conclusion 272
9 Africanising the symbolic landscape: Post-apartheid monuments as ‘critical response’ 275
Introduction 275
The Battle of Blood River and its commemoration 278
Blood River museum initiative 280
Ncome’s inclusion in the National Legacy Project 284
Ncome as a symbol of reconciliation 286
Ncome as response to Blood River 289
Museum exhibition 291
Ncome: Success or failure? 295
Multiple interpretations 296
Countering contested heritage 298
Monuments as critical response versus ‘counter-monuments’ 300
Imitating western models of commemoration 301
Some examples of monuments as critical response:
battlefield memorials 307
Public statuary as critical response 310
Conclusion 315
10 Commodification, tourism and the need for visual markers 317
Introduction 317
Tourism, heritage and identity 318
Tourism as a lifeline for contested heritage 321
Spirit of eMakhosini: Intangible heritage and the
need for visual markers 322
Nelson Mandela as a tourist attraction:
Freedom Statue in Port Elizabeth 328
Other Mandela statue initiatives 333
Monuments and the symbolic reshaping of the urban environment 339
Statues and name changes: Tshwane 340
Conclusion 345
Conclusion 347
References 355
Table of post-apartheid monuments 387
Index 401
Recenzii
'Marschall, program director of Cultural and Heritage Tourism at the University of KwaZulu-Natal,
critically examines South Africa's official attempts to reshape its commemorative landscape in the
postapartheid era through projects such as the Hector Pieterson Memorial, Constitution Hill, the
Sharpeville Massacre Memorial, Freedom Park, and the National Women's Monument. According to
Marschall, what makes the effort to reconstitute the heritage sector unique "is the systematic,
self-conscious, deliberate, and methodical manner in which new monuments engage with the legacy of
the past." In particular, postapartheid heritage development has focused on the production of memorials
that symbolize the liberation struggle against apartheid, colonialism, and racism in general. Designed to
promote nation building and reconciliation, many of these projects, according to Marschall, have instead
exposed the political fractures in postapartheid society. Nonetheless, South Africa has largely avoided the
tendency to sanitize or romanticize its heritage and has instead made an earnest effort "to come to terms
with previously denied, neglected or shameful aspects of [its] past." Summing Up: Recommended.
Upper-division undergraduates and above'.
J. O. Gump, University of San Diego, Reviewed in 2010nov CHOICE.
'This book is an in-depth, masterful analysis and discussion of the landscape of memorialisation and commemoration in South Africa in the two decades since the end of Apartheid. For her analysis Marschall draws on a variety of sources including interviews and statements by government and heritage officials, marketing material, feedback from the public as well as the analysis of the symbolism and physical form of numerous South African monuments and memorials from both a local and international perspective. While much of this discussion has been presented in article form elsewhere, this book brings all aspects of the project together in a dense, multi-layered volume that addresses the political and socially contentious nature of South Africa’s memory landscape as well as the potential that such memorialisation offers for nation-building and reconciliation'.
Natalie Swanepoel, University of South Africa, in 'African Studies Quarterly', Volume 13, Issue 3, Summer 2012
critically examines South Africa's official attempts to reshape its commemorative landscape in the
postapartheid era through projects such as the Hector Pieterson Memorial, Constitution Hill, the
Sharpeville Massacre Memorial, Freedom Park, and the National Women's Monument. According to
Marschall, what makes the effort to reconstitute the heritage sector unique "is the systematic,
self-conscious, deliberate, and methodical manner in which new monuments engage with the legacy of
the past." In particular, postapartheid heritage development has focused on the production of memorials
that symbolize the liberation struggle against apartheid, colonialism, and racism in general. Designed to
promote nation building and reconciliation, many of these projects, according to Marschall, have instead
exposed the political fractures in postapartheid society. Nonetheless, South Africa has largely avoided the
tendency to sanitize or romanticize its heritage and has instead made an earnest effort "to come to terms
with previously denied, neglected or shameful aspects of [its] past." Summing Up: Recommended.
Upper-division undergraduates and above'.
J. O. Gump, University of San Diego, Reviewed in 2010nov CHOICE.
'This book is an in-depth, masterful analysis and discussion of the landscape of memorialisation and commemoration in South Africa in the two decades since the end of Apartheid. For her analysis Marschall draws on a variety of sources including interviews and statements by government and heritage officials, marketing material, feedback from the public as well as the analysis of the symbolism and physical form of numerous South African monuments and memorials from both a local and international perspective. While much of this discussion has been presented in article form elsewhere, this book brings all aspects of the project together in a dense, multi-layered volume that addresses the political and socially contentious nature of South Africa’s memory landscape as well as the potential that such memorialisation offers for nation-building and reconciliation'.
Natalie Swanepoel, University of South Africa, in 'African Studies Quarterly', Volume 13, Issue 3, Summer 2012
Notă biografică
Sabine Marschall, Dr.Phil. (1992) in History of Art, Eberhardt-Karls Universität Tübingen, is Associate Professor and programme director of Cultural and Heritage Tourism at the University of KwaZulu-Natal in Durban, South Africa. She has published extensively on South African art, architecture, cultural heritage and commemoration.