1st Edition

Grappling with Monuments of Oppression Moving from Analysis to Activism

Edited By Christopher C. Fennell Copyright 2025
    252 Pages 46 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    252 Pages 46 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Grappling with Monuments of Oppression provides a timely analysis of the diverse approaches being used around the world to confront colonial and imperial monuments and to promote social equity.

    Presenting 12 interdisciplinary, international case studies, this volume explores the ways in which the materiality of social domination can be combated. With contributions from activists, scholars, artists, and policymakers, the book envisions the theme of restorative justice in heritage and archaeology as encompassing initiatives for the reconciliation of past societal transgressions using processes that are multivocal, dialogic, historically informed, community-based, negotiated, and transformative. Arguing that monuments to historical figures who engaged in oppressive regimes provide rich opportunities for dialogue and negotiation, chapters within the book demonstrate that, by confronting these monuments, citizens can envision new ways to address the context and significance of the figures they memorialize and the many people who were targets of their oppression. Contributors to the book also provide a toolkit of methods and strategies for addressing the continuing structures of social domination.

    Grappling with Monuments of Oppression will be essential reading for academics and students working in heritage studies, archaeology, anthropology, material culture studies, landscape analysis, and museum studies. It will also be of great interest to practitioners and activists around the world.

    Series Foreword

    Nedra K. Lee, Richard Paul Benjamin, and Christopher C. Fennell

    1 Introduction: Remaking Monuments and Memories

    Christopher C. Fennell

    2 Addressing Community Trauma through the Framework of Controversial Monuments and Monuments of Oppression

    Cequyna Moore

    3 Un-ringing the Bell: How to Silence Oppressive Monuments

    Daisy Dixon

    4 Landscapes of Slavery and Colonialism: Creating, Embracing, and Erasing the Past in The Gambia and Senegal

    Liza Gijanto

    5 Cherbourg beyond the Seas: An Invisible Monument and the Colonial Past in a Former French Imperial Port City

    Stéphane Valognes

    6 Place of Punishment or Monument? Colonial Pillories and the Memory of Slavery in Brazil

    Francisco Andrade and Roberto Conduru

    7 Shipwrecks, the Middle Passage, and Jim Crow: The Signatures of Systemic Racism and Injustice at Two Maritime Archaeological Sites

    James P. Delgado

    8 Confronting the Lost Cause Memorialization in South Carolina

    Orville Vernon Burton

    9 Notice Is Hereby Given: The Commemorative to Enslaved Peoples of Southern Maryland

    Julia A. King

    10 A Re-vision of Confederate Monuments: The Art and Activism of John Sims

    Diane Wallman and Uzi Baram

    11 Commemorating an American Genocide: Catharine’s Town ,and the 1779 Sullivan Expedition against the Haudenosaunee

    Mary Ann Levine and James A. Delle

    12 Decolonizing Monument-Making in Newark, New Jersey: The Harriet Tubman Memorial

    Noelle Lorraine Williams, James Amemasor, Michael J. Gall, and Christopher N. Matthews

    Biography

    Christopher C. Fennell is Professor of Anthropology and Law, University of Illinois, Urbana–Champaign, and an annual Visiting Professor of Law, University of Chicago, USA.