Description:What do we see when we look at our collective Dutch colonial legacies from a gender perspective? How are these colonial legacies reflected in our museum collections and archives? Do herstories remain hidden and are there unknown biographies to unravel? Or do we reinterpret existing master narratives?Using an intersectional perspective, Gendered empire looks at the current growing Dutch interest in its own colonial legacy from a more critical and self-reflexive stance. The authors bring historical and current examples in the Dutch metropole and colonies together. Collectively they share archival silences, biographical counternarratives and a museum world grappling with its own colonial legacy, all the while wondering: what has gender got to do with it?Content- NANCY JOUWE, IntroductionThe silent archive:- SUZE ZIJLSTRA, Free and enslaved Asian women in European and Eurasian households in 18th-century Makassar- MERVE TOSUN, Women at home and men outdoors? Locating enslaved peole in 18th-century Batavia- NANCY JOUWE, Beyond the Dapur. Listening to Papuan Women- STEPHANIE WELVAART, Cultural violence in the making. Representations of Indonesian women in Dutch testimonies on the Indonesian war of independence Biographies of ‘the other’:- EMMA VAN MEYEREN, Whiskey in a crate: an interview with Glenda Martinus and her son Quinsy Gario about the 30 May 1969 uprising on Curaçao- SIDRA SHAHID, Violent Benevolence. Dutch Colonialism and the burqa ban- CARLA TJON, In Godforsaken places. Shenzen - Hong Kong - Paramaribo - The Hague - Rotterdam. A legacy of overseas expansion - LARA NUBERG, ‘Then I guess you must love cooking?’- GLORIA WEKKER, How families navigate empireThe hidden museum:- CAROLINE DRIEËNHUIZEN, Of beauties and brides. Tracing the representation of colonized women through two museum objects, 1930-present- EVELIEN WALHOUT & JACQUES DANE, Picturing the East. A visual analysis of Dutch late 19th- and early 20th-century educational tools from the collection of the Dutch National Museum of Education- EVELINE BUCHHEIM & MARLEEN REICHGELT, Hidden in plain sight. Critical reflections on Een verborgen geschiedenis: anders kijken naar Nederlands-Indië by Thom Hoffman - MARLEEN REICHGELT & LARISSA SCHULTE NORDHOLT, Colonial Heritage and Restitution: a round-table discussion among museum professionals, with Wim Manuhutu, Henrietta Lidchi & Jos van Beurden, and reactions by Priya Swamy & Sadiah BoonstraWe have made it easy for you to find a PDF Ebooks without any digging. And by having access to our ebooks online or by storing it on your computer, you have convenient answers with Gendered Empire: Intersectional perspectives on Dutch post/colonial narratives. To get started finding Gendered Empire: Intersectional perspectives on Dutch post/colonial narratives, you are right to find our website which has a comprehensive collection of manuals listed. Our library is the biggest of these that have literally hundreds of thousands of different products represented.
Pages
231
Format
PDF, EPUB & Kindle Edition
Publisher
Verloren, Uitgeverij
Release
2020
ISBN
9087048831
Gendered Empire: Intersectional perspectives on Dutch post/colonial narratives
Description: What do we see when we look at our collective Dutch colonial legacies from a gender perspective? How are these colonial legacies reflected in our museum collections and archives? Do herstories remain hidden and are there unknown biographies to unravel? Or do we reinterpret existing master narratives?Using an intersectional perspective, Gendered empire looks at the current growing Dutch interest in its own colonial legacy from a more critical and self-reflexive stance. The authors bring historical and current examples in the Dutch metropole and colonies together. Collectively they share archival silences, biographical counternarratives and a museum world grappling with its own colonial legacy, all the while wondering: what has gender got to do with it?Content- NANCY JOUWE, IntroductionThe silent archive:- SUZE ZIJLSTRA, Free and enslaved Asian women in European and Eurasian households in 18th-century Makassar- MERVE TOSUN, Women at home and men outdoors? Locating enslaved peole in 18th-century Batavia- NANCY JOUWE, Beyond the Dapur. Listening to Papuan Women- STEPHANIE WELVAART, Cultural violence in the making. Representations of Indonesian women in Dutch testimonies on the Indonesian war of independence Biographies of ‘the other’:- EMMA VAN MEYEREN, Whiskey in a crate: an interview with Glenda Martinus and her son Quinsy Gario about the 30 May 1969 uprising on Curaçao- SIDRA SHAHID, Violent Benevolence. Dutch Colonialism and the burqa ban- CARLA TJON, In Godforsaken places. Shenzen - Hong Kong - Paramaribo - The Hague - Rotterdam. A legacy of overseas expansion - LARA NUBERG, ‘Then I guess you must love cooking?’- GLORIA WEKKER, How families navigate empireThe hidden museum:- CAROLINE DRIEËNHUIZEN, Of beauties and brides. Tracing the representation of colonized women through two museum objects, 1930-present- EVELIEN WALHOUT & JACQUES DANE, Picturing the East. A visual analysis of Dutch late 19th- and early 20th-century educational tools from the collection of the Dutch National Museum of Education- EVELINE BUCHHEIM & MARLEEN REICHGELT, Hidden in plain sight. Critical reflections on Een verborgen geschiedenis: anders kijken naar Nederlands-Indië by Thom Hoffman - MARLEEN REICHGELT & LARISSA SCHULTE NORDHOLT, Colonial Heritage and Restitution: a round-table discussion among museum professionals, with Wim Manuhutu, Henrietta Lidchi & Jos van Beurden, and reactions by Priya Swamy & Sadiah BoonstraWe have made it easy for you to find a PDF Ebooks without any digging. And by having access to our ebooks online or by storing it on your computer, you have convenient answers with Gendered Empire: Intersectional perspectives on Dutch post/colonial narratives. To get started finding Gendered Empire: Intersectional perspectives on Dutch post/colonial narratives, you are right to find our website which has a comprehensive collection of manuals listed. Our library is the biggest of these that have literally hundreds of thousands of different products represented.