Colonized Objects and Bodies in Europe: New challenges and new perspectives on the Decolonialization of Cultural Heritage

Colonized Objects and Bodies in Europe: New challenges and new perspectives on the Decolonialization of Cultural Heritage

Veranstalter
Julien Bobineau, Giuliana Tomasella (Universität Würzburg)
Ausrichter
Universität Würzburg
PLZ
97074
Ort
Würzburg
Land
Deutschland
Vom - Bis
24.06.2022 - 25.06.2022
Deadline
30.09.2021
Von
Julien Bobineau, Universität Würzburg

The conference aims to address the decolonisation of cultural heritage from a pan-European perspective. In this context, the significance of re-presentation, concealment mechanisms and stereotypes in museums and university collections will be examined more closely.

Colonized Objects and Bodies in Europe: New challenges and new perspectives on the Decolonialization of Cultural Heritage

In both the ex-colonial and the ex-colonized worlds, visions of Africa and its colonial past have become incarcerated in stereotypes, dichotomies, and historical misrepresentation. Especially in European Cultural Heritage, we see a mixture of these ambivalent subjects and habits of lack of self-searching. But the restitution debate in Europe on cultural objects from Africa (Sarr/Savoy 2018) and the Black Lives Matter movement, which also reached Europe in 2020, have set the course for a questioning of the colonial essence of Cultural Heritage. Recent questions about history politics, cultural memory and cultural traditions are now also – and above all – debated in public. Museums, Cultural Heritage institutions, Universities with their collections and their self-image are now more than ever in the spotlight of the dynamics of a global debate.

In the course of the conference, we aim to discuss the following questions:
- How can Cultural Heritage be decolonized in science, society, politics, and institutions to avoid ideological extremism?
- Are there national differences and similarities in Europe?
- Who are the actors and networks involved in defending the status quo or in decolonizing Cultural Heritage?
- What are the direct and indirect consequences of unreflect and stereotypical Cultural Heritage in Europe?
- How can the ‘decolonialization of Cultural Heritage’ contribute to the field of development cooperation with the African continent?

The conference will be organized within four sessions:
1. Historical misrepresentation: The concealment of colonial history in Cultural Heritage
2. The survival of Stereotypes: Reflections on the Imaginary within Cultural Heritage
3. University’s collection: Current states and new approaches
4. European Museums: Restitutions and new displays

The conference is organised under the umbrella of the Coimbra Group, an association of long-established European multidisciplinary universities of high international standard.

Abstracts of max. 300 words and a short bio of max. 200 words should be sent to julien.bobineau@uni-wuerzburg.de and giuliana.tomasella@unipd.it by 30 September 2021.

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