从全球范围看纪念碑、暴力和殖民地遗产

IF 2.6 Q1 POLITICAL SCIENCE Journal of Genocide Research Pub Date : 2022-09-18 DOI:10.1080/14623528.2022.2124673
C. Prescott, J. Lahti
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引用次数: 1

摘要

2015年3月9日,开普敦大学校园里充满了意想不到的兴奋。这所以前只有白人的大学的一名非洲黑人学生刚刚向塞西尔·罗德斯的雕像扔了一桶排泄物。这位著名殖民者的雕像曾因其无限的野心和对英国王国的大力扩张而备受尊敬,自1934年雕像落成以来,它就一直在校园里占据着重要位置,就在集会大厅的下坡路。要求取消它的呼声至少可以追溯到20世纪50年代,当时南非白人学生反对罗兹作为英国霸权的倡导者。在后种族隔离时代,经济和社会不平等继续困扰着南非。2015年,人们对历史上的不公正保持沉默,拒绝纠正多年来的系统性种族主义、针对非洲黑人的暴力和土地盗窃行为,越来越愤怒,最终演变成了抗议活动。它引发了一场野火,一场全球性的“罗德斯必须倒下”运动。在被粪便玷污几天后,1000多人聚集在纪念碑前举行集会,要求大学拆除雕像(一个月后,大学拆除了雕像)。与此同时,抗议活动蔓延到南非的其他校园,然后蔓延到英国的牛津大学。根据非殖民化学者Sabelo J.Ndlovu Gatsheni的说法,引发抗议的原因是“罗德斯的纪念碑和雕像在南非的持续存在,这是殖民主义/种族隔离傲慢的表现,也是那些从他的殖民掠夺中受益的人拒绝对罗德斯虐待的人的感情表示忏悔和宽容的表现。“在后种族隔离社会,罗兹可能已经成为过去殖民暴力造成的不平等的最有力象征,这些暴力在现代南非和世界各地引起了共鸣。简言之,罗德斯代表所有贪婪、暴力的殖民者,他们夺走了当地人的土地,杀害、奴役和剥削他们。罗兹必须倒下运动是一个恰当的例子,说明近年来围绕殖民地的持久性和遗产的问题和辩论变得越来越明显,也越来越全球化。2020年夏天,随着“黑人的命也是命”(Black Lives Matter)抗议活动的兴起,现在存在着广泛而多层次的抗议活动
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Looking Globally at Monuments, Violence, and Colonial Legacies
On 9 March 2015, the University of Cape Town campus was abuzz with unexpected excitement. One of the black African students of this formerly white-only university had just hurled a bucket of excrement on the statue of Cecil Rhodes. The statue of this famous colonizer, once revered for his boundless ambition and energetic expansion of the British realm, had figured prominently on campus since the statue’s inauguration in 1934, located just downhill from the convocation hall. Calls for its removal dated back at least to the 1950s, when Afrikaner students objected to Rhodes as an advocate of British supremacy. In the post-apartheid years, economic and social inequality has continued to mar South Africa. In 2015, growing anger at the silence over historical injustices and a refusal to rectify years of systematic racism, violence against black Africans, and land theft boiled over into protests. It sparked a wildfire, a global Rhodes Must Fall movement. A few days after being tarnished by feces, more than 1,000 people gathered for a rally at the monument, demanding the university to remove the statue (which it did a month later). Meanwhile the protests spread to other campuses in South Africa, and then to Oxford University in Great Britain. What sparked the protests, according to decolonization scholar Sabelo J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni, was “the continued existence of Rhodes’ memorials and statues in South Africa as a sign of colonial/apartheid arrogance and refusal by those who benefitted from his colonial plunder to express repentance and tolerance of the feelings of those who Rhodes abused.” In post-apartheid society Rhodes has become perhaps the most potent symbol of the inequalities stemming from past colonial violence that resonate in modern South Africa and across the world. In short, Rhodes stands for all the greedy, violent colonizers who took away the natives’ lands, killing, enslaving, and exploiting them. The Rhodes Must Fall movement is a pertinent example of how in recent years questions and debates surrounding colonial durabilities and legacies have become both increasingly visible and increasingly global. Gaining new steam in the summer of 2020 with the Black Lives Matter protests, there now exists widespread and multilayered
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来源期刊
Journal of Genocide Research
Journal of Genocide Research POLITICAL SCIENCE-
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
6.70%
发文量
27
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