Journal Article — “Indépendance!”: The Belgo-Congolese Dispute in the Tervuren Museum — by Véronique Bragard

$15.00

50 years after Congolese Independence was declared on June 30th 1960 with Joseph Kasa-Vubu as President and Patrice Lumumba as Prime Minister, the Tervuren Museum of Central Africa (Brussels), originally built as the “Musée du Congo” by Léopold II, inaugurated the exhibition “Indépendance! Congolese Tell Their Stories of 50 Years of Independence.” This article examines how this event offers a sharp contrast to many Belgian museographic approaches to Belgium’s colonial past and emerges as a groundbreaking step for Belgium in recognizing the devastating effects of its colonial past.

PDF4 for simple products

You can read the above publication free-access online, by clicking the PDF icon on the bottom of this page. Alternatively, you can purchase this publication in print and/or downloadable PDF formats as offered below.

Description

Abstract

50 years after Congolese Independence was declared on June 30th 1960 with Joseph Kasa-Vubu as President and Patrice Lumumba as Prime Minister, the Tervuren Museum of Central Africa (Brussels), originally built as the “Musée du Congo” by Léopold II, inaugurated the exhibition “Indépendance! Congolese Tell Their Stories of 50 Years of Independence.” This article examines how this event offers a sharp contrast to many Belgian museographic approaches to Belgium’s colonial past and emerges as a groundbreaking step for Belgium in recognizing the devastating effects of its colonial past. The study first analyzes the past of denial experienced by the Congolese community of Belgium to contextualize the Belgo-Congolese dispute and then further analyzes the “Indépendance!” exhibition as a response to the need of museums to embrace non-fixed and creative memory. The exhibit accordingly becomes this contact site in Clifford’s sense, i.e., a place where Belgians, Congolese and Belgo-Congolese people and memories are brought together, and where new meanings can be imaginatively shaped.

Recommended Citation

Bragard, Véronique. 2011. ““Indépendance!”: The Belgo-Congolese Dispute in the Tervuren Museum.” Pp. 193-104 in Contesting Memory: Museumizations of Migration in Comparative Global Context (Human Architecture: Journal of the Sociology of Self-Knowledge: Volume IX, Issue 4, 2011.) Belmont, MA: Okcir Press (an imprint of Ahead Publishing House).

The various editions of Contesting Memory: Museumizations of Migration in Comparative Global Context can be ordered from the Okcir Store and are also available for ordering from all major online bookstores worldwide (such as Amazon, Barnes&Noble, and others).


Read the Above Publication Online

You can read the above publication free-access online, by clicking the PDF icon below.



NEW IN OKCIR'S MONOGRAPH SERIES
Front and Back COVER: Khayyam’s Tent: A Secretive Autobiography: 1000 Bittersweet Robaiyat Sips from His Tavern of Happiness - OMAR KHAYYAM - Logically Re-Sewn and Translated in Verse by Mohammad H. Tamdgidi
Front and Back Cover - Tamdgidi, Mohammad H. - Omar Khayyam’s Secret: Hermeneutics of the Robaiyat in Quantum Sociological Imagination: Book 12: Khayyami Legacy: The Collected Works of Omar Khayyam (AD 1021-1123) Culminating in His Secretive 1000 Robaiyat Autobiography. With Forewords by Winston E. Langley and Jafar Aghayani Chavoshi
Omar Khayyam's Secret Series Books 1-12 Cover, Tamdgidi, Mohammad H. Omar Khayyam’s Secret: Hermeneutics of the Robaiyat in Quantum Sociological Imagination