Description

Book Synopsis

In the wake of recent protests against police violence and racism, calls to dismantle problematic memorials have reverberated around the globe. This is not a new phenomenon, however, nor is it limited to the Western world. De-Commemoration focuses on the concept of de-commemoration as it relates to remembrance. Drawing on research from experts on memory dynamics across various disciplines, this extensive collection seeks to make sense of the current state of de-commemoration as it transforms contemporary societies around the world.



Trade Review

“This impressive collection of essays addresses a very timely issue from a badly-needed comparative perspective. Set to become a benchmark, it covers a huge range of examples from across the world while creating common ground between them. The result is a wealth of insights into the role of public monuments in working through the toxic legacies of colonialism and dictatorship. Highly recommended.” • Ann Rigney, Utrecht University

De-Commemoration is an inspirational collection of diverse approaches, practices, methods, and perspectives of de-commemoration of forgoing heroes and activities, set in various cultural and geographical contexts. This is an exceedingly rare and truly global contribution.” • Mariusz Czepczyński, University of Gdańsk



Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments

Introduction: Making Sense of De-Commemoration
Sarah Gensburger and Jenny Wüstenberg

Part I: De-Commemoration after Regime Change

Chapter 1. Baptizing and Unbaptizing in Algeria: From French Colonization to National Independence
Amar Mohand-Amer

Chapter 2. Street Renaming in Postsocialist Romania: A Quantitative Analysis of Toponymic Change
Mihai Stelian Rusu

Chapter 3. “The First Bolshevik Leaves Riga”: The De-Commemoration of Vladimir I. Lenin in Riga, Latvia (1987–1991)
Dmitrijs Andrejevs

Chapter 4. “In Memory of the Fallen…” But for How Long? The De-Commemoration of German War Memorials in Poland after 1945
Karolina �wiek-Rogalska

Chapter 5. Naming to Erase, Renaming to Restore: (Re)Indigenizing the Landscape
Kerri J. Malloy

Chapter 6. Removing Rhodes from His Pedestal: De-Commemoration in Postcolonial South Africa
Gary Baines

Chapter 7. Contrasting Fates of Lenin Statues in Ukraine and Russia
Dominique Colas

Chapter 8. Beyond the Monument: Unmaking the Valley of the Fallen in Contemporary Spain
Francisco Ferrándiz

Part II: De-Commemoration and Societal Transformation

Chapter 9. Renaming and the Relationship between Colonized and Colonizer: The Role of Commemoration within Dual Place Names in New Zealand
Taylor Annabell

Chapter 10. De-Canonization of the Soviet Past: Abject, Kitsch, and Memory
Yuliya Yurchuk

Chapter 11. Diversifying Public Commemorations in Cape Town and Copenhagen
Vibe Nielsen

Chapter 12. De-Commemoration as Healing and Conflict: Canada and Its Colonial Past and Present
Kate Korycki

Chapter 13. Killing Pedro de Valdivia Again: De-Commemoration of the Past and De-Neoliberalization of the Present during the 2019–2020 Chilean Revolt
Manuela Badilla and Carolina Aguilera

Chapter 14. De-Commemorating Sound: Controversies about the Reestablishment of the National Anthem in South Korea and Beyond
Bae Myo-Jung

Chapter 15. Do Commemorations Have an “Expiration Date”? A Case Study from Belgium
Nicolas Moll

Part III: De-Commemoration to Propel Change

Chapter 16. De-Commemorating Australian Settler Colonialism
Sarah Maddison

Chapter 17. The Present Is All That Matters: De-Commemoration Practices in Israel
Tracy Adams and Yinon Guttel-Klein

Chapter 18. De-Commemorations and the Unsettled Past in Contemporary Brazil
Ricardo Santhiago

Chapter 19. Decolonizing Colonial Monuments: Counter-Memory Activism in Madrid and Barcelona
Fabiola Arellano Cruz

Chapter 20. Transnational Memory Struggles: Guerrilla Remembrances in Colombia and Venezuela in the 2000s
Jimena Perry

Chapter 21. “Next Stop Anton-Wilhelm-Amo Strasse”: Place Names, De-Commemoration, and Memory Activism in Berlin
Duane Jethro and Samuel Merrill

Chapter 22. From Decapitation to Destruction: Making Sense of Toppling Statues in Contemporary Martinique
Audrey Célestine, Valérie-Ann Edmond-Mariette, and Zaka Toto

Chapter 23. De-Commemoration in Great Britain
Stephen Small

Chapter 24. The Role of Nonprofits in De-Commemoration: The Southern Poverty Law Center’s Whose Heritage? Report
Seth Levi and Kimberly Probulus

Part IV: De-Commemoration as Smoke Screen

Chapter 25. De-Commemoration without Decolonization? The Peculiar Case of the Philippines
Lila Ramos Shahani

Chapter 26. Twice Removed: The Mystery of Manila’s Missing Comfort Woman Monument
Catherine Lianza Aquino and Jocelyn S. Martin

Chapter 27. Counter-Memory and State De-Commemoration: The Khavaran Mass Grave in Iran
Chowra Makaremi

Chapter 28. The Toppling of the Equestrian Statue and the Future of Colonial-Era Memorials in Namibia
Vilho Amukwaya Shigwedha

Chapter 29. An Unmarked Rebellion: The Politics of Forgetting Denmark Vesey
Vanessa Lynn Lovelace and Jamie Huff

Chapter 30. Exploring the Scope of De-Commemoration: Touring Trafalgar Square in London and Beyond
Stuart Burch

Part V: De-Commemoration to Challenge Memory

Chapter 31. From De-Commemoration of Names to Reparative Namescapes: Geographical Case Studies in the United States
Jordan P. Brasher and Derek Alderman

Chapter 32. De-Commemoration under the Law: The Removal of Statues in France and the United States
Thomas Hochmann

Chapter 33. Human Rights and Toppled Statues: Can the European Convention on Human Rights Provide Solutions to De-Commemoration Disputes?
Tom Lewis

Chapter 34. Re-Commemoration: What Other Stories Can We Tell? Observing Ordinary People Engaging with Monuments in Public Space
Alison Atkinson-Phillips

Chapter 35. Who Cares about Old Statues and Street Names? Resisting Change and the Protracted Decommunization of Public Space in Poland
Ewa Ochman

Chapter 36. Keeping the Past from Freezing: Augmented Reality and Memories in the Public Space
Mykola Makhortykh and Anna Menyhért

Chapter 37. De-Commemorating White Supremacy through the Act of Voting
Lorena Chambers

Index

De-Commemoration: Removing Statues and Renaming

Product form

£96.30

Includes FREE delivery

RRP £107.00 – you save £10.70 (10%)

Order before 4pm today for delivery by Thu 22 Jan 2026.

A Hardback by Sarah Gensburger, Jenny Wüstenberg

Out of stock


    View other formats and editions of De-Commemoration: Removing Statues and Renaming by Sarah Gensburger

    Publisher: Berghahn Books
    Publication Date: 13/10/2023
    ISBN13: 9781805391074, 978-1805391074
    ISBN10: 1805391070

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    In the wake of recent protests against police violence and racism, calls to dismantle problematic memorials have reverberated around the globe. This is not a new phenomenon, however, nor is it limited to the Western world. De-Commemoration focuses on the concept of de-commemoration as it relates to remembrance. Drawing on research from experts on memory dynamics across various disciplines, this extensive collection seeks to make sense of the current state of de-commemoration as it transforms contemporary societies around the world.



    Trade Review

    “This impressive collection of essays addresses a very timely issue from a badly-needed comparative perspective. Set to become a benchmark, it covers a huge range of examples from across the world while creating common ground between them. The result is a wealth of insights into the role of public monuments in working through the toxic legacies of colonialism and dictatorship. Highly recommended.” • Ann Rigney, Utrecht University

    De-Commemoration is an inspirational collection of diverse approaches, practices, methods, and perspectives of de-commemoration of forgoing heroes and activities, set in various cultural and geographical contexts. This is an exceedingly rare and truly global contribution.” • Mariusz Czepczyński, University of Gdańsk



    Table of Contents

    List of Illustrations
    Acknowledgments

    Introduction: Making Sense of De-Commemoration
    Sarah Gensburger and Jenny Wüstenberg

    Part I: De-Commemoration after Regime Change

    Chapter 1. Baptizing and Unbaptizing in Algeria: From French Colonization to National Independence
    Amar Mohand-Amer

    Chapter 2. Street Renaming in Postsocialist Romania: A Quantitative Analysis of Toponymic Change
    Mihai Stelian Rusu

    Chapter 3. “The First Bolshevik Leaves Riga”: The De-Commemoration of Vladimir I. Lenin in Riga, Latvia (1987–1991)
    Dmitrijs Andrejevs

    Chapter 4. “In Memory of the Fallen…” But for How Long? The De-Commemoration of German War Memorials in Poland after 1945
    Karolina �wiek-Rogalska

    Chapter 5. Naming to Erase, Renaming to Restore: (Re)Indigenizing the Landscape
    Kerri J. Malloy

    Chapter 6. Removing Rhodes from His Pedestal: De-Commemoration in Postcolonial South Africa
    Gary Baines

    Chapter 7. Contrasting Fates of Lenin Statues in Ukraine and Russia
    Dominique Colas

    Chapter 8. Beyond the Monument: Unmaking the Valley of the Fallen in Contemporary Spain
    Francisco Ferrándiz

    Part II: De-Commemoration and Societal Transformation

    Chapter 9. Renaming and the Relationship between Colonized and Colonizer: The Role of Commemoration within Dual Place Names in New Zealand
    Taylor Annabell

    Chapter 10. De-Canonization of the Soviet Past: Abject, Kitsch, and Memory
    Yuliya Yurchuk

    Chapter 11. Diversifying Public Commemorations in Cape Town and Copenhagen
    Vibe Nielsen

    Chapter 12. De-Commemoration as Healing and Conflict: Canada and Its Colonial Past and Present
    Kate Korycki

    Chapter 13. Killing Pedro de Valdivia Again: De-Commemoration of the Past and De-Neoliberalization of the Present during the 2019–2020 Chilean Revolt
    Manuela Badilla and Carolina Aguilera

    Chapter 14. De-Commemorating Sound: Controversies about the Reestablishment of the National Anthem in South Korea and Beyond
    Bae Myo-Jung

    Chapter 15. Do Commemorations Have an “Expiration Date”? A Case Study from Belgium
    Nicolas Moll

    Part III: De-Commemoration to Propel Change

    Chapter 16. De-Commemorating Australian Settler Colonialism
    Sarah Maddison

    Chapter 17. The Present Is All That Matters: De-Commemoration Practices in Israel
    Tracy Adams and Yinon Guttel-Klein

    Chapter 18. De-Commemorations and the Unsettled Past in Contemporary Brazil
    Ricardo Santhiago

    Chapter 19. Decolonizing Colonial Monuments: Counter-Memory Activism in Madrid and Barcelona
    Fabiola Arellano Cruz

    Chapter 20. Transnational Memory Struggles: Guerrilla Remembrances in Colombia and Venezuela in the 2000s
    Jimena Perry

    Chapter 21. “Next Stop Anton-Wilhelm-Amo Strasse”: Place Names, De-Commemoration, and Memory Activism in Berlin
    Duane Jethro and Samuel Merrill

    Chapter 22. From Decapitation to Destruction: Making Sense of Toppling Statues in Contemporary Martinique
    Audrey Célestine, Valérie-Ann Edmond-Mariette, and Zaka Toto

    Chapter 23. De-Commemoration in Great Britain
    Stephen Small

    Chapter 24. The Role of Nonprofits in De-Commemoration: The Southern Poverty Law Center’s Whose Heritage? Report
    Seth Levi and Kimberly Probulus

    Part IV: De-Commemoration as Smoke Screen

    Chapter 25. De-Commemoration without Decolonization? The Peculiar Case of the Philippines
    Lila Ramos Shahani

    Chapter 26. Twice Removed: The Mystery of Manila’s Missing Comfort Woman Monument
    Catherine Lianza Aquino and Jocelyn S. Martin

    Chapter 27. Counter-Memory and State De-Commemoration: The Khavaran Mass Grave in Iran
    Chowra Makaremi

    Chapter 28. The Toppling of the Equestrian Statue and the Future of Colonial-Era Memorials in Namibia
    Vilho Amukwaya Shigwedha

    Chapter 29. An Unmarked Rebellion: The Politics of Forgetting Denmark Vesey
    Vanessa Lynn Lovelace and Jamie Huff

    Chapter 30. Exploring the Scope of De-Commemoration: Touring Trafalgar Square in London and Beyond
    Stuart Burch

    Part V: De-Commemoration to Challenge Memory

    Chapter 31. From De-Commemoration of Names to Reparative Namescapes: Geographical Case Studies in the United States
    Jordan P. Brasher and Derek Alderman

    Chapter 32. De-Commemoration under the Law: The Removal of Statues in France and the United States
    Thomas Hochmann

    Chapter 33. Human Rights and Toppled Statues: Can the European Convention on Human Rights Provide Solutions to De-Commemoration Disputes?
    Tom Lewis

    Chapter 34. Re-Commemoration: What Other Stories Can We Tell? Observing Ordinary People Engaging with Monuments in Public Space
    Alison Atkinson-Phillips

    Chapter 35. Who Cares about Old Statues and Street Names? Resisting Change and the Protracted Decommunization of Public Space in Poland
    Ewa Ochman

    Chapter 36. Keeping the Past from Freezing: Augmented Reality and Memories in the Public Space
    Mykola Makhortykh and Anna Menyhért

    Chapter 37. De-Commemorating White Supremacy through the Act of Voting
    Lorena Chambers

    Index

    Recently viewed products

    © 2026 Book Curl

      • American Express
      • Apple Pay
      • Diners Club
      • Discover
      • Google Pay
      • Maestro
      • Mastercard
      • PayPal
      • Shop Pay
      • Union Pay
      • Visa

      Login

      Forgot your password?

      Don't have an account yet?
      Create account