ABSTRACT
With the rising tide of scholarly and societal interest in the history and legacy of colonialism and slavery, this collection offers a much-needed diachronic analysis of the cultural representations of the lives and afterlives of those subjected to slavery and indenture. It focuses on the history of the ‘neerlandophone’ space, defined as the complex linguistic space spanning former Dutch colonies. This collection gives a longue durée overview, with cases from the early modern period to the present day, revealing the deep roots of the colonial ‘cultural archive’. Scholars from a wide variety of disciplines demonstrate how attention to the layered and polyphonic qualities of narratives can reveal silent and disruptive voices in colonial discourse, as well as collective emotions and imaginations that have hitherto remained unrecorded in historical sources. They discuss different aesthetic, poetic, and storytelling practices, including literature, archival and legal documents, performance, architecture, photography, and philosophy, formed both in the metropolis and by enslaved and indentured peoples in the colonies.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |69 pages
Literary Imaginations
chapter 2|23 pages
Enslaved to the Passions: Slavery, Emotions, and Trade in a Seventeenth-Century Dutch Comedy
chapter 3|22 pages
‘Pleasant and Useful Reading for Dutch Youth’: Attitudes on Slavery in A. E. van Noothoorn's Fictional Travel Accounts for Children (1843–1851)
chapter 4|21 pages
Convict Labour and Concubinage in the Dutch East Indies: Historical and Literary Reappropriations of Martha Christina Tiahahu's Anti-Colonial Revolt
part |85 pages
Intersecting Imaginations
chapter 5|26 pages
The Elephant and Slavery: Thinking about Slavery through the Animal in the Early Modern Dutch Empire
chapter 6|20 pages
Law as a Sociocultural Imaginary: Legal Arguments, Social Hierarchy and Pro-Slavery in the Dutch Republic, c. 1760–1780
chapter 7|19 pages
Januari's Ghost: A Tale of Slavery, Sexuality, and Boyhood on Board a VOC Vessel
chapter 8|17 pages
Transformative Work: An Antislavery Petition at the National Exhibition of Women's Labour, 1898
part |107 pages
Visual and Spatial Imaginations
chapter 10|25 pages
(Re)Visualising Slavery: An Outlook on the Indian Ocean and Indonesian Archipelago
chapter 11|18 pages
Making an Embodied Absence Present: Tourism and the Cultural Imaginary of Slavery and Colonial Heritage in the Netherlands
chapter 12|20 pages
Reframing History: The Artistic Reclamation of Colonial Photography and the Quest for De-Victimisation
chapter 13|19 pages
Imagining Dutch Slavery Legacies Through the Rural-Urban Divide in the TV Show Grenslanders
part 4|69 pages
Philosophical Imaginations
