From What Is Left to What Is Lost: Social Provenance Research to Challenge Exclusion in Restitution

L.H.E. Niederhausen, Klaas Stutje

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference articleAcademic

Abstract

A central assumption in the political process of restitution of looted properties and cultural objects is that their return helps societies to redeem histories of injustice and dispossession. In this article, we ask which objects address whose histories, and how processes of restitution are influenced by the presence and absence of objects and collections. Looting leads to more than material loss. While most attention nowadays goes to objects classified as ‘ethnographic’, historic, and cultural artefacts, loss in a colonial context also included the remains of ancestors, manuscripts, archives, commercial wares, mineralogical samples, as well as land and livelihoods. The Holocaust almost entirely wiped out the rich abundance and variegated landscape of Jewish life in Europe along with its diverse material cultures. If we want to address these larger histories of loss, we should shift our focus from what is left in present-day museum collections to what was lost. The phrase ‘what was lost’ is productive in thre
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationHistory, Culture and Heritage
Subtitle of host publicationConference Proceedings
PublisherAmsterdam University Press
Pages22-28
Volume3
ISBN (Electronic)2949-737X
ISBN (Print)9789048567638
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2024
Externally publishedYes
Event AHM Conference 2024: 'Heritage, Memory and Material Culture' -
Duration: 20 Jun 202421 Jun 2024

Conference

Conference AHM Conference 2024: 'Heritage, Memory and Material Culture'
Period20/06/2421/06/24

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