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Recalling the Belgian Congo : conversations and introspection

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Abstract
When the author embarked on her study, her aim was to approach former colonial officers with a view to analyzing processes of domination in the ex-Belgian Congo. However, after establishing a rapport with some of these officers, the author was soon forced to revise her initial assumptions, widely held in present-day Belgium: these officers were not the "baddies" she had expected to meet. Exploring the colonial experience through the respondents' memories resulted in a far more complex picture of the colonial situation than she had anticipated, again forcing her to question her original assumptions. This resulted not only in a more differentiated perspective on Belgian colonialist rule, but is also sensitized her as regards the question of anthropological understanding and of what constitutes historical fact. These two aspects of her work are reflected in this study that offers specific material on the way Belgian colonialism is remembered and reflects on its conditions of production, thus combining ethnographic analysis with a theoretical essay.
Keywords
HRC, Belgium, Congo, Africa, colonialism, general anthropology

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:

MLA
Dembour, Marie-Benedicte. Recalling the Belgian Congo : Conversations and Introspection. 2nd ed., vol. 9, Berghahn, 2000.
APA
Dembour, M.-B. (2000). Recalling the Belgian Congo : conversations and introspection (2nd ed., Vol. 9). Berghahn.
Chicago author-date
Dembour, Marie-Benedicte. 2000. Recalling the Belgian Congo : Conversations and Introspection. 2nd ed. Vol. 9. Oxford: Berghahn.
Chicago author-date (all authors)
Dembour, Marie-Benedicte. 2000. Recalling the Belgian Congo : Conversations and Introspection. 2nd ed. Vol. 9. Oxford: Berghahn.
Vancouver
1.
Dembour M-B. Recalling the Belgian Congo : conversations and introspection. 2nd ed. Vol. 9. Oxford: Berghahn; 2000. 256 p.
IEEE
[1]
M.-B. Dembour, Recalling the Belgian Congo : conversations and introspection, 2nd ed., vol. 9. Oxford: Berghahn, 2000.
@book{8638426,
  abstract     = {{When the author embarked on her study, her aim was to approach former colonial officers with a view to analyzing processes of domination in the ex-Belgian Congo. However, after establishing a rapport with some of these officers, the author was soon forced to revise her initial assumptions, widely held in present-day Belgium: these officers were not the "baddies" she had expected to meet. Exploring the colonial experience through the respondents' memories resulted in a far more complex picture of the colonial situation than she had anticipated, again forcing her to question her original assumptions. This resulted not only in a more differentiated perspective on Belgian colonialist rule, but is also sensitized her as regards the question of anthropological understanding and of what constitutes historical fact.
These two aspects of her work are reflected in this study that offers specific material on the way Belgian colonialism is remembered and reflects on its conditions of production, thus combining ethnographic analysis with a theoretical essay.}},
  author       = {{Dembour, Marie-Benedicte}},
  isbn         = {{9781571819451}},
  keywords     = {{HRC,Belgium,Congo,Africa,colonialism,general anthropology}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{256}},
  publisher    = {{Berghahn}},
  title        = {{Recalling the Belgian Congo : conversations and introspection}},
  volume       = {{9}},
  year         = {{2000}},
}