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ISBN 10: 0230576060
ISBN 13: 978-0230576063
Author: Vanessa Agnew, Jonathan Lamb
Explores the uncalculated and incalculable elements in historical re-enactment - unexpected emotions, unplanned developments - and locates them in countries where settlers were trying to establish national identities derived from metropolitan cultures inevitably affected by the land itself and the people who had been there before them.
Introduction to Settlers, Creoles and Historical Reenactment
Europe
Settlers, Workers and Soldiers: The Landscape of Total Mobilization
Settlers on the Edge, or Sedentary Nomads: Andrei Platonov and Steppe History
Creole Europe: The Reflection of a Reflection
America
Alexander Hamilton and the New Republic’s Creole Complex
“The Shrug of Horror”: Creole Performance at King’s Bench
Taxonomies of Terror
Africa
Voortrekkers of the Cold War: Enacting the South African Past and Present in Mark Behr’s The Smell of Apples
History Below the Water Line: The Making of Apartheid’s Last Festival
Failing with Livingstone: A Voyage of Reenactment on Lake Nyassa
Australia
Impossible Historical Reenactments: Invisible Aborigines on TV
Colonialism and Reenactment Television: Imagining Belonging in Outback House
“Blacking Up” for the Explorers of 1951
New Zealand
“The finest race of savages the world has seen”: How Empire Turned Out Differently in Australia and New Zealand
Reenacting Aotearoa, New Zealand
Reenactment and the Natural History of Settlement
Native Reenactments/Living Iterability: Lisa Reihana’s Native Portraits n.19897
Epilogue: Genealogies of Space in Colonial and Postcolonial Reenactment
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Tags: Vanessa Agnew, Jonathan Lamb, Settler, Creole, Re Enactment