Sprache
Bd. 84 (2024): ICOMOS - Hefte des Deutschen Nationalkomitees
Monuments and Sites De-colonial! Approaches to the Built Heritage of the German Colonial Era
Veröffentlicht:
2026-04-30
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Titelei
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Contents
5-6
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Welcome – Dissonance at a Distance: The Built Legacy of the German Colonial Era
9-10 -
Editorial – Monuments and Sites De-colonial! Subject, Conference and Proceedings
11-13 -
Introduction – From Global Architectural History to Shared Cultural Heritage. German Colonial Architecture as a Challeng
15-50
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German Colonial Buildings in Tanzania: Viewpoint of a German-Tanzanian Expert Mission (2018) on Status, Preservation Options and Future
53-59 -
Investigating the ‘Shared Heritage’ of German Colonial Period Buildings and Infrastructures in the Volta Region of Ghana
60-67 -
Developing Collaborative Approaches to the (Built) ‘Shared Heritage’ of German Colonialism in Pangani, Tanzania
68-76 -
From Building Archaeology to Conservation Management of German Colonial Architecture in Cameroon (1884–1916)
77-82 -
From Difficult History to Almost Lost Heritage: Surveying Kaiser-Wilhelmsland and Bismarck-Archipel (Deutsch-Neuguinea)
85-93 -
Rust and Dust: The Vestigial Heritage of German Phosphate Imperialism on Nauru and Angaur
94-100 -
Documenting and Promoting German Colonial Buildings in Togo
101-108 -
Dissonance Surrounding the Heritage and Conservation of German Colonial Architecture in Cameroon
109-116 -
Interdisciplinary Approach to Decolonisation: Source Editing, Visual History and Exhibitions Using the Example of the Early History of Tsingtao
117-123 -
The International Settlement of Tientsin and the German Concession (1895–1917) – from History to Heritage
127-132 -
German Fortresses in Northern Cameroon: Preserving Physical Remains and Memories of an Ultimate Resistance against the Allies until 1916
133-139 -
From Construction Material Research to Renovation: The German Architecture of Catholic Churches in Southern Tanzania
140-145 -
Dealing with German Colonial Architecture. Two Strategies – Two Losses: The Old Courthouse in Apia, Samoa, and the Joachim de Brum House in Likiep, Marshall Islands
146-150 -
Appropriation and Politics of German Colonial Heritage. The Tintenpalast in Windhoek, Namibia: an Intact Survivor of Imperialism, Constitutional Monarchy, Apartheid and Democracy
153-159 -
The Alte Feste and the Making of German Colonial Heritage in Namibia
160-166 -
Historical and Contemporary Relations between Tanzania and Germany: A Focus on Colonial Legacy, Cultural Connectivity and the Role of Gunzert House in Mwanza City
167-172 -
Towards the Liberation of Colonial Space? Prospects of Dealing with German Architectural Heritage. The Case of Iringa Boma in Tanzania
173-179 -
The Harbour Quarter of Swakopmund/Namibia: Selling German Colonial Nostalgia in a Seaside Resort
180-186 -
The Palais de Lomé (Togo): from a German Colonial Palace to a Pan-African Arts and Culture Centre to Preserve Biodiversity and Celebrate Africa and its Diasporas
187-192 -
An Architectural Irony: The Mau Bandstand of Sāmoa
195-200 -
Reimagining Monuments of Trauma and the German Colonial Space: Liwale, Nandete and Mahenge in Southern Tanzania
201-206 -
The German Colonial School in Witzenhausen – Controversial Crystallization Site of Different Cultures of Memories and Remembrance
207-212 -
Virtual Interference with Colonial Monuments. Approaching the Kolonialkriegerdenkmal in Düsseldorf/Germany with Augmented Reality
213-218 -
Between Demolition and Artistic Adaptation? The Afterlife of German Colonial Monuments in Africa and Germany
221-228 -
German Colonial Architecture between Germany and Cameroon – Postcolonial Appropriation Motifs in a Decolonial Age
229-235 -
Colonialism and the Extraction of Landscapes: Otobong Nkanga’s Engagement with the Copper Mine in Tsumeb (Namibia) as Anti-monument
236-243 -
Bird’s Perspective – A Decolonial Gaze (Public Space Action in Cologne 2021)
244-250
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Maps from the Deutscher Kolonialatlas of 1910
253-260 -
Authors
261-262 -
Conference Programme
263-264

