"The book is engagingly written, and is notable in its ambition, scope, and breadth of research undertaken. ... The Memory of Colonialism makes several important and timely interventions in the study of historical remembrance and postcolonial identity. ... His book will surely become a cornerstone of the growing scholarship on colonial memory, and deserves to be widely read." (M. Kathryn Edwards, Social History, April 7, 2022)
Introduction
Section I France
Chapter 1 The Case for Silence
Chapter 2 A Silence that Never Was? Appropriating the Algerian War
Chapter 3 Devoir de mémoire on the Road to 2005: The Emergence of Memory Activism
Chapter 4 Memory as Republican Critique: Race and Anti-racism after 2005
Chapter 5 Memory as the Marker of Political Affiliation
Section II Britain
Chapter 6 Postcolonial Silence through Britain’s Long Decolonisation
Chapter 7 The Tale of the Imperial Balance Sheet
Chapter 8 Breaking the Chains? The Memory of Slavery in Britain’s Public Spaces
Chapter 9 Piercing through Nostalgia
Conclusion
Itay Lotem is a Lecturer in French Studies at the University of Westminster, UK. He has published in academic journals like Modern and Contemporary France,French Politics, Culture and Society and French History in addition to appearances in the media.