12 research outputs found

    A More Equitable Past - Southern Supreme Courts and the Protection of the Antebellum Negro

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    Reason of Slavery: Understanding the Judicial Role in the Peculiar Institution

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    The results most relevant to the concerns of this Article are of course the effects upon how we judge the judges-for almost always we are sufficiently Whiggish to attempt such a judgment, either explicitly or implicitly. At times the consequence of so summing can be to imagine that one catches the judicial conscience by asking questions phrased as Sentence D\u27s query, whether the judges collaborated in a system of racial oppression. When we put the question this way, two unfortunate things happen. First, we create a verbal and historical muddle, for if anything ought to be clear by now it is that collaborating is a word whose adverse effects upon dispassionate understanding of the past on its own terms are enormous. Where we should, as historians, be going back and asking whether the judges thought they were doing justice or not, and if so, why, and if not, why not, instead we are imposing a retrospective Whiggish verdict of guilty as presumed--a verdict whose Whiggery is not less for its being done up in radical verbiage. As I have remarked earlier, when we engage in this sort of practice (or equally,and to expand the point now, when we assume that those who,analyzing the judicial past, do not fling around such verbal epithets are engaged in mere apologetics on behalf of an unjust past), when we project our contemporary moral righteousness back upon a complex past incapable of response, then we forget our prime duty of understanding the past on its own terms.Second, and to conclude this Article, we are setting up a moral double-standard whereby we hold the past, for which we have no culpability, to a stiffer standard than we hold the present in which we live, and for which in varying measure we have some culpability

    Colonial heritage and tourism: ethnic landscape perspectives

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    The revival of colonial heritage is a particular feature of former British and French colonies in Pacific and Asian settings. This is exemplified by the redevelopment and rejuvenation of what were exclusive 'comfort zones' for the 'colonial classes' and is central to the consumption of colonial nostalgia via tourism. The political and semiotic implications of renewing colonial era constructions for tourism are manifold. The key argument is that this can re-politicise what was hitherto benign colonial heritages. Furthermore, this can aggravate tensions within what are already fragile ethnic landscapes. This is especially so when the setting is one where the various publics have been steeped in economic, cultural and sociopolitical changes, and where political and civil upheavals are recent occurrences. If the restoration of colonial heritage for tourism (in this case for heritage hotels) in former colonies is conducted oblivious to the legacies and meanings instilled in such heritages, the exacerbation of social and political sensitivities is likely. © 2015 Taylor & Francis
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