id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_2jskcqvd3bb6fhbzksgbxdps7u Charles Forsdick Introduction From Populism to Decolonisation: How We Remember in the Twenty-First Century 2020 34 .pdf application/pdf 20376 1790 54 over Algeria aside, the postwar political cultures of present or former European colonial powers – namely Britain, Germany, Belgium, Portugal and the Netherlands – did not witness significant public debate about the association between imperial violence and the brutality of The haunting memory of victimisation in the Netherlands and France during the Second World War had the effect of rendering the colonial violence that had forced The so-called coming to terms paradigm that developed in the 1970s and 1980s – culminating in the explosion of memory practices after the Cold War – marginalised the connection of violence between the European and colonial worlds, which had been one aspect of the could be addressed in similar ways across the world – a transnational synchronised 'politics of regret' commemorating the 'innocent victim' as the agent of remembrance par excellence across Europe, Latin America, and East and Southeast Asia (Jager and Mitter; Lim; Mark; ./cache/work_2jskcqvd3bb6fhbzksgbxdps7u.pdf ./txt/work_2jskcqvd3bb6fhbzksgbxdps7u.txt