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How can emerging technologies display, reveal and negotiate
difficult, dissonant, negative or undesirable heritage? Emerging
technologies in museums have the potential to reveal unheard or
silenced stories, challenge preconceptions, encourage emotional
responses, introduce the unexpected, and overall provide
alternative experiences. By examining varied theoretical approaches
and case studies, authors demonstrate how "awkward", contested, and
rarely discussed subjects and stories are treated - or can be
potentially treated - in a museum setting with the use of the
latest technology.
This volume is published in honour of the acclaimed work of Robert
Holland, historian of the British Empire and the Mediterranean, and
it brings together essays based on the original research of his
colleagues, former students and friends. The focal theme is modern
Cyprus, on which much of Robert Holland's own history writing was
concentrated for many years. The essays analyse British rule in
Cyprus between 1878 and 1960, and especially the transition to
independence; the coverage, however, also incorporates the
post-colonial era and the construction of present-day dilemmas. The
Cypriot experience intertwines with Anglo-Hellenic relations
generally, so that a section of the book is devoted to those
aspects that have been central to Robert Holland's sustained
contribution. The essays explore, inter alia, historiography,
social history, economics, politics, ideology, education and the
2013 financial crisis. Taken as a collection the essays serve as an
appropriate tribute to Robert Holland as well as an innovative
addition to the existing historiography of colonial and
post-colonial Cyprus. They will be of great interest to anyone
interested in Imperial and Commonwealth History, Anglo-Hellenic
relations and the Eastern Mediterranean in the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries.
In Protectorate Cyprus, education was one of the most effective
tools of imperial control and political manipulation used by the
British. This book charts the cultural and educational aspects of
British colonial rule in Cyprus and analyses what these policies
reveal about the internal struggles on the island between 1931 and
1960. Cyprus had been under British occupation since 1878, but it
was in the 1930s that educational policies acquired a strong
political significance and became essential in preserving the
British position on the island. The co-existence of two very
strongly-held and eventually conflicting national identities in
Cyprus, Greek-Orthodox and Turkish Muslim, inevitably led to the
politicisation of education and culture on the island. Therefore,
any attempts to impose British culture, language and way of
thinking onto Cypriots, or even to create a distinct Cypriot
identity, had very limited success. Gradually, the education system
reflected the shifting political developments in colonial Cyprus.
By the start of the 1950s, schools had become a breeding ground for
discontent and between 1955 and 1959 they were an indispensable
part of the EOKA revolt. In this book, Antigone Heraclidou provides
a new dimension to the understanding and origins of the deadlock
that was to prove one of the most intractable in the final years of
the British Empire.
In Protectorate Cyprus, education was one of the most effective
tools of imperial control and political manipulation used by the
British. This book charts the cultural and educational aspects of
British colonial rule in Cyprus and analyses what these policies
reveal about the internal struggles on the island between 1931 and
1960. Cyprus had been under British occupation since 1878, but it
was in the 1930s that educational policies acquired a strong
political significance and became essential in preserving the
British position on the island. The co-existence of two very
strongly-held and eventually conflicting national identities in
Cyprus, Greek-Orthodox and Turkish Muslim, inevitably led to the
politicisation of education and culture on the island. Therefore,
any attempts to impose British culture, language and way of
thinking onto Cypriots, or even to create a distinct Cypriot
identity, had very limited success. Gradually, the education system
reflected the shifting political developments in colonial Cyprus.
By the start of the 1950s, schools had become a breeding ground for
discontent and between 1955 and 1959 they were an indispensable
part of the EOKA revolt. In this book, Antigone Heraclidou provides
a new dimension to the understanding and origins of the deadlock
that was to prove one of the most intractable in the final years of
the British Empire.
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