Inhalt des Dokuments
Yann LeGall
Dr. des.
Raum: A 083
Telefon: +49 (0) 30 314 24307
Email: yann.legall[at]tu-berlin.de
Forschungsprojekt:
The Restitution of Knowledge:
artefacts as archives in the (post)colonial museum
seit 2020:
Wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiter am Institut für Kunstgeschichte, TU Berlin
2019-2020:
Wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter am Institut für Anglophone Studien der Universität Potsdam
2016-2019:
Mitglied des Graduiertenkollegs "Minor Cosmopolitanisms" an der Universität Potsdam
2017-2018:
Forschungsaufenthalt an der University of Cape Town
2016 - 2019
Remembering the Dismembered: African Human Remains and Memory Cultures in and after Repatriation
Publikationen
LeGall, Yann (2020). "Songea Mbano, Maji Maji Flava, and the 'Halfway Dead' of the Majimaji War (1905-07)." Human Remains and Violence, Manchester University Press (Fall 2020). Open Access.
Kopp, Christian, Yann LeGall & Mnyaka Sururu Mboro (forthcoming). "'Small is beautiful': Postcolonial Walking Tours as a Form of Street Justice." Everything Passes Except the Past, Goethe Institut Bruxelles.
LeGall, Yann (2020). Rezension: Greve, Anna. "Koloniales Erbe: kritische Weißseinforschung in der praktischen Museumsarbeit". Provenienz und Forschung, Deutsches Zentrum für Kulturgutverluste.
--- (2016). "The Return of Human Remains to the Pacific: Resurgence of Ancestors and Emergence of Postcolonial Memory Practices." Postcolonial Justice: Reassessing the Fair Go. Edited by Gigi Adair and Anja Schwarz. Trier: WVT 2016, pp. 45-60.
--- (2016). Rezension: Förster, Larissa & holger Stoecker. "Haut, Haar und Knochen: Koloniale Spuren in naturkundlichen Sammlungen der Universität Jena". HSozKult, 4 Nov. 2016. www.hsozkult.de/publicationreview/id/rezbuecher-26746
Populärwissenschaftliche Artikel:
- “Aboadea nfa omo kra nsie yie”: Brandenburg-Prussian kings, enslaved Africans, and the problem with representation in the public space
- "You are welcome to Moshi": Mangi Meli's grandson visits Berlin to tell the story of German colonial violence in the Kilimanjaro region
- The Orangerie Castle in Potsdam, the Boxer movement in China and astronomical instruments
- The New Palace and the Peak of the Kilimanjaro
- Oduor Obura: "We need to find names for the busts"
- Invaders? Migrants? Refugees? The Migration Museum in Adelaide and its diverse communities
- Dada Afrika in Berlin: Dialogue comes with a price that exhibitions are rarely eager to pay
- Schädel X: The echoes of German colonial history in a skull