Lavishly illustrated and genuinely inter-disciplinary, Remembering Independence reminds us that, for all the artificiality and incompleteness of so-called 'transfers of power', the cultural symbolism of independence days would resonate in post-colonial societies for years afterwards. Interrogating the multiple roles assigned to ceremonial independence days in political cultures, nation-building narratives, and popular memories, the book offers a refreshingly different perspective on the cultural legacies of decolonization.
Martin Thomas, University of Exeter, United Kingdom
This excellent study on the complexities of remembering independence contributes to larger questions about populism and nationalism, which is currently rising globally to an alarming extent. On the aesthetic level, the book invites the reader to think about globally-operating companies, who not only sell their service in creating monuments or museums, but also sell a kind of normative symbolism ... the book is a highly recommended reading to all those interested in methodological questions of how to do a meaningful comparison.
Katrin Bromber, TRAFO - Blog for Transregional Research, 18.10.2018, https://trafo.hypotheses.org/13824.
While offering a broad panorama of different practices of remembering in a range of countries, Lentz and Lowe succeed in presenting their examples in an accessible style that allows non-specialists to engage with the topic. They show that independence is not a fixed event of the past but continuously created and reinterpreted through the perception of participants and later born generations, victims and onlookers.
Christoph Marx, Dhau / Jahrbuch fur aussereuropaische Geschichte 4, 2019
The strength of this book lies in the balance between description and comparison. The distinguishing characteristics of the eight selected countries (or by extension of postcolonial Africa and Asia-Pacific in general), the similarities and differences between the eight cases at hand, as well as the differences and changes over time within each of these countries provide complexity to the ethnographical and historical analysis of past, present and future in the remembering of independence ... The book meets the ambitions and expectations it raised. It is also a pleasant read, richly illustrated and replete with insightful examples.
Geert Castryck, Universitat Leipzig in Connections. A Journal for Historians and Area Specialists
[T]his volume is a must-read for anyone interested in postcolonial nationalism, decolonisation of European empires and the memory politics of postcolonial nations between the end of the Second World War and the end of the Cold War.
Stefan Berger, Postcolonial Studies