Memorialising empires in the Asia-Pacific: The Dutch East India Company (VOC), the Spanish Empire, and the re-imagination of European foundations in Australia and the Philippines
My PhD thesis aims to compare and analyse memory sites concerning European foundations in the Philippines and Australia. Using three themes-monuments, museums, and public commemorations-the current project explores how and in what ways the Spanish Empire and the VOC are commemorated in the Philippines and Australia, respectively. This study will deepen our understanding of how the colonized and Indigenous peoples memorialise, represent, and challenge the legacies of colonial empires in their homeland using memory sites. Moreover, it aims to analyse evolving narratives constructed about these maritime empires and how they manifest in various memory sites. I argue that one can discern trends of challenges to, appropriation of, and contestation within memory sites across two vastly unique colonial experiences, distinctive government systems, and social contexts within the Asia-Pacific Region.
This project then grapples with the following questions:
In addressing these questions, my thesis will make an essential contribution to the interdisciplinary literature on memorialisation and empire, in addition to offering insight into best practices for how empires should be remembered in a post-colonial period in public spaces and history-makers in the real world. My project builds on a vast body of literature on the early national histories of the Philippines and Australia. The current research focuses on the period from the late 16th to early 18th century and how this period is memorialised over time. This period is characterised by both countries' early national and pre-colonial histories, where European explorers were on their quests to search for new lands. I will mainly focus on the Spanish voyages to the Philippines from 1521 to 1815 and the Dutch voyages to Australia from 1606 to 1756.
Principal supervisor: Professor Susan Broomhall
Co-supervisor: Dr Kristie Flannery
Mobilising Dutch East India Company collections for new global stories
Ramos, Dondy Pepito G. II. “‘China’s Curse’: The Racialization of Opium Use in Colonial Philippines, 1903-1908.” Philippine Sociological Reviewvol. 68, Issue 1 (2020): pp. 75-97 link: https://www.jstor.org/stable/48618326