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Dethroning historical reputations: Dethroning historical reputations

Dethroning historical reputations
Dethroning historical reputations
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Contents
  5. List of illustrations
  6. Preface
  7. Notes on contributors
  8. 1. Introduction
  9. 2. Commentary on universities, museums and the commemoration of benefactors
  10. 3. The English civic universities: endowments and the commemoration of benefactors
  11. 4. Donors to an imperial project: Randlords as benefactors to the Royal School of Mines, Imperial College of Science and Technology
  12. 5. The expectations of benefactors and a responsibility to endow
  13. 6. The funder’s perspective
  14. 7. Calibrating relevance at the Pitt Rivers Museum
  15. 8. From objects of enlightenment to objects of apology: why you can’t make amends for the past by plundering the present
  16. 9. British universities and Caribbean slavery
  17. 10. Risk and reputation: the London blue plaques scheme
  18. 11. ‘A dreary record of wickedness’: moral judgement in history
  19. 12. We have been here before: ‘Rhodes Must Fall’ in historical context
  20. Bibliography
  21. Index

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The Institute of Historical Research (I.H.R.) is the U.K.'s national centre for history. Founded in 1921, the Institute facilitates and promotes innovative research via its primary collections library, and its programme of training, publishing, conferences, seminars and fellowships. The I.H.R. is one of the nine humanities research institutes of the School of Advanced Study at the University of London.

‘I.H.R. Shorts’ is a new Open Access publishing series from the Institute of Historical Research at the University of London. Insightful and concise, I.H.R. Shorts offer incisive commentaries on contemporary historical debates. Titles range from 15,000 to 50,000 words with a focus on interdisciplinary approaches to the past.

1. Dethroning historical reputations: universities, museums and the commemoration of benefactors
edited by Jill Pellew and Lawrence Goldman (2018)

2. Magna Carta: history, context and influence
edited by Lawrence Goldman (2018)

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