This article examines how collective memories of the Belgian colonisation of the Congo have shifted between 1960 and 2020 in relation to changing moral discourses. Drawing on a long-term discourse analysis of Belgian newspapers and history textbooks, shared representations of the colonial past are traced over the course of sixty years. By linking changes in these narrative practices to broader sociohistorical developments, the article shows how collective memories and discourses of morality co-evolve, thus reshaping understandings of the past across time.
Louise Ballière (Thu,) studied this question.