2020
Cairn
Bernard Müller, « The case of the “severed thumbs” : Are modern museums obsolete when it comes to narrating today's world? », Multitudes, ID : 10670/1.9ad3ef...
The “Konkomba Memory Box” is not an exhibition but a communication device. It is presented simultaneously in a Konkomba locality in Nawaré, Togo, and at the Rautenstrauch-Joest Museum in Cologne, as part of the exhibition “Resist – Die Kunst des Widerstands (The Art of Resistance)”, from November 6, 2020 to April 14, 2021. This off-the-wall museum setting is not simply a receptacle for information gathered in the course of an investigation into the current events of the colonial past, and in particular its violence, but is the very tool of an exploration whose form is elaborated, appropriated, discussed and recomposed by all the participants, and above all, by those who, today, make this narrative their own. The “severed thumbs” case is a good illustration of this approach. It concerns the debate on the restitution of a phantom limb, that of the thumb of the right hand of the Konkomba archers whose current descendants claim that it was amputated by the German (Von Massow) and then French (Massu) colonial militias.