Leonor Faber-Jonker
PhD candidate / self funded
- Name
- L.A. Faber-Jonker MA
- Telephone
- 071 5272727
- l.a.faber@asc.leidenuniv.nl
Leonor Faber-Jonker (1987) is a historian, author, and artist. She was the scientific curator of an exhibition on the Namibian genocide at the Mémorial de la Shoah, Paris (25 November 2016 - 12 March 2017).
Leonor Faber-Jonker (1987) is an author and artist. In her work, she investigates the relation between objects and memory in practices surrounding statues, heirlooms, photographs, and collections. Her interests include the colonial history of Southern Africa, the workings of collage, and 1980s counterculture. In 2012, she published No Future Nu (Lebowski), a cultural history of punk in The Netherlands.
In 2015, she graduated with honors from the research master Modern History at the University of Utrecht, with a thesis about the practices surrounding twenty skulls of Herero and Nama victims of the genocide in German South-West Africa (1904-1908). Using a material approach, she analysed how these human remains acquired layers of meaning as trophies, anthropological specimens, museal objects, symbols, evidence, and ancestral remains. She was the scientific curator of an acclaimed exhibition on the Namibian genocide at the Mémorial de la Shoah, Paris (25 November 2016 – 12 March 2017).
In 2021, she was awarded a fellowship at the Research Center for Material Culture. She is currently working on a book about the Southern African heirlooms that she inherited from her grandmother and is an external PhD candidate at the African Studies Centre Leiden.
Leonor is supervised by Jan-Bart Gewald and Alicia Schrikker.
www.leonorfaberjonker.nl
PhD candidate / self funded
- Afrika-Studiecentrum
- Wetenschappelijke staf
- Faber-Jonker L. (2018), More than just an object : a material analysis of the return and retention of Namibian skulls from Germany. African Studies Collection no. 70. Leiden: African Studies Centre Leiden (ASCL).
- Faber L.A. (2017), Le premier génocide du Xxe siècle. Herero et Nama dans le Sud-Ouest africain allemand, 1904-1908. Paris: Éditions du Mémorial de la Shoah.
- Faber L.A. (2016), Meer dan een object: de terugkeer van twintig Namibische schedels uit Duitsland, Groniek 48(208/209): 283-296.
- Faber L.A. (2015), 'More than just an object': a material analysis of the return and retention of Namibian skulls from Germany. Utrecht: University Utrecht.