Monuments and Memory

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Albert Gallatin Jenkins
American Civil War
American Revolution
authorized heritage discourse
Boer War
Category=JHMC
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Category=NK
Commemoration
community-remembered histories
confederate monuments
contested heritage
critical heritage studies
cultural heritage landscapes
culture wars
diverse stakeholders
Eleanor Cross
Elmira Prisoner of War Camp
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Gamble Plantation Historic State Park
George Floyd
Green Howards
historical and contemporary conflict
Historical Archaeology
Imperial War Museum
Inchon Landing
International Coalition of Sites of Conscience
Judah P. Benjamin Confederate Memorial
Korean War
marginalized narratives
Memory
monument removal
monuments
monuments of conflict
Pullman National Monument
silenced history
Sir Mark Sykes
slave auction block
Sledmere Memorials
Social Justice
suppressed narratives
United Daughters of the Confederacy
War Memorials Register
White supremist ideology
Wolds Wagoners
World War II
WWII

Product details

  • ISBN 9780813079233
  • Dimensions: 155 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Jan 2025
  • Publisher: University Press of Florida
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Examining the pasts, evolving meanings, and silenced histories surrounding public monuments  

This volume examines many different public monuments to increase understanding of the cultural factors that have shaped their creation, maintenance, and—in some cases—removal. The role of monuments in communities and society continues to be an important and controversial topic, and the case studies in this volume contribute to this conversation by assessing the ways such markers can be empowering or marginalizing from a wide range of perspectives.

The monuments discussed here represent historical events from the Revolutionary War through the Korean War, including the “slave auction block” formerly located on the streets of Fredericksburg, Virginia; memorials to Confederate soldiers across the South and in northern POW cemeteries; and the Pullman National Monument in Chicago for workers who participated in the 1894 Pullman strike. This volume also highlights the dearth of statues memorializing the achievements of women and minorities, especially women of color, and contributors discuss whether recent movements advocating for more inclusive histories will lead to an increase in monuments honoring people whose narratives have been suppressed.

Looking at the powerful role of monuments in conveying the memory of history to future generations, the contributors to Monuments and Memory show why it is important to address the messages of these sites and ask whose histories they may be silencing. This book demonstrates how conversations surrounding preservation and interpretation of monuments encourage community involvement.

A volume in the series Cultural Heritage Studies, edited by Katherine Hayes

Contributors: Mark Cassello | Richard F. Veit | Mark Cianciosi | Joshua Butchko | Diane Wallman | Suzanne Spencer-Wood | Sherene Baugher | Lu Ann De Cunzo | John H. Jameson | Jeffrey Smith | Hilary Green | Brant Venables | Timo Ylimaunu | Paul R. Mullins | Kerri Barile | Harold Mytum | Melissa Ziobro | M. Jay Stottman | Levi Fox | Matthew Litteral

John H. Jameson, retired archaeology public interpretation lead with the United States National Park Service, is coeditor of Unlocking the Past: Celebrating Historical Archaeology in North America.

Sherene Baugher is professor emeritus of anthropology and landscape architecture at Cornell University.

Richard Veit is professor of anthropology and interim provost and senior vice president for academic affairs at Monmouth University. Baugher and Veit are coeditors of The Archaeology of Cemeteries and Gravemarkers.