The Paradox of Invisibility

IF 0.2 4区 艺术学 0 ARCHITECTURE Journal of Architectural Education Pub Date : 2022-07-03 DOI:10.1080/10464883.2022.2097517
A. Morshed
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Abstract

Teaching architectural history with a commitment to social justice presents an epistemological challenge for two key reasons. First, the spatialization of social justice is irredeemably political, raising the question as to how to discuss politics in the classroom. Second, how does an educator articulate an ethical framework within which to situate histories of injustice and exclusion in the realm of knowledge production? By analyzing diverse public reactions to the controversial Emancipation Memorial (also known as the Freedman’s Memorial) in Lincoln Park on Capitol Hill, Washington, DC during the social justice movements of 2020, this paper examines the politics of social justice through an exploration of the notion of “invisibility,” a paradoxical condition that, as African American novelist Ralph Ellison suggests, can imply both a fantasy of empowerment and a tragedy of powerlessness. The Freedman’s Memorial was erected in 1876 to commemorate United States President Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation of 1863, which many American textbooks credit with “freeing the slaves.” Set on a high pedestal, the monument depicts Lincoln as a towering savior and the unshackled man kneeling in front of him. Though sculptor Thomas Ball modeled the kneeling man after the formerly enslaved man Archer Alexander, the monument denies Alexander’s personal history and his traumatic escape to freedom. It is Lincoln’s heroism, and not that of formerly enslaved people like Alexander, that is disseminated through an entrenched web of hegemonic cultural consent. How does an educator discuss Alexander’s invisibility in the context of this memorial to deepen the understanding of racial ideologies undergirding the institution of slavery in America? The paper argues that microhistory can serve as a powerful historiographic antidote to the dehumanizing effects of invisibility.
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隐形悖论
出于两个关键原因,致力于社会正义的建筑史教学是一项认识论挑战。首先,社会正义的空间化具有不可救药的政治性,这就提出了如何在课堂上讨论政治的问题。第二,教育家如何阐明一个伦理框架,将不公正和排斥的历史置于知识生产领域?通过分析2020年社会正义运动期间公众对华盛顿特区国会山林肯公园备受争议的解放纪念馆(也称为弗里德曼纪念馆)的不同反应,本文通过探索“隐形”的概念来审视社会正义的政治,这是一种矛盾的条件,正如非裔美国小说家拉尔夫·埃里森(Ralph Ellison)所言,这既可能意味着对赋权的幻想,也可能意味着无能为力的悲剧。弗里德曼纪念碑建于1876年,以纪念美国总统亚伯拉罕·林肯1863年的《解放奴隶宣言》,许多美国教科书将其誉为“解放奴隶”。纪念碑坐落在一个高高的基座上,将林肯描绘成一个高耸的救世主,一个没有戴镣铐的人跪在他面前。尽管雕塑家托马斯·鲍尔(Thomas Ball)以前奴隶阿彻·亚历山大(Archer Alexander)的名字为跪着的人建模,但这座纪念碑否认了亚历山大的个人历史和他痛苦地逃离自由的经历。是林肯的英雄主义,而不是像亚历山大这样以前被奴役的人的英雄主义通过根深蒂固的霸权文化认同网络传播。一位教育家如何在这座纪念碑的背景下讨论亚历山大的隐形,以加深对支撑美国奴隶制制度的种族意识形态的理解?论文认为,微观历史可以作为一种强大的史学解药,来对抗隐形的非人化影响。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
18
期刊介绍: The Journal of Architectural Education (JAE) has been published since 1947 for the purpose of enhancing architectural scholarship in design, history, urbanism, cultural studies, technology, theory, and practice. Published on behalf of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture, JAE appears twice annually in October and March, with the October issue being the first of a new volume.
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