21世纪美国“种族意识”纪念的未来

M. Hasian, Nicholas S. Paliewicz
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摘要

在最后一章中,作者探讨了美国社区将如何应对EJI的“种族意识”努力。参观纪念馆,从私刑地点挖掘土壤样本并将其送到私刑纪念馆是一回事,但主张大规模改革我们对非裔美国人监禁的看法或对赔偿的需要则是另一回事。在这里,作者认为,他们的批判性家谱分析表明,为什么美国社会可能愿意承认内战前、重建、重建后甚至20世纪50年代的种族隔离做法的问题,但他们可能不愿意看到在21世纪根深蒂固的种族分类或可以追溯到内战后的种族歧视做法的挥之不去的影响。
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The Future of “Race-Conscious” Memorialization in Twenty-First-Century America
In this concluding chapter, the authors take up the question of how American communities are going to react to the EJI’s “race conscious” efforts. It is one thing to visit the memorial, dig up soil samples from lynching sites and send them to the Lynching Memorial but quite another to be arguing for massive overhauls in the ways we think about incarceration of African Americans or the need for reparations. Here, the authors argue that their critical genealogical analyses have shown why U.S. communities may be willing to acknowledge the problematics of antebellum, Reconstruction, post-Reconstruction, or even 1950s segregationist practices, but they are possibly unwilling to see the lingering influence, in the twenty-first century, of entrenched racial categorizations or carceral practices that can be traced back to post-Civil War years.
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The EJI, the Legacy Museum, and “Postgenocide” America Post–World War II Civil Rights Activism, Photojournalism, and the Domestication of Civil Rights Lynching Memories Participatory Rhetorics at the National Memorial for Peace and Justice and Legacy Museum INTRODUCTION. The Future of “Race-Conscious” Memorialization in Twenty-First-Century America
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