
Contested Commemoration in U.S. History
Description
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This edited volume contains fresh interpretations of public history and collective memory that explore the evolving relationship between the U.S. and its past. The individual chapters investigate efforts to memorialize events or interrogate instances of historical sanitization at the expense of less partial representations that would include other perspectives. The primary source material and geography covered is extensive; contributors use historic sites and monuments, photographs, memoirs, textbooks, periodicals, music, and film to discuss the periods from colonial America, through the Revolutionary and Civil Wars up until the Vietnam War, Civil Rights movement, and Cold War, to explore how the commemoration of those eras resonates in the twenty-first century.
Through a range of commemoration media and primary sources, the authors illuminate themes and arguments that are indispensable to students, scholars, and practitioners interested in Public History and American Studies more broadly.
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Persons
Klara Stephanie Szlezak is a postdoctoral researcher and lecturer in American Studies at the University of Passau, Germany. She is the author of "Canonized in History": Literary Tourism and 19th-Century Writers' Houses in New England. Her research interests include museum studies, visual culture studies, and the history of immigration.
Content
Melissa M. Bender and Klara Stephanie Szlezak
Part I: Sites and Spaces
Shenandoah National Park and the Racialization of Progress
Alex Harmon
Assassinated Memories: The Enduring Debate over the Murder and Legacy of Fred Hampton and the Black Panther Party in Chicago
Adrienne Chudzinski
Memory-Place and the Unintentional Monument: Pittsburgh's Civic Arena (1961-2012) and Its Legacy
Amy Bowman-McElhone and Jeanne M. Persuit
Lost Cause "Ocean to Ocean": Memory, Space, and the Jefferson Davis Highway in the West
Alexander Finkelstein
Part II: Textual Representations
"An American Hero": The Right-Wing Reconstruction of Joseph McCarthy
Christopher Michael Elias
"You Were My Heroes": Memorializing Military Nurses of the Vietnam War
Ingrid Gessner
Whose Heritage? U.S. History Textbooks, American Exceptionalism, and Hispanophobia
Alyssa Kreikemeier
Apologists of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study and Efforts toward Historic Preservation and Commemoration
John Elia
Part III: Visual and Audiovisual Representations
"No Longer Here": Remembering Japanese American Internment In School Yearbooks
Amy J. Lueck
Recent Antebellum-Themed Cinema: Race, Nation, and the Obama Presidency
Jayson Baker
Pete Seeger, Woody Guthrie, and the Preservation and Performance of American Counter-History
Jodie Childers
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