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Journal of e-Media Studies, Volume 7 Issue 2: Accessible Civil Rights Heritage

Marez Endnote 48

According to architecture historian Dell Upton, the statues supported white supremacist narratives about the past: that “those who fought for the white cause in the Civil War fought for ‘their’ state in a ‘second war for independence’; that the Confederacy constitutes the state’s ‘heritage’; that the monument to it is ‘sacred’; that ‘self-government’ was not about the right to own and control black people; and that soldiering is inherently honorable whatever the cause.” Dell Upton, What Can and Can’t Be Said: Race, Uplift, and Monument Building in the Contemporary South (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2015).

 

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