Remembering racial violence memory movements and the resurgence of traumatic pasts

TitleRemembering racial violence memory movements and the resurgence of traumatic pasts
Publication TypeBook
Year of Publication2010
AuthorsRaj Andrew Ghoshal, Kenneth T Andrews
PublisherUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
CityChapel Hill, N.C.
Abstract

Recent years have seen a marked resurgence of interest in America's racially violent past. But despite the growing presence of the country's racially violent past in present-day politics and culture, there has been little scholarship on the rise of efforts to address the legacies of long-buried violence. The mnemonic resurgence of historic racial violence raises a broader theoretical question: How do buried, traumatic pasts resurge to become morally and politically salient in the present? This three-paper format dissertation is the first systematic consideration of memory movements addressing historic racial violence. Following an introductory chapter, I describe the rise of these buried pasts and propose a set of hypotheses around memory movements more broadly. I then present analyses of the local-level emergence of memory movements around 1877-1954 racial violence. I conclude with a comparative analysis of why different projects have attained varying levels of impact.

URLhttp://dc.lib.unc.edu/u?/etd,3391
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