Lexington Books
Pages: 208
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-0-7391-8771-5 • Hardback • December 2013 • $128.00 • (£98.00)
978-1-4985-6423-6 • Paperback • July 2017 • $53.99 • (£42.00)
978-0-7391-8772-2 • eBook • December 2013 • $51.00 • (£39.00)
Subjects: History / United States / State & Local / South (AL, AR, FL, GA, KY, LA, MS, NC, SC, TN, VA, WV),
History / United States / 20th Century,
Political Science / Civil Rights,
Social Science / Discrimination & Race Relations
Matthew Mace Barbee is chair of the English Department at Siena Heights University where he teaches courses on U.S., African-American, and multi-ethnic literatures.
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
CHAPTER I: Introduction: Memory and the Imagined Community
CHAPTER II: Memory Between Civil War and Civil Rights: 1890-1948
CHAPTER III: Civil Rights and Memory: 1948-1970
CHAPTER IV: The Richmond Renaissance; Neoliberalism and Multicultural Memory: 1970-1992
CHAPTER V: Memories of Masculinity: Arthur Ashe in Body, Word and Deed
CHAPTER VI: Popular Culture, HIV/AIDS, and Memories of Arthur Ashe, Jr.
CHAPTER VII: Memory and Public Discourse: 1992-1996
Chapter VIII: Conclusion: Race, Memory and Masculinity
Bibliography
Barbee provides a detailed and thoughtful account of struggles over public memory in the civil rights era. Indeed, for many of the events examined, his is the most thorough investigation to date. . . .Race and Masculinity in Southern Memory makes important contributions to the study of historical commemoration in the recent South.
— Virginia Magazine of History and Biography
Barbee lays the foundation for a thorough analysis of the debate over the installation of the Ashe monument. Barbee analyzes this debate well. . . . Barbee is convincing in his argument that the direct, racist power of the monuments has waned and that despite the efforts of neo-Confederates, the Lost Cause ideology that gave birth to Monument Avenue has become a residual culture. . . .[This] case study is an important and suggestive framework for scholars.
— Journal of Southern History
In his rich narrative of Richmond’s Monument Avenue, Matthew Barbee vividly re-animates its statues with the debates over their meanings and purposes in a city struggling with race and memory. As Barbee reveals, monuments carry significant emotional and symbolic weight, revealing to his critical eye the ways in which people imagine themselves and their society. What is important about this study is not what it relates about the past, but what it says about the challenge of living up to the nation’s democratic ideals when sectionalism and racial inequality have been set in stone.
— Craig Thompson Friend, North Carolina State University
Much more than the history of an avenue, Matthew Mace Barbee's Race and Masculinity in Southern Memory: History of Richmond, Virginia's Monument Avenue, 1948–1996 offers an exhaustive, sophisticated, and not infrequently provocative account of the civil rights struggle in one of its seemingly more genteel locations. This book manages not only to attend to very local circumstances but also to show the national implications—especially for African American politicians coming after Doug Wilder—of this former Confederate capital's struggle over its legacy.
— Jon Smith, Simon Fraser University