ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
LIST OF FIGURES
LIST OF TERMS
PREFACE
INTRODUCTION
Charlottesville, Memory and How to Read this Book
Part I: MUSEUMS, CONTROVERSY AND THE PAST
Chapter
- History as Legend and Myth as Fact, David B. Allison
- Confronting Confederate Monuments in the Twenty-First Century, Modupe Labode
- History, Memory, and the Struggle for the Future, W. Todd Groce
- “No Sooner Was It Over, than the Memory Made It Nobler”, Bob Beatty
Part II: THE CIVIL WAR, RECONSTRUCTION AND THE INSTITUTIONALIZATION OF RACISM
Chapter
- Remembering the Civil War, David B. Allison
- Memorializing the Confederate Past at Gettysburg During the Civil Rights and Cold War Era, Jill Ogline Titus
- Tributes to the Past, Present, and Future: World War I-Era Confederate Memorialization in Virginia, Edited for Revised Edition, Thomas R. Seabrook
- Don’t Call Them Memorials, Julian C. Chambliss
- A Lost Cause in the Bluegrass: Two Confederate Monuments in Lexington, Kentucky,Stuart W. Sanders
- Challenging Historical Remembrance, Myth, and Identity: The Confederate Monuments Debate, Edited for Revised Edition, F. Sheffield Hale
- Empty Pedestals: What should be done with Civic Monuments to the Confederacy and its Leaders?, Civil War Times
Part III: NATIVE PEOPLES AND WHITE-WASHED HISTORY
Chapter
- From Columbus to Serra and Beyond, David B. Allison
- Native Voices at Little Bighorn National Monument, Gerard Baker
- The Removal of James Earle Fraser’s Statue of Theodore Roosevelt from the American Museum of Natural History, William S. Walker
Part IV: IDENTITY POLITICS AND THE RATIONAL AND SYMPATHETIC MINDS
Chapter
15. Group Behavior, Self-examination and Clearing the Air around Controversial Issues,David B. Allison
16. Confederate Memorials: Choosing Futures for Our Past, A Veteran’s Perspective,George McDaniel
17. Speech upon the Removal of Confederate Statues from New Orleans, May 19, 2017,Mitch Landrieu
18. A Reflection of Us: The Simpsons and Heroes of the Past, Edited for Revised Edition, Jose Zuniga
Part V: COMMUNITY RESPONSIVENESS AND HISTORICAL RE-CONTEXTUALIZATION
Chapter
19. “The Struggle to Overcome the Negatives of the Past”: Germany’sVergangenheitsbewältigung and South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Program, DavidB. Allison
20. “We as Citizens.…”: Approaches to Memorialization by Sites of Conscience around the World, Edited for Revised Edition, Linda Norris
21. Monumental Relationships: International Monument Culture and the United States in the Early 21st Century, Laura A. Macaluso
22. Listening and Responding to Community: A Long View, David B. Allison
23. Confederate Statues at the University of Texas at Austin, Ben Wright
24. Honoring El Movimiento: the Chicano Movement in Colorado,JJ Lonsinger Rutherford
25. Not What's Broken; What's Healed: Women in El Barrio and the Healing Power of Community, Vanessa Cuervo Forero
26. Telling the Whole Story: Education and Interpretation in Support of #1 in Civil Rights: The African American Freedom Struggle in St. Louis, Elizabeth Pickard
27. Project Say Something’s Whose Monument Project: Not Tearing Down History, But Building Up Hope, Brian Murphy
28. Changing of the Guard: Curating a New Conversation Around Colorado’s Toppled Civil War Monument, Jason L. Hanson
CONCLUSION
Appendix
Bibliography
Index
About the Editor and Contributors