Participatory Rhetorics at the National Memorial for Peace and Justice and Legacy Museum

2020 ◽  
pp. 160-183
Author(s):  
Marouf A. Hasian ◽  
Nicholas S. Paliewicz

This chapter analyzes the participatory rhetorics of Montgomery’s National Memorial for Peace and Justice. Using participatory critical rhetoric as a methodology for criticism, we show how this place of memory uses affective, visual, and embodied appeals to create participatory spaces for remembering lynching pasts (and presents) in U.S. counties where lynchings occurred. As a supplement to the Legacy Museum, which exists down the street from the memorial, this memorial provides a dark tourist countermemorial that powerfully ruptures dominant civil rights memories.

2020 ◽  
pp. 184-202
Author(s):  
Marouf A. Hasian ◽  
Nicholas S. Paliewicz

This chapter studies the counterpart to the National Memorial for Peace and Justice, the Legacy Museum. Attending to the affective and cerebral displays of racial pasts and presents, the authors show how the museum presents a timeline of racial terrorism from slavery to the present era of mass incarceration of persons of color. The hauntologies of the Legacy Museum not only radically critique the colorblind discourses of civil rights remembrances, but they also raise questions about the possibilities of the need to remember an African American Holocaust.


Author(s):  
Sadye L. M. Logan

Isaiah DeQuincey Newman (1910–2008), a tireless advocate for human and civil rights, was a life-long humanitarian and one of the state’s most important civil rights leaders; he worked to bring peace and justice to all South Carolinians.


PsycCRITIQUES ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 61 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth V. Swenson
Keyword(s):  

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