Interpreting the Civil Rights Movement: Place, Memory, and Conflict
Owen Dwyer
The Professional Geographer, 2000
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Progress versus Social Justice: Memory at the National Museum of African American History and Culture
Tim Gruenewald
The Journal of American Culture, 2021
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Institutionalizing counter-memories of the U.S. civil rights movement: The National Civil Rights Museum and an application of the interest-convergence principle
Cynthia Fabrizio Pelak
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The National Civil Rights Museum
Derek H Alderman, Joshua Inwood
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Doing public history at the National Civil Rights Museum: A conversation with Juanita Moore
Michael Honey
The Public Historian, 1995
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Just Being:Reflections on the National Memorial for Peace and Justice (Montgomery, AL), the Legacy Museum (Montgomery, AL), and the National Museum for African American History and Culture (Washington, DC)
Risham Majeed
Art Journal Open, 2020
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For All the World to See: Memorializing the Images of the Civil Rights Movement
Gwennaëlle Cariou
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Atlantic Journal of Communication The national memorial for peace and justice, dark tourist argumentation, and civil rights memoryscapes
Nicholas Paliewicz
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Memory as Social Action: Cultural Projection and Generic Form in Civil Rights Memorials
Victoria Gallagher
New Approches to Rhetoric, 2000
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The Long Civil Rights Movement and the Political Uses of the Past
hall jacquelyn
The Journal of American History, 2005
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Dreams of Union, Days of Conflict: Communicating Social Justice and Civil Rights Memory in the Age of Barack Obama
Kirt Wilson
2016 Carroll C. Arnold Distinguished Lecture
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Transforming Confederate Memory Sites into Spaces for Encounter Reclaiming Space at Marcus David Peters Circle
Kelly Williams Nagel
Rhetoric Society Quarterly, 2023
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"Image and Labor in a Longer, Broader Civil Rights Movement"
Kate Sampsell
Reviews in American History
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The Legacies of the Civil Rights Movement and the Paradoxical Politics of Inclusion: Collective Memory in Contentious Politics
Hajar Yazdiha
2017
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Can Plantation Museums Do Full Justice to the Story of the Enslaved? A Discussion of Problems, Possibilities, and the Place of Memory
Derek H Alderman, perry carter, Arnold Modlin
GeoHumanities, 2018
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Museums, Archives and Protest Memory
Red Chidgey
Palgrave Pivot, 2024
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Re-membering actors and stories of the civil rights movement in Jorge J. Santos Jr.'s graphic memories of the civil rights movement
Peyton Del Toro
Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics, 2020
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Exhibiting Authenticity: The Black Emergency Cultural Coalition’s Protests of the Whitney Museum of American Art, 1968–71
Caroline V Wallace
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Civil Rights Tourism in Alabama and Mississippi: Commemoration, Commercialization and the Distortion of Memory
Dr Matthew Jackson
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Parties Down at the Square Amid Courtroom Melodramas: a Reconsideration of the Modern Civil Rights Movement Demonstration
Peter Kuryla
Patterns of Prejudice, 2009
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Decolonizing African-american Museums: a Case Study on Two African-american Museums in the South
Anastacia Scott
2016
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My Pilgrimage to the National Civil Rights Museum: The Lorraine Motel – Memphis, Tennessee
Don Allen, Ed. S., M.A. Ed., MAT
2013
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Sparring with Public Memory: The Rhetorical Embodiment of Race, Power, and Conflict in the Monument to Joe Louis, in Dickson, G. Ott, B. and Blair, C. (Eds.) Places of Public Memory: The Rhetoric of Museums and Memorials
Victoria Gallagher
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Teaching the Long Civil Rights Movement
Aaron Bruewer
Teaching the Struggle for Civil Rights, 2018
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"Not Your Grandmamma's Civil Rights Movement:" A New Take on Black Activism
Monia Dal Checco
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Speak, Memory! Milestones in the Civil Rights Movement, 1954-1968
Rubén G. Rumbaut
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Memoryscapes in Transition: Black History Museums, New South Narratives, and Urban Regeneration
Patricia Davis
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Constructing Memory in the Absence of History: Embodying Conflicting Narratives at Historic Brattonsville
Pam Brown
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From “Dead Wrong” to Civil Rights History
Victoria Gallagher
Like Wildfire, 2020
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The Personalization of Collective Memory: The Smithsonian's September 11 Exhibit
Amy Fried
Political Communication, 2006
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The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee: Embodying the Changes of the Civil Rights Movement During the 1960's
Zach Sizemore
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What Can and Can’t Be Said: Race, Uplift, and Monument Building in the Contemporary South by Dell Upton
Dell Upton
Journal of Southern History, 2016
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Thoughts on the fate of public monuments during the Black Lives Matter movement: a request for epuration in the decolonial era
Katia Papandreopoulou
Political Monuments from the 20th to the 21st century: Memory, Form, Meaning, Lia Yoka (ed.), 2022
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Opening Up to Hard History: Activating Anti-Racism in an Immersive Ed.D. Cohort Experience at Heritage Sites in Montgomery, Alabama
Theresa Coble
Impacting Education: Journal on Transforming Professional Practice, 2020
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