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AHA Statement on Confederate Monuments | Perspectives on History | AHA
AHA Statement on Confederate Monuments | Perspectives on History | AHA
<span class="dropcap-pf"></span>he American Historical Association welcomes the emerging national debate about Confederate monuments
History comprises both facts and interpretations of those facts. To remove a monument, or to change the name of a school or street, is not to erase history, but rather to alter or call attention to a previous interpretation of history. A monument is not history itself; a monument commemorates an aspect of history, representing a moment in the past when a public or private decision defined who would be honored in a community’s public spaces.
To remove such monuments is neither to “change” history nor “erase” it. What changes with such removals is what American communities decide is worthy of civic honor.
·historians.org·
AHA Statement on Confederate Monuments | Perspectives on History | AHA
How Southern socialites rewrote Civil War history - YouTube
How Southern socialites rewrote Civil War history - YouTube
7 minute video that can provoke a high-level thinking conversation about public memory and history. It would be easy to how the evidence in this video points to the persistence of racism, and it would certainly be correct to do so. At the same, how would any society give meaning to so many dead?
·youtube.com·
How Southern socialites rewrote Civil War history - YouTube
W. E. B. Du Bois Reflects on the Purpose of History | Facing History & Ourselves
W. E. B. Du Bois Reflects on the Purpose of History | Facing History & Ourselves
This short excerpt includes an audio version making it easy to plug into a Reconstruction lesson. This excerpt, from a chapter titled “The Propaganda of History,” questions the ways in which Reconstruction was being studied and taught at the time.
How the facts of American history have in the last half century been falsified because the nation was ashamed. The South was ashamed because it fought to perpetuate human slavery. The North was ashamed because it had to call in the black men to save the Union, abolish slavery and establish democracy.
·facinghistory.org·
W. E. B. Du Bois Reflects on the Purpose of History | Facing History & Ourselves