
Contents
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Place, Space, and Objects of Commemoration Place, Space, and Objects of Commemoration
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Economic Progress and Social Regress: Memphis Reinvents a Southern Past Economic Progress and Social Regress: Memphis Reinvents a Southern Past
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Why Forrest?: Selective History, Collective Memory, and Place Why Forrest?: Selective History, Collective Memory, and Place
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Forrest Park: A Century Later Forrest Park: A Century Later
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The National Civil Rights Museum: Commemorating a Difficult PastClose The National Civil Rights Museum: Commemorating a Difficult PastClose
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Civil Rights Museum: Preserving the Local Past, Foreseeing the Global Future Civil Rights Museum: Preserving the Local Past, Foreseeing the Global Future
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The Twenty-First-Century Role of the Civil Rights Museum The Twenty-First-Century Role of the Civil Rights Museum
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Civic Memorial Space: Collective Memory and the Common Good Civic Memorial Space: Collective Memory and the Common Good
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Community and Commemoration Community and Commemoration
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2 Neither Old South Nor New South: Memphis and the Paradoxes of Identity
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Published:September 2009
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Abstract
This chapter shows how past disruptions and identities, self-consciousness about them, and concerns about public image give meaning and narrative coherence to Memphis as a distinctive southern place and shape place identity. Symbols of past disruptions and conflicts, installed in public spaces to shape collective identity at particular times, represent decades of investment and conscious design to reposition Memphis as a place of regional, national, and international significance. These symbols, representing “memories” of disruptions and conflicts, are embedded in race, class, and gender relations. Consequently, they exemplify “the quintessential sociological issues of power, stratification and contestation.” Once “memories” become objects of commemoration and collective identity, they operate by a logic and force of their own.
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