MEANINGS AND IMPACTS OF CONFEDERATE MONUMENTS IN THE U.S. SOUTH

IF 1.6 3区 社会学 Q2 ETHNIC STUDIES
Lucy Britt, E. Wager, T. Steelman
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Abstract How do citizens interpret contentious symbols that pervade their community? And what downstream effects does state protection of these symbols have on how citizens of different backgrounds feel they belong in their community? We approach these questions through the lens of race and Confederate monuments in the American South. We rely on two original surveys to illustrate 1) the symbolic meanings Americans attach to these monuments and 2) how state protection of them impacts residents’ feelings of belonging. We find that perceptions of Confederate monuments vary by race: White U.S. residents are drastically less likely to perceive them as symbolic of racial injustice than are Black U.S. residents. Further, state protection of Confederate monuments leads to a diminished sense of belonging among Blacks, while leaving Whites unaffected. This research moves beyond scholarship examining simple support for or opposition toward contentious symbols, developing a deeper understanding of what meaning those symbols can hold for individuals and what their impacts are on individuals’ feelings of belonging and engagement in their communities.
美国南方邦联纪念碑的意义与影响
摘要公民如何解读弥漫在他们社区中的有争议的符号?国家对这些符号的保护对不同背景的公民如何感觉自己属于自己的社区有什么下游影响?我们通过种族和美国南部邦联纪念碑的视角来处理这些问题。我们依靠两项原始调查来说明1)美国人对这些纪念碑的象征意义,以及2)国家对它们的保护如何影响居民的归属感。我们发现,对邦联纪念碑的看法因种族而异:美国白人居民比美国黑人居民更不可能将其视为种族不公正的象征。此外,国家对邦联纪念碑的保护导致黑人的归属感减弱,而白人则不受影响。这项研究超越了对有争议符号的简单支持或反对的学术研究,更深入地理解了这些符号对个人的意义,以及它们对个人在社区中的归属感和参与感的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
7.70%
发文量
16
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