Challenges and Opportunities in the Transition of Plantation Museums from Erasing to Narrating Slavery

IF 0.6 Q3 GEOGRAPHY
Doron Eldar, David Jansson
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

highlights:

An increasing number of plantation museums are transitioning away from whitewashing slavery to interpreting it.

Transitioning plantation museums’ access to a traditional visitor base provides educational opportunities.

To successfully transition, plantation museums must take into account a range of considerations.

Key considerations are narrators’ epistemic positionality and capacity to guide visitors through discomfort.

abstract:

Against the backdrop of increasing public scrutiny, a growing number of plantation museums seek to transition their historical interpretation from erasing slavery to narrating it. Due to these sites’ access to their “pre-transition” visitor base, they are uniquely positioned to “call in” visitors who tend to avoid the facts of slavery. Nonetheless, we argue that for these sites to be truly transformative, they must account for a range of factors. These include the role of epistemic self-reflection in narrative construction (to help avoid the reproduction of white innocence), and the ability to guide visitors through the discomfort generated by the new narrative (to prevent backlash and to keep visitors open to the narrative’s message). To make this argument we examine the case of the Oak Alley plantation in Vacherie, Louisiana, and offer brief instructive comparisons to Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello plantation in Virginia.

种植园博物馆从抹除奴隶制向叙述奴隶制转型的挑战与机遇
•越来越多的种植园博物馆正在从洗白奴隶制转向解释奴隶制。•将种植园博物馆的入口转变为传统的游客基地,提供教育机会。•为了成功过渡,种植园博物馆必须考虑一系列因素。•关键的考虑因素是叙述者的认知定位和引导游客穿越不适的能力。在公众日益关注的背景下,越来越多的种植园博物馆试图将其历史解释从消除奴隶制转变为叙述奴隶制。由于这些网站可以访问他们“过渡前”的访问者基础,他们处于独特的位置,可以“召唤”那些倾向于回避奴隶制事实的访问者。尽管如此,我们认为这些网站要真正具有变革性,它们必须考虑到一系列因素。这些包括在叙事构建中的认识论自我反思的作用(以帮助避免白色纯真的再现),以及引导游客通过新叙事产生的不适的能力(以防止反弹并保持游客对叙事信息的开放)。为了证明这一观点,我们考察了路易斯安那州瓦切里的橡树巷种植园,并与托马斯·杰斐逊在弗吉尼亚州的蒙蒂塞洛种植园进行了简要的有益比较。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
14.30%
发文量
33
期刊介绍: The Southeastern Geographer is a biannual publication of the Southeastern Division of Association of American Geographers. The journal has published the academic work of geographers and other social and physical scientists since 1961. Peer-reviewed articles and essays are published along with book reviews, organization and conference reports, and commentaries. The journal welcomes manuscripts on any geographical subject as long as it reflects sound scholarship and contains significant contributions to geographical understanding.
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