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The Myth of the Passive Woman in Confederate Monuments
Since 1932, one of the most visually powerful monuments to the Southern cause in the Civil War has stood on the waterfront of Charleston, South Carolina. It depicts a placid woman standing behind a heroic male solider. She represents the city while presenting, as in other Confederate monuments featuring female forms, the passive virtues of Southern ...openaire +1 more source
Free History Lessons: Contextualizing Confederate Monuments in North Carolina
2021By Matthew Champagne +2 more
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Living Monuments: Confederate Soldiers' Homes in the New South.
The Journal of American History, 1995Stuart McConnell, R. B. Rosenburg
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Contesting Commemorative Landscapes: Confederate Monuments and Trajectories of Change
Social Problems, 2022exaly
Confederate Monuments and Anti-Black Stereotypes in the U.S. South
Sociology of Race and Ethnicity (Thousand Oaks, Calif )Heather O'Connell
exaly

