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Death and Rebirth in a Southern City - Richmond's Historic Cemeteries (Paperback)
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Death and Rebirth in a Southern City - Richmond's Historic Cemeteries (Paperback)
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This exploration of Richmond's burial landscape over the past 300
years reveals in illuminating detail how racism and the color line
have consistently shaped death, burial, and remembrance in this
storied Southern capital. Richmond, Virginia, the former capital of
the Confederacy, holds one of the most dramatic landscapes of death
in the nation. Its burial grounds show the sweep of Southern
history on an epic scale, from the earliest English encounters with
the Powhatan at the falls of the James River through slavery, the
Civil War, and the long reckoning that followed. And while the
region's deathways and burial practices have developed in
surprising directions over these centuries, one element has
remained stubbornly the same: the color line. But something
different is happening now. The latest phase of this history points
to a quiet revolution taking place in Virginia and beyond. Where
white leaders long bolstered their heritage and authority with a
disregard for the graves of the disenfranchised, today activist
groups have stepped forward to reorganize and reclaim the
commemorative landscape for the remains of people of color and
religious minorities. In Death and Rebirth in a Southern City, Ryan
K. Smith explores more than a dozen of Richmond's most historically
and culturally significant cemeteries. He traces the disparities
between those grounds which have been well-maintained, preserving
the legacies of privileged whites, and those that have been worn
away, dug up, and built over, erasing the memories of African
Americans and indigenous tribes. Drawing on extensive oral
histories and archival research, Smith unearths the heritage of
these marginalized communities and explains what the city must do
to conserve these gravesites and bring racial equity to these
arenas for public memory. He also shows how the ongoing recovery
efforts point to a redefinition of Confederate memory and the
possibility of a rebirthed community in the symbolic center of the
South. The book encompasses, among others, St. John's colonial
churchyard; African burial grounds in Shockoe Bottom and on Shockoe
Hill; Hebrew Cemetery; Hollywood Cemetery, with its 18,000
Confederate dead; Richmond National Cemetery; and Evergreen
Cemetery, home to tens of thousands of black burials from the Jim
Crow era. Smith's rich analysis of the surviving grounds documents
many of these sites for the first time and is enhanced by an
accompanying website, www.richmondcemeteries.org. A brilliant
example of public history, Death and Rebirth in a Southern City
reveals how cemeteries can frame changes in politics and society
across time.
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