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When hate groups descended on Charlottesville, Virginia, triggering
an eruption of racist violence, the tragic conflict reverberated
throughout the world. It also had a profound effect on the
University of Virginia's expansive community, many of whose members
are involved in teaching issues of racism, public art, free speech,
and social ethics. In the wake of this momentous incident,
scholars, educators, and researchers have come together in this
important new volume to thoughtfully reflect on the historic events
of August 11 and 12, 2017. How should we respond to the moral and
ethical challenges of our times? What are our individual and
collective responsibilities in advancing the principles of
democracy and justice? Charlottesville 2017: The Legacy of Race and
Inequity brings together the work of these UVA faculty members
catalyzed by last summer's events to examine their community's
history more deeply and more broadly. Their essays-ranging from
John Mason on the local legacy of the Lost Cause to Leslie Kendrick
on free speech to Rachel Wahl on the paradoxes of activism-examine
truth telling, engaged listening, and ethical responses, and aim to
inspire individual reflection, as well as to provoke considered and
responsible dialogue. This prescient new collection is a
conversation that understands and owns America's past
and-crucially-shows that our past is very much part of our present.
Contributors: Asher D. Biemann; Gregory B. Fairchild; Risa
Goluboff; Bonnie Gordon; Claudrena N. Harold; Willis Jenkins;
Leslie Kendrick; John Edwin Mason; Guian McKee; Louis P. Nelson; P.
Preston Reynolds; Frederick Schauer; Elizabeth R. Varon; Rachel
Wahl; Lisa Woolfork.
New research on the archaeology of the colonial landscapes of the
Caribbean. This volume brings together new research on the
archaeology of the colonial landscape of the Caribbean. It focusses
on the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and on the British
Caribbean: notably Bermuda, Jamaica, Florida, Barbados, Antigua,
and especially St. Kitts and Nevis. Chapters cover a wide range of
landscapes - domestic, military and industrial - and interests,
including the archaeology and architecture of African-Caribbean
slavery and emancipation, European settlements, sugar production,
burial grounds, cartography, fortifications and trade.
From the University of Virginia's very inception, slavery was
deeply woven into its fabric. Enslaved people first helped to
construct and then later lived in the Academical Village; they
raised and prepared food, washed clothes, cleaned privies, and
chopped wood. They maintained the buildings, cleaned classrooms,
and served as personal servants to faculty and students. At any
given time, there were typically more than one hundred enslaved
people residing alongside the students, faculty, and their
families. The central paradox at the heart of UVA is also that of
the nation: What does it mean to have a public university
established to preserve democratic rights that is likewise founded
and maintained on the stolen labor of others? In Educated in
Tyranny, Maurie McInnis, Louis Nelson, and a group of contributing
authors tell the largely unknown story of slavery at the University
of Virginia. While UVA has long been celebrated as fulfilling
Jefferson's desire to educate citizens to lead and govern, McInnis
and Nelson document the burgeoning political rift over slavery as
Jefferson tried to protect southern men from anti-slavery ideas in
northern institutions. In uncovering this history, Educated in
Tyranny changes how we see the university during its first fifty
years and understand its history hereafter.
Intermingling architectural, cultural, and religious history, Louis
Nelson reads Anglican architecture and decorative arts as documents
of eighteenth-century religious practice and belief. In The Beauty
of Holiness, he tells the story of the Church of England in
colonial South Carolina, revealing how the colony's Anglicans
negotiated the tensions between the persistence of
seventeenth-century religious practice and the rising tide of
Enlightenment thought and sentimentality. Nelson begins with a
careful examination of the buildings, grave markers, and communion
silver fashioned and used by early Anglicans. Turning to the
religious functions of local churches, he uses these objects and
artifacts to explore Anglican belief and practice in South
Carolina. Chapters focus on the role of the senses in religious
understanding, the practice of the sacraments, and the place of
beauty, regularity, and order in eighteenth-century Anglicanism.
The final section of the book considers the ways church
architecture and material culture reinforced social and political
hierarchies. Richly illustrated with more than 250 architectural
images and photographs of religious objects, The Beauty of Holiness
depends on exhaustive fieldwork to track changes in historical
architecture. Nelson imaginatively reconstructs the history of the
Church of England in colonial South Carolina and its role in public
life, from its early years of ambivalent standing within the colony
through the second wave of Anglicanism beginning in the early
1750s.
When hate groups descended on Charlottesville, Virginia, triggering
an eruption of racist violence, the tragic conflict reverberated
throughout the world. It also had a profound effect on the
University of Virginia's expansive community, many of whose members
are involved in teaching issues of racism, public art, free speech,
and social ethics. In the wake of this momentous incident,
scholars, educators, and researchers have come together in this
important new volume to thoughtfully reflect on the historic events
of August 11 and 12, 2017. How should we respond to the moral and
ethical challenges of our times? What are our individual and
collective responsibilities in advancing the principles of
democracy and justice? Charlottesville 2017: The Legacy of Race and
Inequity brings together the work of these UVA faculty members
catalyzed by last summer's events to examine their community's
history more deeply and more broadly. Their essays-ranging from
John Mason on the local legacy of the Lost Cause to Leslie Kendrick
on free speech to Rachel Wahl on the paradoxes of activism-examine
truth telling, engaged listening, and ethical responses, and aim to
inspire individual reflection, as well as to provoke considered and
responsible dialogue. This prescient new collection is a
conversation that understands and owns America's past
and-crucially-shows that our past is very much part of our present.
Contributors: Asher D. Biemann; Gregory B. Fairchild; Risa
Goluboff; Bonnie Gordon; Claudrena N. Harold; Willis Jenkins;
Leslie Kendrick; John Edwin Mason; Guian McKee; Louis P. Nelson; P.
Preston Reynolds; Frederick Schauer; Elizabeth R. Varon; Rachel
Wahl; Lisa Woolfork.
Founded in 1769 as a new port town on Jamaica’s north coast,
Falmouth expanded dramatically in the decades around 1800 as it
supported the rapidly expanding sugar production of Trelawney and
neighboring parishes. Many of the surviving buildings in Falmouth
are the townhouses and shops of the planters and merchants who
benefitted from the wealth of sugar. That same community also built
a major Anglican church and a courthouse, both of which still
survive and remain in use. In those same years, the town hosted a
growing free-black population and this community also left its mark
on the historic town. In 1894, Falmouth received an extraordinary
gift from the British crown in the form of the Albert George
Market, at once a symbol of persistent colonialism, a shelter for
the ancient Sunday markets, and a symbol of modernism in the form
of its vast cast iron design. Monuments in the city from the
twentieth century include an extraordinary round Catholic church
and an impressively Modernist school wing. With little investment
through the twentieth century, the town was entirely
re-conceptualized in the opening years of the twenty-first century
with the construction of a vast cruise ship terminal. Spanning from
the foundation of the town in 1769 to the opening of the cruise
ship terminal in 2008, this book explores the wide range of
architecture built by Jamaicans and others in the making of this
extraordinary town.
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