Re: Should we have statues at all?
Posted: Sat Jun 13, 2020 4:24 pm
"We will frighten on the beaches"
The fact is that statues are teaching us very little about history. Most are accompanied by a brief plaque mentioning who the person was, their job title or major achievement, and who raised the statue.... Not only is this not teaching us history, it is in itself erasing history because it only tells us [one] side of the story, and a factually incorrect one at that. But having these memorials, and only these memorials, normalises this version of history, erasing alternative versions.
Rather than history, these statues are our archaeology. Archaeology is the study of human activity, beliefs, and values through material culture: that is, the objects that were created and used by humans. The value of statues is not in what they tell us about the individual being memorialised, but what they tell us of the society that created the statue, erected it, and perhaps altered, removed, or replaced it. These statues are therefore a story of us. Who we venerated and celebrated, what stories we told, and what values we upheld.
I love that. If we're keeping on doing statues, I think every statue of someone who did the thing(s) that they were memorialised for through employing/directing/exploiting lots of people to do the actual work, should have their statue's plinth in this style.
Bookmarked.Bird on a Fire wrote: ↑Sun Jun 21, 2020 11:11 pmA useful article in Popular Mechanics on how to safely but effectively remove racist statues.
"The jury will note that he had a bookmark that indicated an interest in the destruction of western culture"basementer wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 9:57 amBookmarked.Bird on a Fire wrote: ↑Sun Jun 21, 2020 11:11 pmA useful article in Popular Mechanics on how to safely but effectively remove racist statues.
Yay science.Bird on a Fire wrote: ↑Sun Jun 21, 2020 11:11 pmA useful article in Popular Mechanics on how to safely but effectively remove racist statues.
If people enjoyed that I highly recommend the twitter thread by Sarah Parcak who provides a,Bird on a Fire wrote: ↑Sun Jun 21, 2020 11:11 pmA useful article in Popular Mechanics on how to safely but effectively remove racist statues.
PSA For ANYONE who might be interested in how to pull down an obelisk* safely from an Egyptologist who never ever in a million years thought this advice might come in handy
*might be masquerading as a racist monument I dunno
Allo V Psycho wrote: ↑Tue Jun 23, 2020 7:09 amI'd quite like a statue of myself, indicating that I was F. Rude too.
Somewhat missing a key point - check who the statue is of before you paint on it or tear it down. For example, a statue raised by the subscription of black civil war veterans ought not be a target. Nor should a statue of the man who crushed both the Confederacy and the original incarnation of the KKK. Likewise, if the statue is of a migrant Free Soil activist and member of a Wide-Awake anti-slave catcher militia who died fighting against the Confederacy, you should not pull down the statue. Spanish writers who never even went to the new world and never owned slaves, but did spend time enslaved, are right out, too.Bird on a Fire wrote: ↑Sun Jun 21, 2020 11:11 pmA useful article in Popular Mechanics on how to safely but effectively remove racist statues.
F. Rude: Napoleon wakening to gloryAllo V Psycho wrote: ↑Tue Jun 23, 2020 7:09 amI'd quite like a statue of myself, indicating that I was F. Rude too.
I had idly wondered where your user name came from.
If it is a statue of an imperialist, a colonialist, a supporter of patriarchy, bring it down. The only question is whether it should be destroyed or preserved in a museum of fascism.EACLucifer wrote: ↑Wed Jun 24, 2020 7:52 amSomewhat missing a key point - check who the statue is of before you paint on it or tear it down. For example, a statue raised by the subscription of black civil war veterans ought not be a target. Nor should a statue of the man who crushed both the Confederacy and the original incarnation of the KKK. Likewise, if the statue is of a migrant Free Soil activist and member of a Wide-Awake anti-slave catcher militia who died fighting against the Confederacy, you should not pull down the statue. Spanish writers who never even went to the new world and never owned slaves, but did spend time enslaved, are right out, too.Bird on a Fire wrote: ↑Sun Jun 21, 2020 11:11 pmA useful article in Popular Mechanics on how to safely but effectively remove racist statues.
We can start with every monument to totalitarian rulers of China - both the current fascist crop, and every emperor, going all the way back to the Shang dynasty, right?Herainestold wrote: ↑Wed Jun 24, 2020 2:06 pmIf it is a statue of an imperialist, a colonialist, a supporter of patriarchy, bring it down. The only question is whether it should be destroyed or preserved in a museum of fascism.EACLucifer wrote: ↑Wed Jun 24, 2020 7:52 amSomewhat missing a key point - check who the statue is of before you paint on it or tear it down. For example, a statue raised by the subscription of black civil war veterans ought not be a target. Nor should a statue of the man who crushed both the Confederacy and the original incarnation of the KKK. Likewise, if the statue is of a migrant Free Soil activist and member of a Wide-Awake anti-slave catcher militia who died fighting against the Confederacy, you should not pull down the statue. Spanish writers who never even went to the new world and never owned slaves, but did spend time enslaved, are right out, too.Bird on a Fire wrote: ↑Sun Jun 21, 2020 11:11 pmA useful article in Popular Mechanics on how to safely but effectively remove racist statues.
Are those real examples? I haven't read about those, have you got links?EACLucifer wrote: ↑Wed Jun 24, 2020 7:52 amSomewhat missing a key point - check who the statue is of before you paint on it or tear it down. For example, a statue raised by the subscription of black civil war veterans ought not be a target. Nor should a statue of the man who crushed both the Confederacy and the original incarnation of the KKK. Likewise, if the statue is of a migrant Free Soil activist and member of a Wide-Awake anti-slave catcher militia who died fighting against the Confederacy, you should not pull down the statue. Spanish writers who never even went to the new world and never owned slaves, but did spend time enslaved, are right out, too.Bird on a Fire wrote: ↑Sun Jun 21, 2020 11:11 pmA useful article in Popular Mechanics on how to safely but effectively remove racist statues.
That is up to the Chinese. We should deal with our own sh.t.EACLucifer wrote: ↑Wed Jun 24, 2020 3:51 pmWe can start with every monument to totalitarian rulers of China - both the current fascist crop, and every emperor, going all the way back to the Shang dynasty, right?Herainestold wrote: ↑Wed Jun 24, 2020 2:06 pmIf it is a statue of an imperialist, a colonialist, a supporter of patriarchy, bring it down. The only question is whether it should be destroyed or preserved in a museum of fascism.EACLucifer wrote: ↑Wed Jun 24, 2020 7:52 am
Somewhat missing a key point - check who the statue is of before you paint on it or tear it down. For example, a statue raised by the subscription of black civil war veterans ought not be a target. Nor should a statue of the man who crushed both the Confederacy and the original incarnation of the KKK. Likewise, if the statue is of a migrant Free Soil activist and member of a Wide-Awake anti-slave catcher militia who died fighting against the Confederacy, you should not pull down the statue. Spanish writers who never even went to the new world and never owned slaves, but did spend time enslaved, are right out, too.
Sadly yes. The Rober Gould Shaw Memorial was just graffitied, not torn down, but it depicts Colonel Shaw and members of 54th Massachussets Volunteer Infantry, one of the first African American infantry units. Shaw was killed during the storming of Fort Wagner in 1863, and fundraising for the statue was lead by veterans of the 54th. It's regarded as one of the first monuments to recognise the heroism of African American soldiers.monkey wrote: ↑Wed Jun 24, 2020 3:56 pmAre those real examples? I haven't read about those, have you got links?EACLucifer wrote: ↑Wed Jun 24, 2020 7:52 amSomewhat missing a key point - check who the statue is of before you paint on it or tear it down. For example, a statue raised by the subscription of black civil war veterans ought not be a target. Nor should a statue of the man who crushed both the Confederacy and the original incarnation of the KKK. Likewise, if the statue is of a migrant Free Soil activist and member of a Wide-Awake anti-slave catcher militia who died fighting against the Confederacy, you should not pull down the statue. Spanish writers who never even went to the new world and never owned slaves, but did spend time enslaved, are right out, too.Bird on a Fire wrote: ↑Sun Jun 21, 2020 11:11 pmA useful article in Popular Mechanics on how to safely but effectively remove racist statues.
Ta. FInding news articles now. They're not being that helpful about the reasons why they were gafitti'd/torn down, just that they were. I agree they are not good statues to be targeted.EACLucifer wrote: ↑Wed Jun 24, 2020 5:46 pmSadly yes. The Rober Gould Shaw Memorial was just graffitied, not torn down, but it depicts Colonel Shaw and members of 54th Massachussets Volunteer Infantry, one of the first African American infantry units. Shaw was killed during the storming of Fort Wagner in 1863, and fundraising for the statue was lead by veterans of the 54th. It's regarded as one of the first monuments to recognise the heroism of African American soldiers.
Ulysses Grant's statue was pulled down. He commanded the Overland Campaign that ultimately smashed the Confederacy, personally taking the surrender of Robert E Lee's army. As president, he suppressed the original incarnation of the KKK. Though his history isn't totally straightforward, anyone in doubt about his overall legacy on this should check out Frederick Douglass's opinion of him.
The Free Soil activist was Hans Christian Heg. His statue was torn down last night. He was a committed abolitionist activist, in deed as well as word, including sheltering a fugitive abolitionist and leading Wisconsin's Wide-Awakes. When the civil war broke out, he used his standing in the Norwegian immigrant community to raise a regiment of Norwegian migrants, with a few Danes and Swedes in it too. As a colonel, his service was exemplary, and he was in line for promotion to general when he died at Chickamauga, fighting against the Confederacy.
Miguel de Cervantes is most noted for writing Don Quixote. He also wrote some plays and poems, fought at Lepanto, and survived five years of slavery after he was captured by Ottoman pirates. No idea why, but his statue in San Francisco was torn down.
That should be enough detail to search for more information if you want. Also, not in the original post, but Matthias Baldwin - another noted supporter of abolition and philanthropist to the African American community - was also targeted with graffiti.
Even though it is 18 meters tall.The invisibility of Drake’s Cross in a San Francisco park may make it the most fitting monument to white supremacy in the country.