Abstract

AbstractThis article investigates how slavery tours on the former estates of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and James Madison negotiate memories of the presidents as historically revered figures and prominent slaveholders. I argue that these tours recirculate benevolent memories of the presidents that work to sanitize the sites’ slave history and venerate the founders’ legacy. My analysis demonstrates that these tours do not just work to recirculate artifacts and narratives that speak to the presidents’ lives, but they revive a republican culture of remembrance from the nineteenth century through which to justify presidential actions and beliefs. In short, I suggest that this rhetorical negotiation helps craft new narratives of historical U.S. slavery and the early presidents’ lives that appear both more credible and less disturbing.

Journal
Rhetoric & Public Affairs
Published
2019-12-01
DOI
10.14321/rhetpublaffa.22.4.0495
Open Access
Closed

Citation Context

Cited by in this index (0)

No articles in this index cite this work.

Cites in this index (5)

  1. Rhetoric & Public Affairs
  2. Rhetoric & Public Affairs
  3. Rhetoric & Public Affairs
  4. Rhetoric & Public Affairs
  5. Rhetoric Society Quarterly
Also cites 23 works outside this index ↓
  1. 2. Amy M. Tyson and Azie Mira Dungey, “‘Ask a Slave’ and Interpreting Race on Public History’s Front Line: In…
  2. 5. Edmund S. Morgan, “Slavery and Freedom: The American Paradox,” Journal of American History 59 (1972): 5–29.
  3. 6. Christine N. Buzinde and Carla Almeida Santos note a growing awareness among the general public regarding …
  4. 8. Shawn J. Parry-Giles and Trevor Parry-Giles, “Collective Memory, Political Nostalgia, and the Rhetorical P…
  5. 10. Lester C. Olson, “Pictorial Representations of British America Resisting Rape: Rhetorical Re-Circulation …
  6. 12. Barry Schwartz, "The Social Context of Commemoration: A Study in Collective Memory," Social Forces 61 (19…
  7. Geoff Eley, "The Past Under Erasure? History, Memory, and the Contemporary," Journal of Contemporary History …
  8. and Paul A. Shackel, "Public Memory and the Search for Power in American Historical Archaeology," American An…
  9. 14. Bradford Vivian, Being Made Strange: Rhetoric Beyond Representation (Albany: SUNY Press, 2004), 153.
  10. Diana C. Crader, "Slave Diet at Monticello," American Antiquity 55 (1990): 690-717
  11. Dennis J. Pogue, "The Domestic Architecture of Slavery at George Washington's Mount Vernon," Winterthur Portf…
  12. Patricia Samford, "The Archaeology of African-American Slavery and Material Culture," William and Mary Quarte…
  13. 19. Steven Hoelscher, “The White-Pillared Past: Landscapes of Memory and Race in the American South,” in Land…
  14. 22. Derek H. Alderman and Rachel M. Campbell, “Symbolic Excavation and the Artifact Politics of Remembering S…
  15. 27. William Livingston, “Of Patriotism,” in The Independent Reflector Or, Weekly Essays on Sundry Important S…
  16. 55. Jefferson’s inaugural address also exemplified his commitment to republican virtues and “strength of char…
  17. 71. Cornelius Holtorf, Archaeology Is a Brand! The Meaning of Archaeology in Contemporary Popular Culture (Ox…
  18. 76. One study recently documented ways that tour guides on plantations provide more emotionally evocative acc…
  19. 82. Wayne Martin Mellinger, “Representing Blackness in the White Imagination: Images of’Happy Darkeys’ in Pop…
  20. 95. Jeremy Engels, “The Two Faces of Cincinnatus: A Rhetorical Theory of the State of Exception,” Advances in…
  21. 96. Allison M. Prasch, “Toward a Rhetorical Theory of Deixis,” Quarterly Journal of Speech 102 (2016): 171–72.
  22. 113. William Palmer, “How Ideology Works: Historians and the Case of British Abolitionism,” Historical Journa…
  23. 119. Martell Teasley and David Ikard, “Barack Obama and the Politics of Race: The Myth of Postracism in Ameri…
CrossRef global citation count: 1 View in citation network →