The matter of memory : visual and performative witnessing of the Greensboro massacre

This report explores the role of documentary art in the constitution of collective memory in Greensboro, North Carolina, between the years 1999 and 2004. In that city on November 3, 1979, Ku Klux Klan and Nazis killed five labor organizers in broad daylight. Television news crews, on site to cover t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Pryor, Michael Scott
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Art
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-08-6380
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-ETD-UT-2012-08-63802015-09-20T17:12:25ZThe matter of memory : visual and performative witnessing of the Greensboro massacrePryor, Michael ScottArtPoliticsCollective memoryTraumaHuman rightsTruth and reconciliationPerformance studiesSouthern US historyThis report explores the role of documentary art in the constitution of collective memory in Greensboro, North Carolina, between the years 1999 and 2004. In that city on November 3, 1979, Ku Klux Klan and Nazis killed five labor organizers in broad daylight. Television news crews, on site to cover the anti-Klan march scheduled for that day, captured the killings on film. In spite of this evidence, all-white juries twice acquitted the Klan/Nazis of any wrongdoing. In the weeks and months that followed the massacre, city officials and mainstream media sought to disassociate Greensboro from the event, generating a master narrative that portrayed both the Klan/Nazis and labor organizers as outsiders, and the city as an innocent bystander. This narrative covered up the fact that the Greensboro police had extensive prior knowledge about the potential for violence, and yet were mysteriously absent when the Klan/Nazis arrived on the scene. In a third trial—a civil suit brought against the city by survivors of the shooting—Klan and police were found jointly liable for wrongful death. Twenty-five years later, the massacre and its aftermath served as the impetus for the first Truth and Reconciliation Commission in the United States. In the years leading up to the Commission, six artists—including the author—made or presented artwork in Greensboro about the killings. Importantly, none of the artists were from Greensboro or had any direct connection to the massacre. However, through their creative processes and final artworks, they made an implicit claim about the political relevance of remembering and engaging with the full history of November 3, 1979. Collectively, the art spanned a variety of mediums, including theater, paintings, music, and dance. Through interviews with the artists, archival research, and qualitative analysis, this report argues that the artists helped to generate the potential for an expanded, poly-vocal collective memory of the massacre. They did this through practices of citation and translation—converting the archive of factual history into aesthetic and material forms—that made the events of November 3, 1979 available to community members for encounter and interpretation in the present.text2012-11-26T18:52:11Z2012-11-26T18:52:11Z2012-082012-11-26August 20122012-11-26T18:52:23Zthesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-08-63802152/ETD-UT-2012-08-6380eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Art
Politics
Collective memory
Trauma
Human rights
Truth and reconciliation
Performance studies
Southern US history
spellingShingle Art
Politics
Collective memory
Trauma
Human rights
Truth and reconciliation
Performance studies
Southern US history
Pryor, Michael Scott
The matter of memory : visual and performative witnessing of the Greensboro massacre
description This report explores the role of documentary art in the constitution of collective memory in Greensboro, North Carolina, between the years 1999 and 2004. In that city on November 3, 1979, Ku Klux Klan and Nazis killed five labor organizers in broad daylight. Television news crews, on site to cover the anti-Klan march scheduled for that day, captured the killings on film. In spite of this evidence, all-white juries twice acquitted the Klan/Nazis of any wrongdoing. In the weeks and months that followed the massacre, city officials and mainstream media sought to disassociate Greensboro from the event, generating a master narrative that portrayed both the Klan/Nazis and labor organizers as outsiders, and the city as an innocent bystander. This narrative covered up the fact that the Greensboro police had extensive prior knowledge about the potential for violence, and yet were mysteriously absent when the Klan/Nazis arrived on the scene. In a third trial—a civil suit brought against the city by survivors of the shooting—Klan and police were found jointly liable for wrongful death. Twenty-five years later, the massacre and its aftermath served as the impetus for the first Truth and Reconciliation Commission in the United States. In the years leading up to the Commission, six artists—including the author—made or presented artwork in Greensboro about the killings. Importantly, none of the artists were from Greensboro or had any direct connection to the massacre. However, through their creative processes and final artworks, they made an implicit claim about the political relevance of remembering and engaging with the full history of November 3, 1979. Collectively, the art spanned a variety of mediums, including theater, paintings, music, and dance. Through interviews with the artists, archival research, and qualitative analysis, this report argues that the artists helped to generate the potential for an expanded, poly-vocal collective memory of the massacre. They did this through practices of citation and translation—converting the archive of factual history into aesthetic and material forms—that made the events of November 3, 1979 available to community members for encounter and interpretation in the present. === text
author Pryor, Michael Scott
author_facet Pryor, Michael Scott
author_sort Pryor, Michael Scott
title The matter of memory : visual and performative witnessing of the Greensboro massacre
title_short The matter of memory : visual and performative witnessing of the Greensboro massacre
title_full The matter of memory : visual and performative witnessing of the Greensboro massacre
title_fullStr The matter of memory : visual and performative witnessing of the Greensboro massacre
title_full_unstemmed The matter of memory : visual and performative witnessing of the Greensboro massacre
title_sort matter of memory : visual and performative witnessing of the greensboro massacre
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-08-6380
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