• Just_Pizza_Crust@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Museums don’t store this sort of thing though. Since it’s not from the civil war, it’s not sensible to store and exhibit such a thing. Imagine if people started telling the Louvé to display paintings inspired by the Mona Lisa, because it’s basically the Mona Lisa. Museum curators would have no reason to do so, despite what the public thinks.

    Edit: Also the statue is a piece of propaganda rather than actual history. There’s honestly not much to say about the statue itself. The bulk of what could be said is about Lee, and actual historic pieces of his life do exist in museums. Displacing those real historic exhibits in exchange for this statue would be a shame.

    • homura1650@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Propoganda + Time = history.

      The statue doesn’t say much about the civil war. But it does say alot about the Jim Crow era in which it was built. Personally I think this is even more important because the Jim Crow era is far less well understood by most Americans, and far more relevant to the race issues we see today.

    • TechyDad@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Exactly this. Plus, unfortunately, there are plenty of Confederate monuments and statues erected way after the Civil War whose sole purpose was “scare those black people into knowing their place.” Some of those can find new homes in museums displaying the history of racism (with added context), but we can’t preserve all of them. So melt the rest down and reuse them in ways that uplift people instead of oppressing them.

    • steltek@lemm.ee
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      8 months ago

      It’s absolutely history but just not Civil War history. This is the Charlottesville statue and it’s iconic of our contemporary far right nationalist problem. Imagine things like this being a part of an exhibit laying out the turmoil our country is going through.

      Edit: A lot of key pieces of history are missing because people didn’t look to the future. I think some of it should have been carefully stored in a basement somewhere. Out of sight for at least 20 years.