ABSTRACT

This book addresses the interconnected issues of public memory, race, and heritage tourism, exploring the ways in which historical tourism shapes collective understandings of America’s earliest engagements with race.

It includes contributions from a diverse group of humanities scholars, including early Americanists, and scholars from communication, English, museum studies, historic preservation, art and architecture, Native American studies, and history. Through eight chapters, the collection offers varied perspectives and original analyses of memory-making and re-making through travel to early American sites, bringing needed attention to the considerable role that tourism plays in producing—and possibly unsettling—racialized memories about America’s past. The book is an interdisciplinary effort that analyses lesser-known sites of historical and racial significance throughout North America and the Caribbean (up to about 1830) to unpack the relationship between leisure travel, processes of collective remembering or forgetting, and the connections of tourist sites to colonialism, slavery, genocide, and oppression.

Public Memory, Race, and Heritage Tourism of Early America provides a deconstruction of the touristic experience with racism, slavery, and the Indigenous experience in America that will appeal to students and academics in the social sciences and humanities.

chapter |17 pages

New directions for research

Bringing together public memory, early America, and tourism studies

chapter 1|17 pages

Revisiting the Gateway to Bondage

A comparative study of the landscape preservation and touristic interpretation at Sullivan's Island with Ellis and Angel islands

chapter 2|17 pages

Remembrance and mourning in the Native mid-South

Florence Indian Mound Museum's past, present, and future

chapter 3|16 pages

Remembering and forgetting plantation history in Jamaica

Rose Hall and Greenwood Great House 1

chapter 5|18 pages

Slavery in the Big Easy

Digital interventions in the tourist landscape of New Orleans

chapter 6|17 pages

Don't mess with (Anglo) Texas

Dominant cultural values in heritage sites of the Texas Revolution

chapter 8|17 pages

Rendezvous with history

Grand Portage National Monument and Minnesota's North Shore

chapter |6 pages

Afterword

Memory and heritage in the “era of just redemption”