Politics and Memory: Civil War Monuments in Gilded Age New York

Image
-

American Antiquarian Society
185 Salisbury Street
Worcester, MA 01609
United States

Join us virtually, or in person, to hear Akela Reason discuss her new book, Politics and Memory: Civil War Monuments in Gilded Age New York, a rich history of Gilded Age partisan politics, aesthetics, and the creation of New York City’s Civil War monuments.
 
In the decades following the Civil War, New York City built more monuments to the Union cause than any other city in the nation outside of Washington, DC. Ranging from simple standing soldiers to grand triumphal arches and temples, these monuments shaped commemorative aesthetics and iconography at the local and national levels. Unlike Confederate monuments, which were mostly initiated by private organizations, New York’s soldiers’ monuments were largely supported through city and state funding. These civic projects attracted the interest of competing groups--artists, politicians, veterans, and the public--who all sought to influence the growing commemorative landscape. Works such as the Brooklyn Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Monument outside Prospect Park and the New York Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Monument in Riverside Park were created in a fractious political landscape and defined as much by municipal maneuvering as by artistic principle.
 
Illuminating the historical context of Civil War soldiers’ monuments in New York City, Reason explores the complex and fascinating intersection of art, politics, and memory within these works, while also highlighting the ever-changing ways different constituencies have engaged with them in symbolic and physical terms.

Author

Akela Reason is an Associate Professor of History at the University of Georgia and director of the Interdisciplinary Certificate in Museum Studies. A scholar of American visual and material culture, she teaches courses in material culture, urban history, and museum studies. Her first book, Thomas Eakins and the Uses of History, won the 2011 Southeastern College Art Conference Award for Excellence in Scholarly Research and Publication. She has also published articles and essays on American art and visual culture of the late nineteenth century.