Screening Resources
MELTDOWN IN DIXIE
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MELTDOWN IN DIXIE |
MELTDOWN IN DIXIE |
Press Stills
Download All High-Resolution Press Photos |
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Websites
Whose Heritage? Public Symbols of the Confederacy
In this updated edition of a 2016 report, the SPLC identifies 114 Confederate symbols that have been removed since the Charleston attack, and 1,747 that still stand. Many of these monuments are protected by state laws in the former Confederate states.
Southern Coalition for Social Justice
SCSJ is a nonprofit organization founded by a multidisciplinary group, predominantly people of color, who believed that families and communities engaged in social justice struggles need a team of lawyers, social scientists, community organizers, and media specialists to support them in their efforts to dismantle structural racism and oppression.
Further Reading
Confederate Symbols: Relations to Federal Lands and Programs
Congress is considering the role of Confederate symbols on federal lands and in federal programs. While no comprehensive inventory of such symbols exists, numerous federal agencies administer assets or fund activities in which Confederate memorials and references to Confederate history are present.
The Orangeburg Massacre
Sons of Confederate Veterans
America’s Most Political Food (The New Yorker)
A Confederacy of Sauces (The New York Times)
Can a S.C. barbecue family rise above their father’s history of racism?
The Confederate Flag: The Use of a Symbol
A video by the Museum of Jewish Heritage - A Living Memorial to the Holocaust