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Over Race and Place in Charlottesville
Listen to a Study Center tour of Charlottesville's history of race and racism interpreted through the streets, buildings, monuments, and spaces of Charlottesville’s university and downtown communities.Led by Study Center Board Chair and Professor of Architectural History, Louis Nelson, the series features interviews with local experts, public historians, and residents. The series is motivated by Jesus' command to love our neighbors.This podcast is a production of the Center for Christian Study in Charlottesville, VA.
Calling the Church
Still sitting in the Study Center library, Professor Nelson and Dayna Matthew's conversation moves from discussing the current state of racial inequity in Charlottesville to examining what the church can do next. "Instead of just giving ear to the problem, the church can roll up its sleeves and give love to the problem." - Dayna Matthew. Support the show [http://studycenter.net/support-study-center] (http://studycenter.net/support-study-center)
Where Are We Today?
At the end of his walking tour, Professor Nelson sits down with Dayna Mathew, William L. Matheson and Robert M. Morgenthau Distinguished Professor of Law at UVA, to discuss Charlottesville's current landscape of racial inequity. The episode ends with a set of statistics of where we are today. Support the show [http://studycenter.net/support-study-center] (http://studycenter.net/support-study-center)
Three Histories of the KKK
Professor Nelson expounds on three historical iterations of the Ku Klux Klan's presence in Charlottesville—including the August 11 and 12 rallies in 2017—and the impact the white supremacist group has had on the city's minority communities, including its African-American and Jewish citizens. Support the show [http://studycenter.net/support-study-center] (http://studycenter.net/support-study-center)
Acting Out the Lost Cause
Standing in front of the Downtown Mall's Jefferson Theater, Professor Nelson explores the ways in which the white citizens of Charlottesville looked back with great fondness on the way of life of the antebellum South—slavery included—through social gatherings, re-enactments, and minstrelsy shows. Support the show [http://studycenter.net/support-study-center] (http://studycenter.net/support-study-center)
Vinegar Hill: Enfranchisement of Place
Professor Nelson continues to meditate on the history surrounding Charlottesville's Vinegar Hill neighborhood. As he stands in the parking lot that has come to replace the black-owned and -occupied homes and businesses, he expounds on the disenfranchising impact that loss of place has had on the city's black communities. Support the show [http://studycenter.net/support-study-center] (http://studycenter.net/support-study-center)
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