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Gruesome Looking Objects

Gruesome Looking Objects

Gruesome Looking Objects

A New History of Lynching and Everyday Things
Elijah Gaddis, Auburn University, Alabama
November 2022
Available
Hardback
9781316514023
$32.00
USD
Hardback
USD
eBook

    The 1898 lynching of Tom Johnson and Joe Kizer is retold in this groundbreaking book. Unlike other histories of lynching that rely on conventional historical records, this study focuses on the objects associated with the lynching, including newspaper articles, fragments of the victims' clothing, photographs, and souvenirs such as sticks from the hanging tree. This material culture approach uncovers how people tried to integrate the meaning of the lynching into their everyday lives through objects. These seemingly ordinary items are repositories for the comprehension, interpretation, and commemoration of racial violence and white supremacy. Elijah Gaddis showcases an approach to objects as materials of history and memory, insisting that we live in a world suffused with the material traces of racial violence, past and present.

    • Examines the history of racial violence through ordinary objects
    • Deepens our understanding of the embedded memory of lynching
    • Suggests ways this material culture approach could illuminate local and national histories

    Reviews & endorsements

    ‘Elijah Gaddis has written an incisive, probing history of the materiality of racial violence and its historical residue. In creatively reconstructing a double lynching in North Carolina, he has persuasively demonstrated how objects and things, if interrogated and contextualized thoroughly enough, can allow us to read more deeply into the freighted meanings of such tragedies.’ Claude A. Clegg III, author of Troubled Ground: A Tale of Murder, Lynching, and Reckoning in the New South

    ‘There are hundreds of lynching stories yet to be told, and all deserve to be told with care and creativity. In a crowded scholarly field, Elijah Gaddis has offered a singular contribution through his examination of artifacts associated with a double lynching that occurred at the height of North Carolina’s white supremacy campaign. Gaddis demonstrates, like none before him, how lynchers leave their mark on history, memory, and the everyday things left behind. A remarkable achievement.’ Jason Morgan Ward, author of Hanging Bridge: Racial Violence and America's Civil Rights Century

    ‘Gruesome Looking Objects offers a rich analysis of the material culture surrounding racist violence. Through a case study of one lynching, Gaddis deftly demonstrates how the ordinary objects used in and generated from a lynching served to normalize atrocity and embed it in everyday life. This is an innovative and smart book.’ Amy Louise Wood, author of Lynching and Spectacle: Witnessing Racial Violence in America, 1890-1940

    ‘The book is versatile and strongly written, and individual chapters can stand alone as scholarly works as needed. I highly recommend this book to anymore interested in the normalization of white supremacy thorugh objects in the Jim Crow South as well as to historians interested in material culture studies.’ V. Camille Westmont, Journal of Southern History

    ‘Gaddis has provided an in-depth exploration of aspects of white American culture surrounding lynching that perpetuated the growth of white supremacist ideology. The book is well worth a read.’ Karen McIlvoy, H-Net Reviews

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    Product details

    November 2022
    Adobe eBook Reader
    9781009085038
    0 pages
    This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.

    Table of Contents

    • Preface
    • Introduction: Fragments
    • 1. The Article
    • 2. The Letter
    • 3. The Clothes
    • 4. The Tree
    • 5. The Hammer and Chisel
    • 6. The Song
    • Conclusion: Archival Remains.
      Author
    • Elijah Gaddis , Auburn University, Alabama

      Elijah Gaddis is Assistant Professor of History at Auburn University, and the co-director of A Red Record, a comprehensive mapping of lynching victims in the American South.