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Monumental

Monumental

The landscape of public memory is shifting. As we re-examine the plaques in our parks and sculptures on our streets, we grapple with what to do with them. Once we learn the stories these objects tell about who we are, will tearing down statues and renaming schools be enough?

Monumental interrogates the state of monuments across the country and what their future says about our own. In this 10-episode series, host and author Ashley C Ford and a team of audio journalists from around the country will piece together the complex stories behind some of the thousands of monuments that exist in every corner of the U.S. Listen to Monumental weekly on Mondays beginning October 30, 2023.

For more information about Monumental, visit our website at www.prx.org/monumental

PRX

The landscape of public memory is shifting. As we re-examine the plaques in our parks and sculptures on our streets, we grapple with what to do with them. Once we learn the stories these objects tell about who we are, will tearing down statues and renaming schools be enough?

Monumental interrogates the state of monuments across the country and what their future says about our own. In this 10-episode series, host and author Ashley C Ford and a team of audio journalists from around the country will piece together the complex stories behind some of the thousands of monuments that exist in every corner of the U.S. Listen to Monumental weekly on Mondays beginning October 30, 2023.

For more information about Monumental, visit our website at www.prx.org/monumental

PRX
9hr 43min
Thumbnail for "Introducing: Monumental".
Monumental interrogates the state of monuments across the country and what their future says about our own.
Thumbnail for "Staring Down Stone Mountain".
Stone Mountain and Xernona Clayton
Thumbnail for "Introducing: The Hustle".
A podcast from Feet In Two Worlds
Thumbnail for "Introducing: Modern West".
A podcast from Wyoming Public Media
Thumbnail for "Bringing Monuments Home".
Monuments of the Future
Thumbnail for "Hell Valley, Hawai‘i, USA".
Pearl Harbor National Monument and Honouliuli National Historic Site
Thumbnail for "In NYC, A Tale of Two Monuments".
Federal Hall and the African Burial Ground in NYC
Thumbnail for "The Suffragist in the Basement".
Esther Hobart Morris statue
Thumbnail for "Whispers in Wilmington".
Wilmington 1898 Monument and Memorial Park
Thumbnail for "Boston’s Tribute to Chinatown’s Everyday Heroes".
Immigrant Workers Get Their Due
Thumbnail for "Monumental Conflict in Santa Fe".
Santa Fe Soldier's Monument, Bosque Redondo Memorial at Ft. Sumner Historic Site
Thumbnail for "The Cult of Columbus".
Birth of the New World and the Mabuhay mural
Thumbnail for "Are Monuments Set in Stone?".
George Floyd Square and The Emancipation Group

Staring Down Stone Mountain

Thumbnail for "Staring Down Stone Mountain".
February 19, 202453min 11sec

Stone Mountain Park is Georgia's most popular attraction, and its centerpiece is a massive rock carving that depicts three Confederate leaders who fought a Civil War over the right to own slaves and lost. It’s the largest Confederate monument in the entire world. The mere presence, let alone the popularity of Stone Mountain raises this question: If people can be oblivious or indifferent to something as big as that carving, then what about the rest of the nation that lives not only with monuments but with streets, bridges, buildings and schools named for the Confederacy? Confederate monuments have started coming down, but the struggle around what to do with Stone Mountain speaks to how difficult it can be to truly see and confront the stories being told all around us and tell the ones we need to hear.

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Staring Down Stone Mountain
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53:11