This article draws on the author’s 2009 tour of South Carolina’s Magnolia Plantation as a primary text to examine how nostalgia for the 19th-century plantation and the Lost Cause Confederacy continues to limit entangled understandings of the past. Plantation tourism reveals how participants negotiate the layers of the past and the present—bringing in new and tense forms of engagement with a dismissal of the past (and present), of consuming it, and of rewriting one’s heritage. These tours’ audience ranges from those haunted by the past to those who want to celebrate the ubiquitous idea of “the gallant South.” The erasure and containment of the site’s horror indicate how tour operators profit from redeployments of the South. The plantation’s ...
Research has shown how little tour guides in the American South talk about slavery and the enslaved ...
As more plantation museums across the US work to incorporate slavery into their historic interpretat...
“Dark Tourism and the Sorrel-Weed House: How the Representation of America’s Antebellum South Is St...
During the 20th century, wealthy Northern families purchased hundreds of Antebellum plantation estat...
The article presents an analysis of the operations of the Whitney Plantation Museum, which opened in...
Plantation house museums have come under increased scrutiny for obscuring or excluding altogether hi...
Heritage tourism plays an increasingly important yet controversial role in interpreting the emotiona...
Plantations are one of the long-standing symbols of the U.S. South. Today, almost four hundred forme...
This dissertation contextualizes southern narrative critiques of plantation house preservation throu...
Haunted History and Public Memory Paranormal investigation shows like Ghost Hunters are nearly a dim...
William Faulkner’s well-known statement: “The past is never dead. It’s not even past” captures an id...
Recent representations of slavery, however well intentioned, have provoked discussions about who sho...
In recent years, plantation tourism has become a prominent concern for many researchers, with studie...
In the wake of Dylann Roof’s murders at a Charleston church and another death during the violence at...
This article begins with a brief explanation of personal experiences on plantation tours. It follows...
Research has shown how little tour guides in the American South talk about slavery and the enslaved ...
As more plantation museums across the US work to incorporate slavery into their historic interpretat...
“Dark Tourism and the Sorrel-Weed House: How the Representation of America’s Antebellum South Is St...
During the 20th century, wealthy Northern families purchased hundreds of Antebellum plantation estat...
The article presents an analysis of the operations of the Whitney Plantation Museum, which opened in...
Plantation house museums have come under increased scrutiny for obscuring or excluding altogether hi...
Heritage tourism plays an increasingly important yet controversial role in interpreting the emotiona...
Plantations are one of the long-standing symbols of the U.S. South. Today, almost four hundred forme...
This dissertation contextualizes southern narrative critiques of plantation house preservation throu...
Haunted History and Public Memory Paranormal investigation shows like Ghost Hunters are nearly a dim...
William Faulkner’s well-known statement: “The past is never dead. It’s not even past” captures an id...
Recent representations of slavery, however well intentioned, have provoked discussions about who sho...
In recent years, plantation tourism has become a prominent concern for many researchers, with studie...
In the wake of Dylann Roof’s murders at a Charleston church and another death during the violence at...
This article begins with a brief explanation of personal experiences on plantation tours. It follows...
Research has shown how little tour guides in the American South talk about slavery and the enslaved ...
As more plantation museums across the US work to incorporate slavery into their historic interpretat...
“Dark Tourism and the Sorrel-Weed House: How the Representation of America’s Antebellum South Is St...