Abstract

In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, monuments honouring white heroes of the Confederate States of America were erected along Monument Avenue in Richmond, Virginia. In 1995, a vociferous debate occurred in Richmond over a proposal to ‘integrate’ the Avenue, still considered to be the South’s grandest Confederate memorial site, with a statue of the late African American Richmond native, tennis star and human rights activist Arthur Ashe. While on the surface, the main issue in the debate was where to locate the Ashe statue, the underlying debate over Richmond’s symbolic landscape centred on issues of race relations, identity and power in Richmond at the end of the twentieth century.

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