Thinking outside the (wooden) box: A rhetorical analysis of the ethical complexity of the Uncle Jack statue
by Klobucar, Gretchen Victoria, M.A., THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHAPEL HILL, 2011, 46 pages; 1496618

Abstract:

The life-sized bronze statue variously known as “Uncle Jack” or the “Good Darky” has been subject to protests and numerous relocations. Currently located in Baton Rouge, Louisiana at the Louisiana State University Rural Life Museum, the statue continues to be a source of controversy as an artifact with shifting “use” and “value” over the last 84 years. Based on the statue's sculptured body, the wooden box covering the original inscription, and the interpretive placard, I argue that the ethical complexity of past racial relations and the racial anxiety the statue continues to provoke are framed by the museum either as problems of the past or as problems deferred indefinitely to the future. This critical analysis assesses the rhetorical and ethical consequences of the statue and the way the museum has framed it, and demonstrates why prescriptions to destroy the statue are ill-considered.

 
AdviserCarole Blair
SchoolTHE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHAPEL HILL
SourceMAI/ 50-01, p. , Aug 2011
Source TypeThesis
SubjectsAmerican studies; Ethnic studies; Rhetoric; Museum studies
Publication Number1496618
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