Ivan Gaskell will give a Work-in-Progress talk on Monday,
October 22, at 12:15 pm. His talk is entitled “For the Union Dead: Harvard’s
Memorial Hall and the Exclusion of the Confederate Fallen.” The war fought in North America between 1861 and 1865 remains one of the
most contentious conflicts in American history. Even allocating it a name
is a matter of dispute. One hundred and sixty two members and alumni of
Harvard University fell in the Union cause. A large building, incorporating
not only works of art commemorating individuals but also marble plaques
bearing the names of the fallen, was constructed in the Victorian gothic style
to the north of Harvard Yard. It was formally given to Harvard in 1879.
However, the 68 Harvard men who gave their lives for the Confederacy are
not included. This omission has been the cause of heated debate at various
times in the subsequent history of the university, notably during the
extensive renovation campaign completed in 1996. This paper, intended for
the volume, Philosophical Perspectives on Ruins, Monuments, and
Memorials: Artifact and Memory, edited by Jeanette Bicknell, Jennifer
Judkins, and Carolyn Korsmeyer (Routledge), examines some of the ethical
implications of the decisions made in relation to this case.
Ivan Gaskell is Professor and Curator and Head of the
Focus Gallery Project at Bard Graduate Center. His work on material culture
addresses intersections among history, art history, anthropology, and
philosophy.
|