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Tropes of a Texan trauma: monumental Dallas after John F. Kennedy
Authors:Hanneke Ronnes  Anna Meijer van Putten
Institution:1. Department of European Cultural History , University of Amsterdam , Amsterdam, The Netherlands h.ronnes@uva.nl;3. Department of European Cultural History , University of Amsterdam , Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Abstract:Dealey Plaza in central Dallas serves both as a ‘cradle’ and a ‘grave’; at this historic site Dallas was born and an American president died. The assassination of President Kennedy on 22 November 1963 changed Dealey Plaza, the site where the first citizen of Dallas settled in 1841, from a symbol of civic pride into a place of guilt and shame. After the events of 1963, the Dallas community voiced a wish to forget and hence, the exact location where Kennedy was murdered was initially remembered by neither monument nor plaque. At the same time, America grieved and from all over the country US citizens started to visit the assassination site. Dealey Plaza became a place of pilgrimage, which caused a change in the monumental landscape and eventually transformed civic guilt into civic pride. This article offers an analysis of the responses to this Texan trauma in terms of commemorative heritage and describes Dallas’ shift from ‘amnesia’ to ‘identification’, two contrary responses to traumatic, or mourning, heritage.
Keywords:John F  Kennedy  Dallas  mourning heritage  memory culture  identity  dissonant heritage
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