Sunday Edition June 21, 2020 Sunday Edition, Juneteenth: βπΏFrom Images of Liberation to Remembrancesπ· I didnβt grow up in the United States so there are aspects to this country that continue to fascinate me, particularly regional differences that reflect local cultural histories. Iβd never heard of Juneteenth until I arrived in New York over 20 years ago, and from the first time I heard it mentioned I was curious to learn more about a celebration that started in Texas and marked the liberation of the last enslaved populations in the US. In the last few years, calls to commemorate the day have grown louder, and last week four US Senators proposed a bill to make the day a federal holiday. Juneteenth is already recognized by 47 states as a state holiday or observance, but itβs curious how little Americans know about the day itself. With the added attention, new research is helping to unearth previously unknown facts about an event that was celebrated by Black Americans largely outside of the white-dominated mainstream for over 150 years. One of the curious realities we encountered when preparing this issue is that 1865, when Juneteenth began, may mark the end of chattel slavery in this country, but it also was the year, as Jasmine Weber illuminates in her article, when the Ku Klux Klan was founded, demonstrating that white Americans have long been Janus-faced in their attitudes towards Black people. I hope this issue, which we began earlier this year before the new wave of attention around the holiday arrived, will reveal some of the complicated and powerful stories that orbit Juneteenth. I hope it is also a reminder that liberation has never been a destination, as scholar Leigh Raiford reminds us in a long conversation on photographs of liberation, but a movement that is always in motion. This weekβs edition includes: A conversation with scholar Leigh Raiford about the absence of large photograph archives for Juneteenth and what it tells us about photographyβs role in documenting the liberation struggle. Scholar Cherise Smith writing about her own familyβs relationship to Blackness and how digital spaces are starting to manifest new troubling forms of digital blackface. Artist Deborah Roberts reflecting on her own family Juneteenth celebrations writes, βI learned to love Juneteenth long before I became aware of the emancipation of enslaved Black people.β Curator Lise Ragbir examining the breadth of art by Black artists in Texas and their relationship to the stateβs complicated history. Jasmine Weber looking at a powerful, and now destroyed, Mexican mural by American artist John Wilson about the rise of the KKK and their regime of terror against Black Americans. TriniGambianAmerican poet Rosamond S. King offering us poems on the theme of liberation.I hope you enjoy this edition of Hyperallergic Sunday, which has been co-edited with Seph Rodney, and use it as an opportunity to learn more about a celebration of the end of one of the most grotesque institutions in US history and a reminder that really none of us can be free unless all of us are free. The relationship between Black liberation and photography reveals many things about our notions of freedom and the limitations of image making as a form of common truth. Hrag Vartanian As Juneteenth approaches, Iβve been given reason to consider a confluence of events and ideas: my familyβs life-long process of becoming Black and having to police my sonsβ consumption of a certain kind of blackface. Cherise Smith I learned to love Juneteenth long before I became aware of the emancipation of enslaved Black people. I think my father was his happiest on that day; he permitted himself to do whatever he wanted on Freedom Day. Deborah Roberts For better or worse, words like βproud,β βunapologetic,β and βresilientβ have come to define Texans, and these words and this attitude also define a spectrum of Black artists who are from, or have lived in, Texas. Lise Ragbir John Wilsonβs 1952 mural βThe Incident,β is a salient meditation on the horrors of lynching and though physically lost, the mural endures in archival images, preliminary sketches, and studies. Jasmine Weber Rosamond S. King, a Brooklyn-based poet, is a TriniGambianAmerican, has been publishing poetry since 1994, and won a Lamda Literary Award in 2018. Rosamond King Your membership supports Hyperallergic's independent journalism and our extensive network of writers around the world. Become a Member Forward this newsletter to a friend! If this email was forwarded to you, click here to subscribe Hyperallergic, 181 N11th St, Ste 302, Brooklyn, NY 11211 This email was sent to [email protected]. Manage your preferences to subscribe to our daily or weekly newsletters. Forward Preferences | Unsubscribe |