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Journal of Black Studies
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Article

Place Politics: Material Transformation and Community Identity at the National Civil Rights Museum

Bernard J. Armada*

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: bjarmada{at}stthomas.edu.


   Abstract
In 1991, the Lorraine Motel—infamous site of Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination—reopened to the public under a refurbished name and identity: the National Civil Rights Museum (NCRM). This essay traces the motel’s transformation into the museum and argues that the physical conversion parallels three related changes that yield a degree of psychological refurbishment for various communities at the historical, economic, and cultural levels. By emphasizing the historical and cultural significance of the Lorraine Motel’s balcony, African American citizens were instrumental not only in preserving a site of tragedy but also in rebuilding, reframing, and renaming it as a more productive place of remembrance and collective identification. As a place of societal redemption, the NCRM represents a symbolic cleansing of King’s assassination site—a historical, economic, and cultural metamorphosis enacted through material transformation from vernacular to official culture.

First published on July 31, 2008
Journal of Black Studies 2008, doi:10.1177/0021934708321848


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