During 1880-1968 over 4,000 African Americans were lynched at the hands of white mobs. These lynchings were commemorated through souvenir postcards that would ultimately be subverted by Blac... Read allDuring 1880-1968 over 4,000 African Americans were lynched at the hands of white mobs. These lynchings were commemorated through souvenir postcards that would ultimately be subverted by Black activists to expose racist violence in the U.S.During 1880-1968 over 4,000 African Americans were lynched at the hands of white mobs. These lynchings were commemorated through souvenir postcards that would ultimately be subverted by Black activists to expose racist violence in the U.S.
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Images of Holocaust atrocities by the Nazis are etched in our brains as a reminder of how hateful and monstrous humans can be. I believe that "Lynching Postcards: 'Token of A Great Day" serves as a necessary reminder of barbarous American history and the vile acts committed in the subjugation of Black Americans.
There are stories, movies, books, etc. That recount the horrors of the holocaust. The German nation has issued apologies and are the self-proclaimed fortification from this ever to happen again. Many in the U. S. are heavy subscribers to media about this history and feel good that we were on the "right side" of history.
However, the general population in "Lynching Postcards: 'Token of A Great Day" appear to be typical people from a Norman Rockwell work of art - sans the Dante's Inferno victims. Any one of the smiling children can easily be found in any elementary school throughout America. The mobs and spectators pictured in the post cards are too close to who Americans still are.
Until our country faces, acknowledges, and apologizes for it's past atrocities, we'll continue to bleed every time the scab is picked and the wound will never heal.
There are stories, movies, books, etc. That recount the horrors of the holocaust. The German nation has issued apologies and are the self-proclaimed fortification from this ever to happen again. Many in the U. S. are heavy subscribers to media about this history and feel good that we were on the "right side" of history.
However, the general population in "Lynching Postcards: 'Token of A Great Day" appear to be typical people from a Norman Rockwell work of art - sans the Dante's Inferno victims. Any one of the smiling children can easily be found in any elementary school throughout America. The mobs and spectators pictured in the post cards are too close to who Americans still are.
Until our country faces, acknowledges, and apologizes for it's past atrocities, we'll continue to bleed every time the scab is picked and the wound will never heal.
They would have you believe people hunted down blacks to kill in public spectacles. But a little research showed discrepancies with this story.
Not every victim was black. Also, how many of these were public executions of criminals and not lynchings at all? Yep, they still did those back then.
For instance: Rainey Bethea, executed August 14, 1936 at Owensboro, Kentucky, was the last public execution in America. He was publicly hanged for rape on August 14, 1936 in a parking lot in Owensboro, Kentucky (to avoid damage to the courthouse lawn by thousands of people who were expected to attend).
But this "documentary" would have you believe it was all about racism. Lynching was a bad thing. I do believe some were lynched. It shouldn't have happened, and I'm glad it was stopped. Death sentences are for courts to decide, not angry mobs. Racism is also bad, but constantly picking at the scab is only going to make it fester.
That's exactly what this drama does, it picks out only what it thinks can be used to promote a story of racism. No real context provided for the photos, just a narration about lynchings being all about racism against blacks. Smh.
Not every victim was black. Also, how many of these were public executions of criminals and not lynchings at all? Yep, they still did those back then.
For instance: Rainey Bethea, executed August 14, 1936 at Owensboro, Kentucky, was the last public execution in America. He was publicly hanged for rape on August 14, 1936 in a parking lot in Owensboro, Kentucky (to avoid damage to the courthouse lawn by thousands of people who were expected to attend).
But this "documentary" would have you believe it was all about racism. Lynching was a bad thing. I do believe some were lynched. It shouldn't have happened, and I'm glad it was stopped. Death sentences are for courts to decide, not angry mobs. Racism is also bad, but constantly picking at the scab is only going to make it fester.
That's exactly what this drama does, it picks out only what it thinks can be used to promote a story of racism. No real context provided for the photos, just a narration about lynchings being all about racism against blacks. Smh.
This is a rotation of 3 appointed taking heads and images, not all of which are postcards. The mixture of represented fact and opinion about the images as a style has become a norm in 'documentary' making but I find it unsatisfactory; it will however prompt me to look for objective sources of fact as to the background for some of the images and compare that to the generic and specific claims made by the talking heads. Horrific subject matter and thought provoking.
Brief but powerful. The postcards, as well as the Gildersleeve photos and other images, make clear that white people of the time felt justified, if not jubilant, in the lynching of black people.
This short documentary was sad but mad me angry. Things like this needs to be seen and talked about. It should not be erased because this was part of our history. I believe that we live in a time that if people don't like something they try to get rid of it. They use the law and the Supreme Court to erase it. They have tried it with slavery and they have succeeded with abortion. Using the law for things that are personal issues. This documentary was hard to take at times but the truth is a hard pill to swallow at times. I come to live with the fact that I may never know my whole history so I cherish stuff like this.
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