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Smithsonian museum offers hope

The Washington Monument is framed by a window at the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2016, during a press preview.
The Washington Monument is framed by a window at the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2016, during a press preview. AP

The Smithsonian's new National Museum of African American History and Culture, which President Barack Obama will ceremonially open Saturday in Washington, D.C., will play a valuable part in the process of changing how African Americans are depicted in American history and society. And not just on the national stage, but here in Texas as well.

The $540 million museum is a massive undertaking that seeks to narrate the experiences and contributions of black Americans. It is a story that is too often ignored, maligned or relegated to the margins in favor of traditional celebratory stories of our nation’s glorious past.

It’s no secret that race occupies a looming, yet contentious place in our social landscape. At a time that has witnessed the election of the first black president along with an unrelenting level of racial violence against black people in Texas and across the country, perhaps the most importance and significance that this museum holds is in the impact on K-12 education.

As scholars who research how race and culture figure into the curricula and teaching practices of K-12 schools, we believe this event brings hope.

There are longstanding challenges around making sure school curricula address the experiences and histories of racially diverse student populations. These concerns trace back 100 years, as African Americans were either nonexistent or inaccurately portrayed in traditional school curricula and in public spaces such as museums.

For example, it was not uncommon to find everything from Texas textbooks to international museum exhibits that portrayed peoples of African descent as either “happily” enslaved or as savages.

We’ve seen some changes during the past few decades. Yet even though enslaved people of African descent are no longer presented as “happy slaves,” other key exclusions persist.

For instance, in one study we conducted that examined the state’s fifth-, eighth- and 11-grade American history textbooks for their portrayals of violence directed toward African Americans — such as floggings, lynchings and church bombings — we found that these texts often left out governmental and institutional ties to racial violence.

Racial violence was depicted as random acts or the behaviors of overtly racist individuals, or as we call it, just “bad men doing bad things.”

That’s why this new museum is so important to Texas and beyond. It will play a major role in how African Americans are portrayed, from school curricula to the minds of adults.

The cultural space of a new museum is also significant. The museum not only serves as a location to walk through exhibits, a museum of this scale will become a cultural space of educational learning and research. It will help to create a new epicenter for collecting and examining black history. Histories will be deepened and rewritten through this museum.

The museum is an architectural wonder. Standing more than eight stories, the building houses more than 37,000 objects that address history, literature, music, arts and popular culture.

This collection is the first of its kind. No other museum exists that has exhibited African American history with this kind of financial or institutional support.

For Texans, this museum offers an opportunity to spark conversation on race and the important role that African Americans have had in the U.S. narrative, as well as in Texas, a sorely under-addressed topic in its K-12 schools and curricula.

A building, no matter how lovely and substantial, cannot repair the open and unhealed wound of our country’s virulent racist history. But we know that symbols matter. And representation matters too.

The National Museum of African American History and Culture has the potential of representing the importance of this story, in all its terror and beauty, for generations to come.

Keffrelyn D. Brown and Anthony L. Brown are associate professors in the department of instruction and curriculum in the College of Education at The University of Texas at Austin.

This story was originally published September 21, 2016 at 5:10 PM with the headline "Smithsonian museum offers hope."

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