Discussion
Loading...

Post

  • About
  • Code of conduct
  • Privacy
  • Users
  • Instances
  • About Bonfire
D. Elisabeth Glassco
@Deglassco@mastodon.social  ·  activity timestamp yesterday

American democracy keeps facing the same test. Reconstruction. Watergate. January 6th. Each was an inkblot: some saw freedom and law, others tyranny and betrayal.

The danger isn’t just the crisis—it’s perception unmoored from fact. A lie, repeated often enough, creates its own inkblot. Not to reveal the viewer. But to control them.

1/17

#history #blackmastodon #histodons #blackandwhite #photo #photography #politics #democracy #fascism #civilwar

A digital graphic promoting an article titled The Rorschach Republic. An abstract black inkblot resembling a Rorschach test, with the silhouette of the U.S. Capitol dome centered within it.
A digital graphic promoting an article titled The Rorschach Republic. An abstract black inkblot resembling a Rorschach test, with the silhouette of the U.S. Capitol dome centered within it.
A digital graphic promoting an article titled The Rorschach Republic. An abstract black inkblot resembling a Rorschach test, with the silhouette of the U.S. Capitol dome centered within it.
  • Copy link
  • Flag this post
  • Block
D. Elisabeth Glassco
@Deglassco@mastodon.social replied  ·  activity timestamp yesterday

Reconstruction was the first great inkblot. The war was over. The Union preserved. Slavery abolished. To freedmen, it meant democracy fulfilled: citizenship, schools, the vote. To white southerners, it meant humiliation: Black men in office, white supremacy shaken. The same moment: freedom, or tyranny.

2/17

Image: Union soldier representing the Freedman's Bureau / Drawn by A.R. Waud, 1868. Library of Congress. https://www.loc.gov/item/92514996

A Reconstruction-era illustration titled The Freedmen’s Bureau by A.R. Waud. At the center, a Union officer in blue uniform stands with arms outstretched, attempting to keep peace between two hostile groups. On the left, armed white men with knives, clubs, and guns confront him aggressively. On the right, freed Black men, some with raised fists and makeshift weapons, stand defiant. An American flag waves behind the officer, symbolizing federal authority.
A Reconstruction-era illustration titled The Freedmen’s Bureau by A.R. Waud. At the center, a Union officer in blue uniform stands with arms outstretched, attempting to keep peace between two hostile groups. On the left, armed white men with knives, clubs, and guns confront him aggressively. On the right, freed Black men, some with raised fists and makeshift weapons, stand defiant. An American flag waves behind the officer, symbolizing federal authority.
A Reconstruction-era illustration titled The Freedmen’s Bureau by A.R. Waud. At the center, a Union officer in blue uniform stands with arms outstretched, attempting to keep peace between two hostile groups. On the left, armed white men with knives, clubs, and guns confront him aggressively. On the right, freed Black men, some with raised fists and makeshift weapons, stand defiant. An American flag waves behind the officer, symbolizing federal authority.
  • Copy link
  • Flag this comment
  • Block
D. Elisabeth Glassco
@Deglassco@mastodon.social replied  ·  activity timestamp yesterday

The Freedmen’s Bureau? Lifeline—or corruption. The 14th & 15th Amendments? Democracy perfected—or perverted. Reconstruction was not a single meaning. It was a national test.

3/17

Image:The House Joint Resolution Proposing the 14th Amendment to the Constitution, June 16, 1866; Enrolled Acts and Resolutions of Congress, 1789-1999; General Records of the United States Government; Record Group 11; National Archives.

A faded parchment with hand written words of the 14th amendment. The page is yellow with barely decipherable handwriting in cursive.
A faded parchment with hand written words of the 14th amendment. The page is yellow with barely decipherable handwriting in cursive.
A faded parchment with hand written words of the 14th amendment. The page is yellow with barely decipherable handwriting in cursive.
  • Copy link
  • Flag this comment
  • Block
D. Elisabeth Glassco
@Deglassco@mastodon.social replied  ·  activity timestamp yesterday

A century later came Watergate. A burglary, small at first. Then the gravest constitutional crisis since the Civil War. What Americans saw depended on what they were prepared to believe.

4/16

Image: In this Nov. 17, 1973 file photo, President Richard Nixon speaks near Orlando, Fla. to the Associated Press Managing Editors annual meeting. Nixon told the APME "I am not a crook."

Black and white photograph of President Richard Nixon, raising his right hand and pointing his finger upward. He is in a traditional suit standing behind a presidential seal..
Black and white photograph of President Richard Nixon, raising his right hand and pointing his finger upward. He is in a traditional suit standing behind a presidential seal..
Black and white photograph of President Richard Nixon, raising his right hand and pointing his finger upward. He is in a traditional suit standing behind a presidential seal..
  • Copy link
  • Flag this comment
  • Block
D. Elisabeth Glassco
@Deglassco@mastodon.social replied  ·  activity timestamp yesterday

For some, Watergate proved democracy’s strength: Press exposing corruption. Congress investigating. Courts demanding compliance. A resignation that showed no man was above the law. For others, it was only a witch hunt.

5/17

Image:Tourists reading President Nixon resignation news, 8 August 1974. Photograph: Bettmann/Bettmann Archive.

Black-and-white photograph of two people reading newspapers outside the White House gates in August 1974. The front pages of the Washington Star-News headline “Nixon Resigning” with a large photo of President Richard Nixon. The White House is visible in the background beyond the iron fence.
Black-and-white photograph of two people reading newspapers outside the White House gates in August 1974. The front pages of the Washington Star-News headline “Nixon Resigning” with a large photo of President Richard Nixon. The White House is visible in the background beyond the iron fence.
Black-and-white photograph of two people reading newspapers outside the White House gates in August 1974. The front pages of the Washington Star-News headline “Nixon Resigning” with a large photo of President Richard Nixon. The White House is visible in the background beyond the iron fence.
  • Copy link
  • Flag this comment
  • Block
D. Elisabeth Glassco
@Deglassco@mastodon.social replied  ·  activity timestamp yesterday

Even Nixon’s helicopter ride divided opinion.
To some, disgrace.
To others, dignity.
Watergate offered no single meaning. Only a choice.

6/17

Image: Richard Nixon flashes his trademark V signs before boarding Marine One and leaving the White House grounds on August 9, 1974. The night before, he had announced that he would resign as president because of the Watergate scandal.Oliver F. Atkins/National Archives.

Color photograph of U.S. President Richard Nixon standing in the doorway of a helicopter, smiling broadly with both arms raised in his trademark double “V for Victory” gesture. The American flag is visible above him. A uniformed military aide stands in the foreground near the helicopter.
Color photograph of U.S. President Richard Nixon standing in the doorway of a helicopter, smiling broadly with both arms raised in his trademark double “V for Victory” gesture. The American flag is visible above him. A uniformed military aide stands in the foreground near the helicopter.
Color photograph of U.S. President Richard Nixon standing in the doorway of a helicopter, smiling broadly with both arms raised in his trademark double “V for Victory” gesture. The American flag is visible above him. A uniformed military aide stands in the foreground near the helicopter.
  • Copy link
  • Flag this comment
  • Block
Log in

Open Science

We are a network of scientists, developers and organizations building the next generation of digital spaces for open science.

Open Science: About · Code of conduct · Privacy · Users · Instances
Bonfire open science · 1.0.0-rc.2.30 no JS en
Automatic federation enabled
  • Explore
  • About
  • Members
  • Code of Conduct
Home
Login