4.9 • 11K Ratings
🗓️ 31 January 2024
⏱️ 49 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
After the massacre and coup of November 10, 1898, white supremacists in North Carolina soon finished the job of disenfranchising Black citizens and instituting Jim Crow segregation. They also took control of the narrative. A new propaganda campaign, the one after the fact, succeeded for a century – even as several Black writers tried to tell the truth about 1898 and left breadcrumbs for future historians to find.
By Michael A. Betts, II and John Biewen. Interviews with LeRae Umfleet, Gareth Evans, David Cecelski, William Sturkey, Chenjerai Kumanyika, Doug Jones, and Adriane Lentz-Smith. Story editor: Loretta Williams. Voice actor: Mike Wiley. Music by Kieran Haile, Blue Dot Sessions, Okaya, Jameson Nathan Jones, and Lucas Biewen. Art by Zaire McPhearson. “Echoes of a Coup” is an initiative of America’s Hallowed Ground, a project of the Kenan Institute for Ethics at Duke University.
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0:00.0 | I'm David Remnickin each week on the New Yorker radio hour. My colleagues and I |
0:04.8 | unpack what's happening in a very complicated world. You'll hear from the New |
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0:30.4 | Another content warning. |
0:32.1 | This episode includes the use of a racial slur. |
0:35.0 | John, this story we're telling has me thinking a lot about the truly immense power of propaganda. |
0:42.0 | Uh, yeah. In the wildly different... the truly immense power of propaganda. |
0:43.0 | Yeah. |
0:44.0 | In the wildly different meanings that events can take on depending on who's controlling the |
0:49.9 | narrative. |
0:51.6 | For example, if I say the word race riot, what do you think comes to mind for the |
0:55.8 | average American based on the way that that phrase usually appears in our news media |
1:00.0 | and history books? |
1:01.0 | Yeah, let's see. |
... |
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