About
During moments of collective grief and triumph, Americans gather in public spaces to commemorate our shared history. In those places, we have built altars of stone, metal, and marble in tribute to our values, and we’ve placed our heroes on giant pedestals. But our monuments and memorials are also the site of flash points in our struggles with injustice. They can be painful symbols of the many narratives and people left out of the American story. Once we learn the stories these objects tell about us, will tearing down statues and renaming schools be enough?
Monumental interrogates the state of monuments across the country and what their future says about our own. In this 10-episode series, audio journalists from around the country will piece together the complex stories behind some of the thousands of monuments that exist in every corner of the greater U.S. We’ll look at the commemoration of a racist massacre and the only successful coup d’etat in U.S. history in North Carolina; we’ll learn about the creation of new statues depicting immigrant workers in Boston’s Chinatown, a city where the nation’s founders cast a long shadow. From the toppling of a contested Civil War monument in Santa Fe, to the statue of a voting rights pioneer tucked away in a government basement in Wyoming, Monumental will interrogate the personal and political costs of memorialization.
Join our host, author and journalist Ashley C. Ford, as we travel across the greater U.S. to learn what symbols are being challenged and remade in our public spaces, and how we undertake the monumental task of forging a new American identity - one that includes us all.
Monumental is produced by PRX Productions, PRX’s award-winning creative studio specializing in audio storytelling. For more about the host and the team behind Monumental, visit our Team page. The series is generously supported by the Mellon Foundation.
Listen
-
Coming Soon
-
Coming Soon
-
Coming Soon
-
Coming Soon
-
Coming Soon
-
Coming Soon
-
Coming soon
-
Coming soon
Team
-
Ashley C. Ford is the author of the New York Times bestselling memoir, Somebody’s Daughter, published by Flatiron Books. Ford is the former co-host of The HBO companion podcast Lovecraft Country Radio, and the current host of Ben & Jerry’s Into The Mix. She currently lives in Indianapolis, Indiana with her husband, poet and fiction writer Kelly Stacy, and their chocolate lab Astro Renegade Ford-Stacy.
Ford has written or guest-edited for The Guardian, ELLE Magazine, BuzzFeed, OUT Magazine, Slate, Teen Vogue, New York Magazine, Allure, Marie Claire, The New York Times, Netflix Queue, Domino, Cup of Jo, and various other web and print publications. She’s also developed special projects for companies like Medium.Com, Mailchimp Presents, Condé Nast Entertainment, and MasterCard. She's taught creative nonfiction at The New School in Manhattan, served as Ball State University’s Writer-In-Residence Fall 2021, and will be teaching the Creative NonFiction Workshop at Butler University in Spring 2023.
-
Jocelyn Gonzales is Executive Producer of PRX Productions. Previously, she was Executive Producer of Studio 360, the Peabody Award-winning radio show and podcast. She produced the Popcast and Book Review podcasts at The New York Times for 10 years, and worked on podcasts for American Public Media, Hello Sunshine, Boston Globe Media and others. She has contributed reporting and production to radio outlets such as WNYC, Radiolab, Marketplace, Musicians Radio, and Minnesota Public Radio. She was an audiobook producer at Simon & Schuster Audio, mixed independent films and animated shorts, and worked in broadcast services at ABC Radio Networks. Jocelyn is a long-time faculty member of the Film and TV Department at NYU's Tisch School of the Arts, and is a senior producer and engineer at Feet In Two Worlds, an award-winning non-profit journalism program focused on reporting in immigrant communities.
-
Nancy Rosenbaum is an award-winning podcast producer and documentary audio journalist based in Minneapolis. Most recently, she has been working as a contract producer to develop and launch new podcasts and public radio specials for Minnesota Public Radio, PRX and APM Reports. Her reporting has appeared on NPR’s Weekend All Things Considered and Here and Now as well as the BBC, The World and Latino USA. She has produced two feature-length audio documentaries about 20th century Minneapolis social history that have aired statewide on Minnesota Public Radio. Nancy got her start in public media as a staff producer for the renowned public radio program and podcast, On Being. Earlier in her career, she ran educational programs for youth and adults in New York City. For more information see www.nancyrosenbaum.com.
-
Rosalind Tordesillas is an independent producer in New York City. She was born in the Philippines, trained and worked as a social scientist, and now explores human experience through audio storytelling. She produces and edits stories for radio and podcasts, focusing especially on immigrant life. Her work has been featured on Feet in 2 Worlds podcasts, The World and various PRX shows, as well as podcasts like Self Evident and Queens Memory.
-
Coming Soon!
-
Wonbo is an independent journalist and producer based in New York. He was most recently executive producer of The Takeaway, the public radio show hosted by Melissa Harris-Perry, produced by WNYC Studios and PRX, and broadcast on more than 250 stations nationwide. He was previously an executive producer at WIRED, where he oversaw all video content and quadrupled both subscribers and views on the brand's YouTube channel. Before that, he worked at NBC’s Nightly News and for more than a decade at ABC’s Nightline and World News Tonight. He has won numerous awards for his work, including three Emmys and a Sigma Delta Chi Award for Public Service from the Society of Professional Journalists. Wonbo was a Nieman fellow at Harvard from 2015-2016 and was a longtime faculty member at CUNY’s Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism.
-
Coming Soon!
-
Gisele Regatão is a professor of journalism and podcasting at Baruch College in New York City. Before that, she worked at WNYC and KCRW public radio stations for almost 15 years. Originally from Brazil, she has done reporting about everything from an art fraud case in New York, to avocado production in Peru and Latino vote in the US. She has also produced two fiction podcast series, the most recent one for Radiotopia Presents, which received a Webby nomination.
-
Ben is a freelance podcast producer and engineer from Santa Fe, NM. They've produced shows for Conde Nast, Audible, Vox, and Sonos as well as for small independent projects, universities, and an NPR-affiliate radio station. They love podcasts of all kinds and have worked on shows across a wide variety of different formats including audio-first documentaries, celebrity interviews, pop culture chat casts, and sound designed meditations. In addition to freelancing for various clients, they're also an Audio Story Editor at NYU's American Journalism Online graduate program.
-
Heidi is a journalist, podcast producer, and writer. She’s especially interested in the stories of immigrant communities and the inevitable connections between stories abroad and our lives in the U.S. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, National Geographic, California Sunday Magazine, Snap Judgment, Atlas Obscura, The Queens Memory Project, 70 Million Podcast, BBC, WGBH, and PRI’s The World, amongst other outlets. Heidi also teaches about podcasting at the PRX Podcast Garage, Harvard University’s Sound Lab, and leads Boston’s Sonic Soiree.
-
Michael A. Betts II, MFA is a Durham, NC-based podcaster, sound designer, and assistant professor in UNC-Wilmington's Film Studies Department whose work centers on Black & Brown bodies and their existence in white space. A 2011 UNC alumnus, Betts completed his MFA in Experimental and Documentary Arts at Duke University in 2020. Notably, Michael designed for playwright Howard Craft’s The Miraculous and the Mundane, Sonny Kelly’s one-man show, The Talk, and Haunted. Betts produced the audio version of Dr. LeRhonda S. Manigualt-Bryant New York Times op-ed, "My Mother Is Busy Getting Ready To Die." Betts also assisted on her award winning film short death.everything.nothing.
-
John Biewin is a longtime journalist and producer now based at the Kenan Institute for Ethics at Duke University, where he produces and hosts the Scene on Radio podcast. Previously, John reported for NPR News, American Public Media, and Minnesota Public Radio. Scene on Radio’s 2017 series exploring the history of white supremacy, Seeing White, and its 2020 series on American democracy, The Land That Never Has Been Yet, were each nominated for a Peabody Award. Biewen is also a two-time winner of the Robert F. Kennedy Award for outstanding coverage of the disadvantaged. John is co-editor of the book, Reality Radio: Telling True Stories in Sound, published by the University of North Carolina Press.
-
Irina is an award-winning journalist, reporting primarily on environmental issues. She's reported in the American West, in Russia, Puerto Rico, her native Philadelphia and currently works in the U.S. South. Her first novel, Lost Believers, was published in 2023.
-
Emily worked as a park ranger at different sites all over New York City. But after an internship with WNYC in 2019, she decided to pursue a master’s degree in journalism. She honed her audio skills at the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism while freelancing with several outlets, focusing on the health and science beat. She graduated in 2021, then went on to become a digital content producer for radio station 1010 WINS, covering local news stories and building up the station’s digital platform. Now she’s a digital producer for Gothamist, another local news site, finding and telling stories of the underrepresented. When she’s not wrapped up in the news of the day, she’s probably cycling around the city or using those park ranger skills on a hike.
-
J. Matt is a documentary photographer and feature-writer from, and based in, Honolulu whose work principally focuses on global warming and its intersections with place, ecology, and social, political, and economic histories. Represented by ZUMA Press, a member of the Society of Environmental Journalists and the National Press Photographers Association, their focus is on Hawai‘i and California as exemplary of what the nation faces in our new climate epoch.
-
Caroline is a Maine-based independent radio and podcast producer, documentary filmmaker and installation artist. Her work has appeared on Maine Public Radio, Marketplace (APM), National Public Radio, KEXP, BBC, Kitchen Sisters (Radiotopia) and in podcasts, the New York Times, festivals and museums. Caroline has taught at the Salt Institute for Documentary Studies and she enjoys frequent collaborations with other artists. Often, she focuses her work on people who make a living on the ocean, artists and musicians, and movements for social justice. She is currently working on her first feature length documentary film.
-
Jess is an award-winning podcast producer. She has worked with various companies to develop dynamic projects including HBO’s Lovecraft Country Radio and Netflix’s Okay, Now Listen. She co-directed and lead-produced the award-winning fiction piece His Saturn Return for Pineapple Studio’s The 11th series. Along with her commitment to being a joyful queer Black girl, Jess is just as committed to fostering and creating stories that expand the narrative of Black and queer communities and works to elevate stories by and for Black women.
-
Tamar is an art historian and independent audio producer based in Cleveland, OH. She is the creator and host of the award-winning podcast The Lonely Palette, which aims to make art history more accessible and unsnooty, one object at a time. Tamar has produced podcast episodes in partnership with SFMOMA, the Harvard Art Museums, the Addison Gallery of American Art, Hi-Phi Nation, Open Source with Christopher Lydon, ParentData with Emily Oster, and others, and is the co-founder of Hub & Spoke audio collective. Since early 2020, she has been the podcaster-in-residence at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
Additional Resources
-
Storymaps project for the City of Santa Fe from Valerie Rangel, featuring:
A People's History of the City of Santa Fe
Ojo Differentes (Augmented Reality art projects)
Unsettled, a podcast series from the Santa Fe Art Institute feat. Alicia Inez Guzman
Rest in Pieces by Alicia Inez Guzman
Centering Truths Not So Evident by Estevan Rael-Galvez
Decolonising New Mexico by Estevan Rael-Galvez
Through My Eyes, a presentation and film by DezBaa' and David Henderson
Bosque Redondo Memorial website
The Long Walk: Tears of the Navajo documentary
The Long Walk from the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian
State Historian Rob Martinez and his YouTube channel features hundreds of videos about NM history in an accessible format
Frontera!, an animated film/documentary
The Trap of Race and Memory by Charles Montgomery
New Mexico Has a Hispano White Nationalism Problem by Tales of Aztlantis podcast
Murals by Three Sisters Collective
-
Edmunds, Helen, The Negro and Fusion Politics in North Carolina 1894-1901
Prather, H. Leon, Sr., We Have Taken A City
Umfleet, LeRae, A Day of Blood: The 1898 Wilmington Race Riot
Todd, Bertha Boykin, Reflections on a Massacre and Coup
The Renaming of Hamilton Hall at UNC Chapel Hill
The 1898 Foundation, Inc's Papers at UNCW's Randall Library
Researching the Wilmington 1898 Massacre and Coup
Chesnutt, Charles W., The Marrow of Tradition