"Behind the Big House has the heart of a gorgeous memoir and the bones of our most evocative scholarly texts. Jodi Skipper meets readers and monuments where we are, and chronicles superbly what it means to make, destroy, and really rebuild a region's history. Stunning work."--Kiese Laymon, author, Heavy: An American Memoir
"Skipper has illuminated for us one of the most pressing issues in American identity--how we reckon with our own original sin of enslavement. More than that, she's illuminating a path to redemption lit by thoughtful engagement, open eyes, and open hearts. This book is the intersection of mindfulness and hope."--Michael W. Twitty, James Beard Award-winning author, The Cooking Gene
"Skipper's book is a grassroots level journey into prioritizing the lives of enslaved people in historic preservation and historic representations in Holly Springs, Mississippi, and nationally. Behind the Big House is a hands-on research project and heritage tourism destination that has brought people together for impactful conversations about race."--Antoinette T. Jackson, author, Heritage, Tourism, and Race: The Other Side of Leisure
"Behind the Big House presents historic preservation as a form of memory activism. In Skipper's telling, a local effort to preserve the legacy of slavery wends through classrooms, national nonprofits, ill-fitting academic benchmarks, and intimate friendships. Historic preservation--and Dr. Skipper herself--emerge as models for work in the public humanities."--Dave Tell, author, Remembering Emmett Till
"Skipper's book highlights not only the current crisis facing higher education but also the systematic changes needed to rewrite tenure and promotion policies to value and give appropriate credit to applied, community-engaged scholarship. Behind the Big House is an important contribution to a burgeoning interdisciplinary literature that will interest scholars in archaeology, anthropology, architecture, geography, public history, and other academic disciplines."--Arris: Journal of the Southeast Chapter of the Society of Architectural Historians
". . . an intimate and candid look at the challenges and rewards of public history work centered on race and slavery, as well as the effect it has on individual practitioners. . . . adeptly interweaves theory and practice from the fields of public history, anthropology, Black studies, feminist theory, and women's studies. . . . Both emerging and experienced public history practitioners will find this work valuable for furthering their ability to evaluate and challenge prevailing public misunderstandings of race and heritage through heritage tourism."--Journal of Southern History