Mount Rushmore: America's Most Monumental Contradiction
Mount Rushmore, with its images of four Presidents carved into the Black Hills of South Dakota, is America’s most identifiable monument. It might also be its most monumental contradiction — which is saying a lot, given the country’s gaping contradictions. According to Matthew Davis, the mountain’s biographer, the history of the Rushmore project captures both the remarkable engineering achievements of early 20th-century America and the country’s bloody colonial and racist past. So Mount Rushmore, Davis suggests, is indeed as American as cherry pie. Only that pie and those cherries aren’t quite as sweet as the MAGA crowd might like to think.
Keen On America is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keenon.substack.com/subscribe
Episode 2245: Is it really "not hard" to be a billionaire these days?
Episode 2244: Tim Wu on how to decentralize capitalism
Episode 2243: Nick Bryant on why Trump 2.0 is as historic as the Fall of the Berlin Wall
Episode 2242: Ian Goldin on the past, present and future of migration
Episode 2241: Gaia Bernstein on the Threat of AI Companions to Children
Episode 2240: Ray Brescia on how our private lives have been politicized by social media
Episode 2239: Frank Vogl on why Trump's financial deregulation is likely to lead to another global economic crash
Episode 2238: What to make of J.D. Vance's speech at the Paris AI Summit
Episode 2237: Matthew Karp explains how progressives can successfully bulldoze America
Episode 2236: Colum McCann and Dianne Foley on what a mother said to her son's ISIS executioner
Episodes 2235: Jeffrey Toobin on whether we all deserve second chances
Episode 2234: Walter Mosley on Easy Rawlins, King Oliver and the history of fictional black American detectives
Episode 2233: John Kay on why (almost) everything we are told about business is wrong