
76. The Story of Us 2026, Part 2
Mar 18, 2026
Jacqueline Stewart, film scholar and museum leader who centers cultural memory; Viet Thanh Nguyen, Pulitzer-winning novelist exploring war and migration; Ava DuVernay, filmmaker amplifying Black stories and independent distribution. They discuss museums under political attack, reclaiming blacklisted artists, the power and threat of storytelling, and independent paths for filmmakers. Performances dramatize McCarthyism’s erasures.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Hazel Scott's Erasure During McCarthyism
- Hazel Scott's career was erased during McCarthyism when her TV show was canceled and archives were thrown into the Hudson River.
- Kara Young's performance reenacts Hazel's lament to show how blacklisted artists were actively silenced and forgotten.
Museums As Targets In Memory Wars
- Jacqueline Stewart links attacks on museums and archives to a broader assault on collective memory and democratic storytelling.
- She cites the International Council of Museums' 2019 definition positioning museums as democratizing, inclusive, polyphonic spaces that custody diverse memories for justice.
Self-Distribute And Build Exhibition Spaces
- Ava DuVernay urges filmmakers to bypass constricting Hollywood channels by self-distributing and creating exhibition spaces.
- She points to the LA Rebellion filmmakers who showed films in community spaces and urges audiences to support niche films financially and by attending screenings.







