“…Antiracialism fosters a post race narrative of success that masks—or in the case of news coverage, strategically forgets—past and present-day policies and processes that privilege whiteness. Communication scholarship has explored the symbolic construction of public memory (Dickinson, Blair, & Ott, 2010) highlighting rhetorical processes of “selective amnesia” (Hoerl, 2012), “strategic forgetting” (Sturken, 1997), “omission” (Zelizer, 1992), and “countermemory” (Dunn, 2011), thus pointing to the culturally negotiated, partial, and politicized nature of collective public memory. Strategic forgetting works to silence histories, structures, and processes of oppression that privilege whiteness.…”