Statues weren’t the only symbols of white supremacy in Charlottesville. Jalane Schmidt, a UVA professor of race and religion, thinks a lot about this in her work. She is the director of the Memory Project at UVA, which aims to promote research, develop curricula and programming and create opportunities for public engagement to address issues of public memory, memory conflict and memory politics in the wake of the white supremacist violence that came to Charlottesville in August 2017.