Earl Lewis, Columnist

In the Absence of Federal Arts Funding

The taxpayer burden is incredibly light for the benefits to communities large and small.

Arts and humanities money at work.

Source: Appalshop
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Since President Lyndon Johnson and a bipartisan Congress created the national arts and humanities endowments, no president has called for their elimination -- until now. We should pause and think about what our country would be like in their absence.

In 1965, Douglas Turner Ward, a Southern-born, Northern-educated playwright, produced a satirical story of a town that wakes up to learn its black residents have disappeared. In “Day of Absence,” the white townspeople -- played, in pre-“Hamilton” cleverness, by black actors -- come to terms with their segregated world. There are suddenly no blacks to labor or clean; no blacks to be hated and used to establish one’s importance.