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The Kennedy Memorial (1972), created by Anneta Duveen, is located in Columbus Parc in Brooklyn, the same location as the Emma Stebbins statue. The bronze bust depicts Attorney General, U.S. Senator and Presidential candidate Robert Francis Kennedy (cf. Culture Now, n.d.). This bust takes its place on a granite pedestal with four quotes from Kennedy inscribed on the base "meant to inspire community action, whether it be at the local, national, or global level" (ibid.). Robert is John F. Kennedy's brother and, in parallel to his own professional career, he actively supported his brother's rise to the presidency, for example, as his campaign manager. It is certainly interesting to note that Robert F. Kennedy was a less prominent person than his brother, and was thus overshadowed by him, although this does not do justice to his personality.

If one would want to translate the memorial of the brother who is in the background but nevertheless important into a feminist narrative, one could allusorically derive the message that a strong and successful personality alone cannot prevail in this world. It needs a lot of support from the outside. On a smaller level, in order to work out the feminist just mentioned, this means that in the family context there is also always a need for a support network that makes the career of an individual possible; the inequality of the sexes could see itself negated in this way and would bring the date of origin of the bust to the fore: The 1960s and 1970s were marked by new women's movements that hoped for such a concession and, moreover, called for an emancipatory perspective on women's participation in social contexts (cf. Profession Politische Bildung, 2021).

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