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The Importance of Protest on Campus
Of all the criticism lobbed at hunger strikers and their supporters these past few weeks, most troubling is the charge that strikers were myopically and hyperbolically obsessed about a few faculty hires and texts in light of the real world issues like the presidential campaign or the war in Iraq or the human rights violations in Burma. While the crises on this campus can in no way be equated to war or genocide, the suggestion to “go fight real battles” carries with it the implicit assumption that what is at stake carries few consequences for the community within our gates and even fewer for those outside.
Besides questioning the importance of the strikers’ four demands, many doubted that they were even related to each other. Further, many rebuffed the notion that students—not just the five on South Lawn, but any at all—should have a say in the way our University is run.
Skeptics insisted with words of ownership that strikers “hijacked,” “co-opted,” and “took over” to emphasize that the students were somehow interlopers, outsiders with no authority to talk about the University culture or experience. The overall critique seemed to be that the hunger strike was an overblown gesture to meddle in an affair that was both insignificant and out of the strikers’ province.
Of course, the unspoken tension has been about University curriculum and policy, but it is also a battle of vision: we are debating just what a university is and what it means to the world it occupies and affects.
Denying Columbia’s powerfully global role eschews the accountability, scrutiny, and responsibility we routinely ask of governments, big businesses, and other world players. Columbia, more than a place of learning, is the third largest landowner in New York City. It can bring in someone as notorious as the president of Iran and as controversial as the Minutemen and set the tone and attitude for worldwide dialogue. The kind of research and scholarship generated in our labs, libraries, and classrooms have a far-flung impact on how we live and what we understand. In its own mission statement, our University is brutally self-aware of its role in the world: we pledge to address “global issues,” forge “academic relationships with many countries and regions,” and “carry the products of its efforts to the world.”
This is why the way we introduce world leaders, react to nooses on professors’ doors, develop our curriculum, support our ethnic studies department, and expand into neighborhoods is vital enough to appear and linger on our intellectual and moral radar screens. Manacled to its ideological and political climate, the University, never a neutral or objective institution, quietly proclaims and perpetuates certain values—something we always forget when we mythologize free speech on this campus. As community members, we, like the strikers, should be staunchly devoted to critiquing and reshaping such values when they grate against what we know to be just and honorable. The strikers’ demands, far from being trivial or self-important, are about acknowledging the seismic reverberations we send from country to country, and taking part in defining the message we articulate and reinforce daily. The demands, then, are about us and about more than us: they will have real-life and wide-reaching effects past our four years and past our campus.
Take the Core Curriculum, for instance. The myth goes that the curriculum is some ideology-free gaze at literature, philosophy, art, and science chosen for its merit. But if you have looked at the Core’s Web site, you know that the Core was created in the early 1900s to answer our postwar anxieties about preserving Western culture: from its inception, it served a cultural agenda and was an assertion of ideology. It functioned as a careful arrangement of texts and lesson plans meant to send a message about values and perspectives. What the strikers propose is not to politicize the curriculum, but to shift the politics of an already political agenda. To examine race, colonialism, gender, class, and power is to answer our contemporary needs as a technologically connected and globalized world and to offer cultural literacy in the face of our most pressing questions of power, difference, and disparity—not unlike offering national identity as the Core founders did in the chaotic climate after World War I. When an academic institution can cut ties with its assumption of Western superiority and devote itself to scrutinizing and reassessing ways in which it engages in world issues, something gets said about a nation’s possibility to do the same.
Connected to that is our need to bolster ethnic studies. I cannot forget when I first applied to college and watched as Harvard’s brilliant and accomplished scholars in its African and African-American studies department fled, feeling that their work was unvalued. When we neglect and undermine our ethnic studies and Institute for Research in African-American Studies, we at Columbia are sending that same message that chilled me those three years ago: we refuse to have more than nominal diversity. If our students and faculty of color will mean nothing about the way we as a University relate, socialize, and educate, they will mean nothing, period, which is a consequence of values that will effect more than the students who will take classes in or collaborate with ethnic studies.
Which brings me to expansion. As someone who read Community Board 9’s 197-a and Columbia’s 197-c, I still am no expert about the economic market or city planning—crucial aspects of dialogue on expansion. My concern comes from a different place and is just as crucial to that dialogue. This is about more than who will be displaced and how high the buildings will reach and how much space we need for research facilities. Perhaps expansion is tragically inevitable.
Nobody—including the Community Board—argues for that point, now moot. What is important now is how we will expand. If we do not make more of an effort to collaborate, respect, and uplift our Harlem neighbors as we undergo our project, we operate as just another corporation following the rules of business. But we aren’t just another corporation. We are a University, and that binds us to a higher, sometimes less practical, set of rules as we tell the world about our values and our building of a world community.
Candace Mitchell is a Columbia College junior majoring in English.
Under the Radar runs alternate Thursdays.
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Whocan stand to be around someone who makes a career of complaining?
Wow, what a silly column. Too bad nobody cares about your idiotic concerns.
The hunger strikers' voices were heard. The majority didn't agree with them. Isn't a democracy where majority rules? Maybe I should go back to school to learn exactly what is going on here. Does Columbia not have an ethnic studies department? Why does it need to be bolstered? Columbia is known for its diversity but it's not good enough for the hunger strikers?
Democracy does NOT mean the subjugation and suppression of the minorities
in a society where the majority rules. It means respecting minorities' rights,
including their right to Hunger-Strike.
That's exactly right: Columbia does not have an ethnic studies department. It has a Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race, which is nothing like a department at all, because...
sheesh. I give up. This has been addressed thousands of times. Please read up.
As for the claim that Columbia is known for its diversity, I find this puzzling. Columbia is known for being in New York, and sometimes for being in the Ivy League. That's about the extent of it. No one I know who didn't go here knows much else about the place, unless they're old enough to remember 68 (and yes, I'm suggesting that no one's heard of the Core).
Regardless of its history, you must consider the meaning of the Core today. The idea is to give students of the College a shared experience in what are considered to be great works of human civilization.
Should it be expanded beyond the Western canon? Absolutely. Obvious additions would be the Tao Te Ching and Mahābhārata. But additions and changes should be chosen conservatively, and should not include recent works that may be fads and have not proven their endurance.
Historically the Core's purpose has been to explain the underpinnings of American society to its future leaders. Ideologically its emphasis has been on demonstrating that we live in a country that is the proud inheritor of an intellectual tradition that has traveled from Greece through Western Europe to reach its pinnacle on our shores.
The way to expand the Core is therefore not to add a smattering of texts to it that vaguely add diversity through appreciation of other cultures. What's needed is an intellectual, systematic response that examines the role of e.g. colonization and race in constructing that tradition--and therefore our society. That's the role of Ethnic Studies and hopefully of any revamped Major Cultures requirement.
To state the obvious: You and your friends have every right to make your views known using such devices, including hunger strikes, as you think will help you make your case.
You have no right, however, to assume that your views are generally shared or that they should prevail against a large majority of doubters. You would temper the animostiy created by the hunger strike, and perhaps even make your case more persuasive, if you had the humility to concede this point, rather than railing on about your absolute virtue and the absolute evil of those who take issue with you.
Candace, you are an articulate and eloquent writer. However, those two qualities are no substitute for academic argument. As it stands, your article is nothing more than a piece of well-written clap trap.
Please answer the actual criticisms that were asked about the hunger strike and not the ones you wish were asked about the hunger strike.
Don't just deny that you co-opted and hijacked student opinion without explaining how you arrived at such a daring conclusion. We need to know why.
We all know and agree already that Columbia is important. This is the sole justification you give for the demands not being "trivial or self-important." But just bc Columbia is important does not mean a handful of its students have the right to change it. Surely you can see that? We ALL KNOW already that your demands "will have real-life and wide-reaching effects past our four years and past our campus." But stop repeating this unthinkingly like a well-trained parrot. We need to know why, if your demands have such an impact, they are so necessary and urgent as to justify a hunger strike, and above all, why they do not have represent the preferences of the larger student body.
It doesn't follow that because what we learn and internalize at CU is extremely important that therefore we need to learn and internalize X,Y,Z, (especially when the faculty wants A,B,C, and the students J,M,Q). What is the specific justification for X,Y,Z??
Also, despite denying that the hunger strike is self-important, you go on in the very next sentence, to state (twice) that the hunger strike is important precisely because it is about you. Pathetic.
The Hunger-Strike represents the concerns and interests of the MINORITIES and not the
"MAJORITY." It is clear that the wider student body consists of mostly White and those
who may pretend to be "White" and therefore it makes absolutely NO SENSE to expect
for the wider student body to support the Hunger-Strike.
A truly great institution is one where the rights of the "minorities" and those without any
voice are heard and respected and NOT just doing what the majority or the wider student
body may want to protect their own interests. REMEMBER, the majority have "power", and
the minorities are the ones WITHOUT power and therefore resort to such extreme measures
as Hunger-Strike, even though they can expect be severly criticized for merely exercising
their rights. The difference between a civilized and uncivilized society is that in a civilized
society even the minorities' rights are respected and not condemned.
It is as simple as that!!!
Did you seriously just reference people "Pretend[ing] to be 'White'"?
Because black people need to "think Black", Hispanic people should "think Hispanic", etc., in the way that you proscribe?
Ladies and gentlemen: THIS is what racism at Columbia looks like.
Have you NOT heard of some Black people discriminating against other Blacks
and some Hispanics discriminating against other Hispanics, etc...etc..?
Just because, one belongs to a particular race does not mean that they
cannot discriminate against individuals of their own race. Wake up,
my friend and SEE the truth !!!
I've heard of Black people discriminating against other Blacks.
You've given us an excellent example of what that looks like:
If people disagree with your views, you marginalize their perspective by saying "Oh, they 'think White'". Aside from the obvious problems with your bigotry against 'White' people, your apparent belief that the color of a person's skin dictates how they should think and what they should believe is itself racist.
With all due respect, I suspect you have absolutely no idea what you are talking about.
I am not saying that you or anybody else is discriminating against Blacks and or other
minorities simply because you disagree with the Hunger-Strike. I am only saying that
the Hunger-Strike is about the issues and concerns affecting predominantly Blacks and
other minorities and not White people. There are also many rational and sensitive White
people, such as Professor Dalton, who understand the pain and suffering of those
without any power and support their cause.
There are also Blacks (Supreme Court Judge Clarence Thomas, may be an example)
who are most insensitive and arguably discriminate against individuals of their own race
because of their own "self-hate" and other complex psychological issues. I suggest
you should see the great movie Malcolm X.
Also, I don't know any thing about you and you don't know any thing about me, and
the only thing I can say is even in the colonial times of slavery, there used to be the
"House-Slave" and the "Field-Slave." I and many others would argue that the Black
"House-Slave" may be as racist as the White "Slave-Master."
I think I made my point!!!
Your point being, again, that any Black person who disagrees with you is 'Uncle Tomming' it for 'Whitey'.
As you (hopefully) grow and become more educated, someday you may realize that sometimes when people disagree with you it just means that you have dumb ideas.
And in this case, the dumb and racist belief that what people think and believe should be dictated by the color of their skin. But I understand - it's probably profoundly disturbing to the fragile worldview you're trying to maintain when members of minority groups don't agree with you.
POWER & RACISM go hand in hand. Most Blacks and other minorities CANNOT be "racists" because they just don't have the power to exercise any of their "racism", if you really want to call that.
Some Black people may hate Whites or others based on their own experiences of discrimination and subjugation but that is not what "racism" really means in the practical sense. In America, that could be easily misunderstood as "Black Racism" but it is not. Blacks do not make the rules and control the lives of Whites who are in the majority. At best, any so-called "Black Racism" could be described as some form of (reverse) hate for what was done to them. "Hate With Power" is racism; "Hate WITHOUT Power" is NOT racism.
Just think about it; You don't have to feel compelled to provide an immediate response.
Candace,
You are GREAT!!! You touched upon some of the MOST IMPORTANT issues which not
many people even is this so-called "great" institution of so-called intellectuals seem to
understand.
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