Monday, July 19, 2010
American Portraiture
Sunday, July 18, 2010
Brown University Steering Committee on Slavery and Justice
October of 2006 was a critical time for the reparations movement. Brown University’s Steering Committee on Slavery and Justice, appointed by President Ruth Simmons, released a highly anticipated report on the University’s historical ties to slavery (and I hasten to add, anti-slavery). The report also makes clear suggestions about what to do in the aftermath.
With President Simmons' call for action, Brown University joined the club of institutions studying their historical connections to slavery. The report is as comprehensive and authoritative as you will find. The Committee was inspired, it appears to me, by two events. First, David Horowitz’ ad “Ten Reasons Why Reparations for Slavery Is A Bad Idea--And Racist, Too,” which was published in the Brown Daily Herald in 2001 and stirred up much controversy on campus. Secondly, President Ruth Simmons' push to have a factual account of Brown’s connections to slavery.
The University's Committee did what academicians naturally do: question, investigate, discuss, and document. It is compellingly written, insightful, and informative. Take for example the first line of the report: "Let us begin with a clock." And so follows an engaging vignette about a historical artifact and its ties to the slave trade and to the University... Intriguing. What I especially liked about the report is the careful way in which it harmonizes historical evidence with discussion of contemporary moral and social justice issues. As an Art History major at Amherst, I know that it tends to be unpopular among historians to write for the present. However, I think such an approach is exactly appropriate in this context - what is relevant and what we as readers want to know about is the connections of the past to the present.
Most of the details of the history of Brown University and Rhode Island were entirely new to me. Specifically, the report emphasizes the many ways in which Rhode Island’s economy was tied to the products of an for slaves’ labor (negro cloth) and the convoluted roles that the Brown family (Nicholas, John, Joseph, and Moses) played in the slave trade and the abolition movement. One of the most haunting passages of the report is the discussion of the 1763-64 voyage of the slave trading ship Sally. The records of the disastrous voyage are shocking, to say the least.
Yet, after all of the research, discussion forums, speaker events, and publication of this report by Brown University, the question remains the same: what do we make of this now? Much of what the Steering Committee proposes is further education, k-12 public education to be exact. I do believe there is something beneficial in simply having a fuller, more complete history. That being said, I think it is critical in this case because it outlines the intricate ways in which great institutions of the past (and present) are connected to slavery. When we begin to look further, we see this same system seemingly everywhere. I am left wondering about other institutions - Amherst included - and their connections to slavery and genocide.
The Main Squeeze
Thoughts on the Internship
What did you like?
Advice to future interns:
- Ask questions. Ben will ask you a lot of questions, but don't be afraid to do the same. You will have access to some extraordinarily brilliant minds (Jerry Mitchell, Dr. Winkle, the Barksdales, everyone is brilliant, really), so don't let them pass you by!
- Listen. Try not to dominate discussions, you will have plenty of opportunities to get your opinion in. Sit back and soak in what others have to say at times.
- Be honest. If that means disagreeing, by all means, disagree. Don't be the people please-er.
- Be respectful and let go (as much as humanly possible) of assumptions and stereotypes.
- Extend yourself to the first year and second year teachers - you are here to support them in every way possible. Bend over backwards to lend them a hand - they are going through incredibly challenging circumstances.
- READ. Not just the assigned readings from Ben (do those thoroughly), but go to Square Books or the University Library and read about the history of the South, civil rights, read the news. Immerse yourself in the literature of Mississippi (Richard Wright & Faulkner).
- Try new things: be it volleyball after work, spin class (Larissa and my favorite), fried green tomatoes, delta tamales.
- You are only here for two short months, so don't play it safe, absorb everything you can! MTC has so much to offer.
Monday, July 12, 2010
National Civil Rights Museum
Extraordinary. Powerful. Beautiful. Eye-opening.
I found the second half of the museum - located across the street - not quite as effective as the first. This section focuses mainly on the investigation of James Earl Ray - intriguing for conspiracy theorists, I suppose.
Thursday, July 8, 2010
Hot Tamale
“You can use many avenues of approach to race relations in the South" he says. "I think that it is all part of a continuum and food is a great method to get at race".
His creativity and good storytelling are affective as well. My sincere admiration for John T. extends well beyond anything I can eloquently express. His writing is like okra from the field, "the gifts of this earth made dear by their brief season" as my godmother Susan Hull Walker put it, rightly layered in both past and present, revert with a sense of place.
In the interest of time and leaving the storytelling to the pros, I will leave you with some of our assigned reading and listening in preparation for meeting with John T. - I hope you enjoy.
"Pig, Smoke, Pit: This Food Is Seriously Slow"
"Hot Tamales & the Mississippi Delta"
"Abe's Bar-B-Q" - this is where we ate lunch Wednesday.
Robert Johnson, blues legend who supposedly sold his soul to the Devil to learn to play the blues - here singing about hot tamales. We visited one of his four suspected grave sites between Greenwood and Money, Mississippi.
NPR piece here.