Texas Senator Dan Patrick, R-Houston: Stop Senate Bill 1128
change.orgSenate Bill 1128 is a bill by which college courses in Mexican American history and African American history would not count towards a college degree in Texas public universities. We must stop this bill because college courses that teach about Mexican American history and African American history teach undergraduate students from a critical standpoint; students understand the meaningful contributions from individuals of color that help make this state and our country a great one. Further, students are given a multicultural educational perspective that not only underscores inclusiveness, dismantles stereotypes, and provides an opportunity for students of all racial backgrounds to collaborate towards social justice.
Followers, please take time to sign this important petition. Ethnic studies are indispensable to the liberation and empowerment of all PoC.
Grad Students Respond to Riley Post on African-American Studies
chronicle.com
As graduate students in Northwestern University’s department of African-American studies, we were thrilled with the informative and important article by Stacey Patton for The Chronicle of Higher Education that looked at the state of our discipline through the lens of an important academic conference bringing together the 11 African-American studies doctoral programs together for the first time.
So imagine our surprise when almost two weeks after The Chronicle’s original article appeared, The Chronicle’s Web site published a lazy and vitriolic hit piece by blogger Naomi Schaefer Riley that summarily dismisses our academic work while debasing us as something less than “legitimate scholars.” Riley then holds up our research as the reason African American Studies as a discipline should be “eliminated.”
Instead of taking her own advice given to her readers to “just read the dissertations,” Riley displays breathtaking arrogance and gutless anti-intellectualism by drawing such severe conclusions about our work and African-American studies as a whole based on four or five sentence synopses of our dissertation projects. In fact, Riley has never read our dissertations, as they are in process. Nor has she read a chapter or even an abstract of our work, but that does not stop her from a full throttle attack on our scholarship and credibility.
When Rick Santorum took his failed campaign for the Republican nomination for President to Iowa, he invoked blacks on welfare as a campaign issue—in a state where African-Americans make up only two percent of the population. He said, “I don’t want to make black people’s lives better by giving them somebody else’s money. I want to give them the opportunity to go out and earn the money and provide for themselves and their families.”
When Newt Gingrich had trouble drumming up interest in his failed political campaign, he began referring to President Barack Obama as the “food stamp president” and then told the NAACP that he wanted to address their convention to counsel, “why the African-American community should demand paychecks and not be satisfied with food stamps.”
One can only assume that in a bid to not be “out-niggered” by her right-wing cohort, Riley found some black women graduate students to beat up on. Despite her attempts to silence us personally, and indeed the discipline as a whole, her exhortations confirm the need for the vigorous study and investigation of black life in the United States and beyond.
Riley describes our work as driven by “conspiracy theories,” “liberal hackery,” and “left-wing victimization claptrap” all in an attempt to deny the persistence of racism in American society. Her racial-justice calendar ends in 1963, the year before the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was passed and two years before the Voting Rights Act was passed in 1965. According to Riley’s calendar, the legislative fruit of the southern Civil Rights Movement meant the end of American racism in any institutional capacity. Thus Riley, in a betrayal of her own bigotry, declares that there are “some fundamental problems in black culture that cannot be blamed on white people,” while at the same time imploring us to stop “blaming the white man.”
As black people living in the United States we do not need conspiracy theories or white bogie men to explain the disparities that separate and distinguish the life chances of white people compared to those of African Americans, even with a black president sitting in the White House. We understand that these conditions are driven and shaped by racism and real white men who exercise power and influence in the economic, social and political institutions that govern this nation. Before the dirt has fully come to rest on the grave of Trayvon Martin, black men and women, in the academy or outside of it, have never needed Harvard educated white women to lecture us about the conditions in the communities we live in—and we certainly do not need it now.
Our work is not about victimization; it is about liberation. Liberating the history, culture and politics of our people from the contortions and distortions of a white supremacist framework that has historically denied our agency and subjectivity as active participants in the making of the world we live in.
For the past 40 years, black studies has been instrumental in transforming higher education into a more inclusive, competitive, and rigorous intellectual enterprise. This is a fact. The contributions are irrefutable. But the extent to which Riley chose to assail black studies and the scholarship of black-studies doctoral students is indicative of the desperate tactics commonly used by media pundits. What is she so afraid of?
Finally, shame on The Chronicle of Higher Education. As students we welcome the vigorous interrogation and examination of our work that comes with life in the academy. We do not welcome smug attacks by lazy bloggers, in your employment, who resort to racial caricature in a pitiful attempt to drum up controversy and interest in an otherwise underwhelming and pedestrian career. Riley’s rant is typical matter for personal blogs and anonymous postings in comment sections. The Chronicle’s complicity in Riley’s anti-intellectualism and the pernicious attack on black scholars and black culture is what is most offensive. It is revealing that such an esteemed publication would abandon its journalistic and academic standards.
Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor
La Tasha B. Levy
Ruth Hays
“Maybe it has been awhile since you have been a graduate student. Maybe you have never been a black graduate student. Let me tell you a little about my experience of that. You are almost always perceived as crazy and different for doing something few in your family or peer groups would ever consider doing. Even if you are among the best and brightest in college you are somewhat of an oddity in graduate school. You are either the voice of all black people or the voice of no one. You can be, in any combination and at any given moment: an affirmative action case, an overachiever, lazy, aggressive, scary, and your University’s poster child for diversity. You are simultaneously invisible and in the spotlight…all the time. For five-plus years. And you pay for the privilege because you care about the scholarship. You do the work. You jump through the hoops. You refine a research agenda, craft a research question that passes muster with your committee members; you spend countless hours reading, writing, collecting data, and learning your craft. Finally, it is time to present your baby to the world. And you do not expect to be coddled but you do expect that professional rules of conduct to which you have been taught to adhere will also apply to your colleagues.”
—The Inferiority Of Blackness As A Subject“Black children are our most valuable possession and our greatest potential resource. Any meaningful discussion of the survival or future of Black people must be predicated upon Black people's plan for the maximal development of all Black children. Children are the only future of any people. If the children's lives are squandered, and if the children of a people are not fully developed at whatever cost and sacrifice, the people will have consigned themselves to certain death. They will be destroyed from without or from within - by the attack of their own children against them. And they may be destroyed by both. Black people now are being attacked in the streets (from within) by our own youths, as well as being attacked (from without) by our collective oppressor. ”
—Dr. Frances Cress Welsing
The Isis Papers - The Keys To The Colors
Chapter 20 - Black Children and the Process of Inferiorization
After Texas Attacks Ethnic Studies Programs, Students and Educators Fight Back
policymic.comAfter having a conversation with the office of Senator Dan Patrick, the staff clarified that the bill was created simply to make sure students are taking courses that are relevant to Texas and U.S. history. Seemingly, in an effort to be inclusive, Patrick is determined to push for a comprehensive approach to history by eliminating ethnic studies.
Because obviously Mexican-American Studies and African-American Studies are irrelevant to Texas culture.
Essays from Black Queer Studies, ed E. Patrick Johnson, Mae Henderson
note: I want to read all of the essays in this collection because so far they have been amazing, but due to time constraints I’ve only yet read the few that were required for class
- Holland, Sharon P. “Foreward: “Home” is a Four-Letter Word.”
- Johnson, E. Patrick and Mae G Henderson. “Introduction: Queering Black Studies/ “Quaring” Queer Studies”
- McBride, Dwight A. “Straight Black Studies: On African American Studies, James Baldwin, and Black Queer Studies.”
- Ross, Marlin B. “Beyond the Closet as Raceless Paradigm” (NB: This one totally takes one of my current professors to task for “offhand exploitation of race” and I think it’s a super valid [and scathing] critique of how discourses of racial oppression are employed by white gay academics)
- Clark, Keith. “Are We Family? Pedagogy and the Race for Queerness.”
Dual Consciousness
-dilemma in which black people have to balance between eurocentric and afrocentric polarities
- Alien Identity -consistently demonstrating a eurocentric worldview, discomfort with one’s true self
- Collective Identity -embracing and feeling a belonging to the black community wholeheartedly, dominant afrocentric worldview
- Diffused Identity -balances between the alien and black worldviews, “They know black is beautiful but understand white is power.”