Elvita Dominique, "Negotiating Integration: Black Women at Barnard, 1968–1974" (page 2 of
8)
On Rejecting the Offer
Alienation and Black Nationalism
Being Negro is being different, but America is called a
melting pot, which I take to mean that everything goes in and one thing
comes out. But it hasn't worked that way, somehow thankfully; some
elements, the Negro particularly, have not succumbed to the temperature,
have not let blow freely the molecules of their makeup. But in places
like this there is the danger of being blinded, or being bleached.[7]
—Joan Frances Bennett, black Barnard student, spring
1968
Socializing almost exclusively with other black students was one of
the most defining characteristics about black students at Barnard during
this period. All the interviewees from this period claim they made no
real friendships with white students while at Barnard. Haratia Trahan,
Jonette Miller, and Barbara LaBoard do not recall any significant
interaction with white students while at Barnard.[8] This was not a
phenomenon found exclusively at Barnard. Many scholars have noted that,
as the number of black students increased at historically white colleges
and universities, instead of having more social integration between the
races, black students became more alienated from the schools they were
attending. Black students did not quietly assimilate into the white
culture of their colleges. One of their initial acts of rejection of
Barnard's offer was to withdraw from the social life of the college and
create their own social groups and communities. They decided that they
would refuse to allow themselves to be assimilated into Barnard's
community. Why did black students reject Barnard's offer and withdraw
from the college? All the black interviewees from this period spoke
about how they stuck together as a group as a means of getting through
Barnard. They all spoke about a sense of disconnection and alienation
they felt from the larger college environment.
Black students generally did not come to Barnard expecting not to fit
into the social environment of the college. Although Jonette Miller and
Haratia Trahan spoke about coming to Barnard looking specifically for
the black Barnard experience, most of those interviewed said they
expected some period of adjustment to college life but for the most part
were simply looking for a good college experience. As Marsha Simms
explained, when asked about her expectations of Barnard, "What did I
expect? I expected to get a reasonably good education."[9] Some, like
Frances Sadler, were accustomed to integrating white institutions and
did not really give much thought to the fact that Barnard was a white
institution.[10] Although, undoubtedly some were probably well aware of
the realities of being black at a white institution, many came expecting
to be able to integrate easily into the Barnard community. In a piece
written for The Barnard Alumnae magazine in 1969, Deborah Perry
explained that even after an initial feeling of unease, she still
believed she could fit in at Barnard:
During my first week as a Barnard freshman I was infused
with a spirit of adventure, of anticipation at being in New York . . . I
had very little contact with whites, except as teachers, and I staunchly
supported the idea that only though integration and communication
between the races could we ever have harmony. Yet and still, I worried
about assimilation and acceptance here at Barnard. From the very first,
I felt uncomfortable and uneasy with the white girls I met. I felt that
I had nothing to say to them, and vice versa, but I ignored the feeling,
chalking it up to "the period of adjustment."[11]
Perry was mostly excited about the prospect of college and, prior to
coming to Barnard, believed thoroughly in the idea that social
integration of the races was possible. Jacqueline Fleming, in a book
comparing the experiences of black students at black colleges with those
of black students at white colleges, concludes: "Because black students
came to college expecting less prejudice and more social integration
than they found, their consequent anger and despair contributed to a
desire for separation and withdrawal from whites."[12] Part of the reason
blacks became so rapidly alienated from the white college environment,
according to Fleming, was that they were expecting to be welcomed by the
college community. Many of them after all had been recruited and enticed
to come with special financial aid offers. Therefore, being rejected by
the college community came as a surprise to many and their withdrawal
from campus life was for some a reaction to this rejection. They wanted
to feel accepted and valued by the Barnard community and when they did
not receive this acceptance, they turned to each other for support and
validation.
They were rejected both overtly and subtly by the college community.
As Frances Sadler explains, "I don't think the college was malicious. It
was just a racist institution. It was an organization that had not
worked at diversity. So, it never tried to support us, understand us,
incorporate us. Mostly the policies were 'fine—we invited you
here, now deal.'"[13] Jonette Miller states, "It was even more than a
matter of seeing through the transparency of the people's prejudice to
how they really were not there to support young black women, or how they
really wanted us to be cookie cutter images of upper-class white
women."[14] From the very beginning of their Barnard experience many felt
that the college had done nothing to prepare for their arrival. Deborah
Perry remembered,
The Social Life—Freshman Orientation program, floor
parties, mixers, luncheons, teas—was geared to the incoming white
freshman, completely ignoring the different needs of black students. We
were treated as whites too—which may sound fine and
dandy—but this type of treatment is a kind of racism in itself.
The administration, the student sponsors, everyone was so willing to
"overlook" the fact that we were black and to ignore the different
cultural and social background that is black people's. Barnard's
lily-white faculty and courses of study emphasized even more the lack of
concern or interest on the part of the "powers that be" about the needs
or interests of blacks.[15]
Perry re-emphasized Sadler's point that black women felt ignored by
the Barnard community. Like Perry, some of the women interviewed talked
of the limits of social life provided by the college for black students
(some stating they turned to New York City, and Harlem in particular,
for entertainment).[16] And, like Perry, many regretted the absence of
black professors and courses on black issues. Karen Butler majored in
American Studies in order to pursue her interest in African American
history.[17] Sadler recalls feeling pressure to represent black people
and teach other students about black culture in classes where blacks
were never mentioned. Sadler remembered "taking an American Literature
Symposium with Christine Royer and it was Melville, Whitman, and another
American author of your choice. I think about the fact that I chose to
do Richard Wright because I felt obligated to do a black author because
otherwise no one else would have heard of him."[18]
Sadler also noted that not only were black students asked to carry
the burden of educating their fellow students about blackness, they also
felt they were rejected as full contributors to the intellectual life of
the college because, as was previously discussed, many doubted their
academic qualifications for gaining admission into Barnard. Sadler
stated, "Everyone assumed that they had lowered their standards to let
us in. And in fact we were highly qualified."[19] These negative
perceptions of themselves and blackness really frustrated the black
students. Such perceptions were particularly annoying when they were
held by white classmates with whom they lived.
Sadler felt that the college did nothing to prepare white students
for integration, and that this lapse showed in white student's reception
of blacks. "Yes the college had a big part of it but it also didn't do
anything to prepare the white students for us being there," Sadler
explained. "They are the ones who made our lives miserable on a day to
day basis. Not the college as an institution . . . You know, people talk
today about the posture pictures and the touching hair. That wasn't the
college who touched our hair and invaded our space. It was the
students."[20] Jonette Miller also mentioned she felt that black students
were always being watched by staff, in places like the dining hall,
because people were always worried black students would steal or cause
trouble.[21] Taking these women's stories into account, it is not
surprising that many of them found the Barnard of this period such a
hostile environment in which to study, and turned to each other for
support.
Alienation alone, however, does not fully explain the black women's
rejection of Barnard's offer. In his discussion of black students'
protest at the University of Pennsylvania, Wayne Glasker argues for the
importance of black power and black nationalist ideology to the
development of group consciousness and, subsequently, black students'
protest at the University of Pennsylvania. Black power ideology also
played an important role in black women's rejection of Barnard's offer.
Black power ideology provided them with a view of integration different
from the one being put forth by Barnard, and it also influenced their
ideas about where they fit into the Barnard College community.
Black nationalism and alienation were, of course, connected. The
black students who came to Barnard during this period had some
commitment to integration; however, it soon became clear to most black
students that they would need to form supportive networks if they were
going to make it through Barnard. As many of the issues they were facing
had to do with race, it was almost inevitable that they would form bonds
along racial lines since these relationships helped to increase group
identification and pride. Fleming quotes a researcher as stating that,
"'[T]he experience in the white senior college or university in most
cases seems to lead the student toward an increasing consciousness of
his blackness, toward an identity not with all people, but with black
people.'"[22] James P. Pitts in his article discussing the politicization
of black students at Northwestern University explains, "Black students,
despite differences in status and regional origin, constituted a nascent
group from the moment they entered the University, sharing honor,
stigma, elation, and frustration. This nascent group, not simply
individuals, became politicized in their attempts to cope with the
campus environment."[23] In his study, "College as a Source of Black
Alienation," Richard Shingles defines black nationalism, in terms of
black alienation from white American society, as "a sense of
powerlessness and isolation from American society leading to a
counter move or withdrawal characterized by militancy, the
rejection of traditional means of political access and social reform,
and separatism, the black demand for control of their own affairs
and the institutions which influence their lives."[24] One alumna, in an
article assessing the state of blacks at Barnard in 1976, explained the
growing feeling of black nationalism at Barnard in reaction to white
rejection: "We felt a need to show whites that we didn't want them, that
we (the) rejected, just discovered a pride in our own culture and wanted
to spread it around us, just have total Blackness around us."[25]
Wayne Glasker explains that toward the late 1960s the influences of
black nationalism and black power could be clearly seen among the black
student population of the University of Pennsylvania.[26] Evidence for
their shift toward a black power ideology could be found in their
creating black students' organizations (that limited or forbade white
participation and membership) and protests, to make demands on the
administration regarding issues of racial importance. Pitts also notes
this shift in the experience of students at Northwestern University.
Black students who entered Northwestern in 1966 were
overwhelmingly sympathetic to the objectives of the Civil Rights
Movement, but few saw themselves as crusaders or activists. Their
experiences between 1966 and 1969 reflect much of the general pattern of
change in race consciousness among young blacks from an 'integrationist'
to a 'black nationalist' perspective.[27]
This race consciousness, as Pitts argues, moved many black students
to reject integration and move toward a black nationalist understanding
of race relations, especially as they became more politicized. A similar
shift in ideology to the one at Northwestern can be seen at Barnard.
Just in looking at black students' writings in the Barnard
Bulletin that year one notes a new emphasis on racial consciousness.
One student, Paulette Williams (later known as Ntozake Shange),
announced this shift in an editorial in the Bulletin:
I have seen Black men and women preparing themselves
together for participation in the development of the black nation we
intend to build . . . Martin Luther King is dead now. He died because
non-violence is out of context in the American experience. Black Barnard
realizes that this golden dream of peaceful reconciliation of Black and
white society has died with him, in spite of the eulogies expressed by
generous white leaders who had opposed him subtly or blatantly while he
lived. There is going to be throughout the country a shift in the
attitudes of the Black community, especially students.[28]
For students at Barnard there was an acceleration of the shift toward
black nationalism in the spring of 1968, a significant time in the
development of black power thought and increased politicization of black
students both at Barnard and Columbia and really throughout the nation.
According to Fleming, "Prior to 1960, most black students on white
campuses had been content to be seen, not heard (except within their own
peer group)."[29] Robert McCaughey argues that spring 1968 was a turning
point for black students at Columbia University. Although they had
formed their own communities and social networks between and within the
two colleges prior to 1968, they did not have a political agenda until
that moment.[30] As increased feelings of alienation and black
nationalism took hold, black students began creating their own political
agendas.
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