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David Roediger
Abstracted from: David Roediger, What's Wrong with
These Pictures? Race, Narratives of Admission, and The Liberal
Self-representations of Historically White Colleges and
Universities,18 Washington University Journal of Law and Policy
203-222, 203 (2005) (54 Footnotes omitted)
This Article focuses on the interpretation of several iconic images
used to represent racial inclusion at what the sociologist Eduardo
Bonilla-Silva has tellingly called "historically white colleges and
universities." All of the images come from schools in the Midwest,
and, churlishly enough, a memorial in the law school publishing this
Journal comes in for the most extended criticism. In mitigation, I
conclude with discussions of my own institution, University of
Illinois, whose use of a racist caricature of American Indians to
rally its fans now makes it the (pun intended) chief offender among
Midwestern universities where race and representation are concerned.
However, while brief exploration of the connection between
Illinois's hideous anti-Indian symbolism and its professed racial
liberalism ends this paper, the larger focus is on images
professedly designed not to entertain fans, but to "admit" students
of color into the historically white institutions. The liberal
narrative of admission that welcomes students of color to
historically white universities comes, the Article argues, at the
high price of effacing the exclusionary past and present of such
institutions. Thus, the notion recently advanced at Illinois that a
racist sports symbol can be put into the service--or somehow has
always been in the service--of multiracial education represents not
so much a sharp break with the ways the historically white, but
confidently liberal, university represents itself as an elaboration
of such views.
David Roediger is the Babcock Professor of History and of African
American Studies at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. His
most recent book is Working Toward Whiteness: How America's
Immigrants Became White (2005). |