Like so many of our national discourses on race, and the policies that address racial inequities, affirmative action has come under direct attack in the Obama era. We know that affirmative action works. It helps to tilt a racial “playing field” that continues to be imbalanced and unjust across a number of social institutions. But the symbolic victories of affirmative action too often serve as simulacra for actual racial equality.
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As a historically elite academic institution, access to Harvard University (for a few gifted black folk) has often served as a false positive for racial equality. In the fall of 2013 I was invited to speak at former Senator Mo Cowan’s course on politics at the Kennedy School for a session on diverse candidates’ campaigns for public office. Prior to the class session, Mr. Cowan asked me to sit with several black undergraduate student leaders at Harvard. I am grateful to him for doing so. Our exchange was engaging, interesting and depressing.
The unrest expressed by those student leaders – their disenchantment with Harvard, their frustration with arbitrary, racialized stigmatization, the administrative silence about it all – and their burgeoning response to all of this, eventually became the #ItooAmHarvard campaign. I could not have known then that this would be the year that Harvard would set its own admissions record for black students. These two phenomenon, I believe are directly related to each other and, in turn, they are both also related to the recent decision made by the High Court to uphold Michigan’s ban on affirmative action.
The frustration of black students at Harvard, the record number of black admits and the judicial unraveling of race-based decisions in college admissions all speak to broader issues related to race in the 21st century, Obama Era, and the blind spots that too often accompany American progress in closing the racial divide. Those students at Harvard were not, in effect, expressing anything that isn’t fairly common in the experiences of students of color on predominantly white campuses.
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Being a black undergraduate student at an elite (predominantly white) institution, is like being trapped in a black and white television with only two channels: 1) The stereotype threat channel, where students of color are constantly wary of confirming some negative stereotype; and 2) the threatening stereotype channel, where students of color constantly wrestle with the majority culture’s perception of them as angry or threatening.
I wish I could say that I was shocked by what I heard, but given what was going on at my own campus — we too had an #ItooAMLehigh campaign this year — and what I have experienced for most of my academic and adult life, racial discrimination and racial discomfort on college campuses is as normalized as ignorant and culturally insensitive mascots in college and professional sports. What was different (both at Harvard and at my own institution) was the steely resolve of the students.









