Colorblind Notion Aside, Colleges Grapple With Racial Tension
ANN ARBOR, Mich. A brochure for the University of Michigan features a vision of multicultural harmony, with a group of students from different racial backgrounds sitting on a verdant lawn, smiling and conversing.
The scene at the undergraduate library one night last week was quite different, as hundreds of students and faculty members gathered for a 12-hour speak out to address racial tensions brought to the fore by a party that had been planned for November and then canceled amid protests. The fraternity hosting the party, whose members are mostly Asian and white, had invited rappers, twerkers, gangsters and others back to da hood again.
Beyond the immediate provocation of the party, a sharp decline in black undergraduate enrollment to 4.6 percent of the student body in 2013 from 6.2 percent in 2009 and a general feeling of isolation among black students on campus have prompted a new wave of student activism, including a social media campaign called Being Black at the University of Michigan (or, on Twitter, #BBUM). Members of the universitys Black Student Union have petitioned campus administrators to, among other things, increase enrollment of black students to 10 percent.
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In the news media and in popular culture, the notion persists that millennials born after the overt racial debates and divisions that shaped their parents lives are growing up in a colorblind society in which interracial friendships and marriages are commonplace and racism is largely a relic.
But interviews with dozens of students, professors and administrators at the University of Michigan and elsewhere indicate that the reality is far more complicated, and that racial tensions are playing out in new ways among young adults.
Some experts say the concept of being postracial can mean replicating some of the divisions and insensitivity of the past, perhaps more from ignorance than from animus. Others find offensive the idea of a society that strips away deeply personal beliefs surrounding self-identification.
full: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/25/us/colorblind-notion-aside-colleges-grapple-with-racial-tension.html
i am one of the few millennials on DU. last night I saw Michael Eric Dyson speak at my university. video is here. i am so frustrated with my generation embracing bigoted shit like that twerking party at Michigan and "blaming the victims" essentially black people as a whole for white people's own bigotry.