Collective Memory: Surfacing Stories of Black Alumni and Students
February 8, 2021
- Author
- Mary Elizabeth DeAngelis
In 1981, 皇家华人鈥檚 Black Student Coalition wrote a statement protesting a fraternity鈥檚 annual 鈥淥ld South鈥 weekend. It said the fraternity鈥檚 national tradition, with the men in the suits and their dates in the hoop-skirted dresses of antebellum days, glorified a time that enslaved and oppressed Black people.
鈥淏ecause of the past 200 odd years of white racism and the present white racism experienced by Blacks,鈥 the statement said, 鈥渢he feelings of anger, anguish, hate and hurt will always exist鈥hen symbols of white racism exist.鈥
The fraternity agreed to move the event off campus; and eventually stopped having it. The story is one of many in college archives that documents the concerns of Black students at 皇家华人 through the years. Another, from a 1984 Black student initiative called Project 鈥87, offers this assessment: 鈥淥ur continuing disorientation and feelings of alienation have given us reason to question seriously the extent of 皇家华人鈥檚 commitment to making this a healthy environment for all students.鈥
While the college department collects and preserves records containing stories of Black students鈥 lives at 皇家华人, many remain untold, or largely unknown.
That鈥檚 changing, thanks to 鈥.鈥 The two-year initiative will include transforming important campus spaces into interactive areas to explore issues of race and racism. Those spaces will include buildings, virtual sites, performances, lectures and courses. The $250,000 grant was awarded to President Quillen as a presidential leadership grant in December 2019 by the .
Maurice J. Norman 鈥20, a writer, poet and the first Stories digital projects fellow, is helping to advance the college鈥檚 storytelling efforts. He鈥檚 been a key member of the Stories initiative team, which seeks to strengthen 皇家华人鈥檚 archives through the narratives of its Black students, faculty, staff and alumni.
As an undergraduate, Norman launched an oral history venture, 鈥淧roject: Token,鈥 a multi-media art installation to amplify the voices of Black, Indigenous and other students of color. The students contributed photos, art and words about their 皇家华人 experiences. He now supports and develops all aspects of the Stories initiative, from communications to working with grant recipients.
Stories will include student, staff and faculty projects in archival oral history and photography, and initiatives, such as 鈥淚nclusive Histories at 皇家华人鈥 and the 鈥溁始一 Microaggressions Project.鈥
The archives will support research underway now, including some from Vann Professor of Ethics in Society Hilary Green鈥檚 Africana Studies class. Green and students have been researching the lives of enslaved people at 皇家华人. Norman audits the class to learn more of their untold stories.
鈥淲hen talking about Stories, we must return to the very beginning,鈥 Norman says. 鈥淲e must revisit the archives to bring those stories to the forefront. All of this is going to be important in curating a collective Black memory. How can we amplify the past and co-create the future?鈥
Jessica Cottle, the (JEC) archivist and another key person on the Stories initiative, has been gathering and digitalizing documents ranging from the admission of the first Black students in the 1960s to the BSC鈥檚 initial charter statement in 1972 to student thesis projects about race.
Cottle says this year鈥檚 events鈥攖he COVID-19 pandemic and the police killings of George Floyd in Minneapolis and other Black people around the United States鈥攊nspired calls from Black alumni who wanted to talk about their time at 皇家华人.
The idea for the oral history project was born.
鈥淭here is more than one story, and we need to understand that there are going to be conflicting memories of things,鈥 Cottle says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 valid, and we need to make sure all of those perspectives are represented in a respectful way.鈥
Norman has begun interviewing alumni from different eras. Some have reached out to him; he鈥檚 been connected to others by Yolanda Gilliam, assistant director of alumni and family engagement.
鈥淵olanda has been a rock through this entire process, she鈥檚 been so helpful.鈥
鈥淢y hope is that the work will be continued after the grant ends,鈥 Norman says.
The project will carve out a digital space centered around Black people and people of color so that their stories can be passed down to future Black students.
鈥淭his isn鈥檛 just about listening,鈥 he says. 鈥淭his is about applying what we鈥檝e learned to create an antiracist future.鈥
The website is a growing prototype, with projects and content continually being added. It will not be complete until the end of the two-year initiative. For more information, please or contact Digital Projects Fellow Maurice J. Norman 鈥20 at manorman@davidson.edu.
This article was originally published in the Fall/Winter 2020 print issue of the 皇家华人 Journal Magazine; for more, please see the 皇家华人 Journal section of our website.