Ethnic
Studies is back at the forefront of higher education. It has been
more than half a century since the first ethnic studies courses
became part of the curriculum in higher education. Ethnic studies
evolved out of the civil rights movements of the late 1960s and early
1970s, an era dominated by an intense level of civil disobedience
that contributed to increasing self-awareness and ethnocentric pride
among many people of color. Black American Studies, Asian American
Studies, Chicano Studies, Mexican American Studies, Native American
Studies, Jewish Studies, Arab Studies, and studies of indigenous
cultures were established as fields in their own rights. Such
activism is still
occurring.
The
first official establishment of an ethnic studies department occurred
in 1968
as the result of a long, tense, and lengthy strike staged by students
of the Third World Liberation Front at San Francisco State
University, a progressive and radical group composed of Black, Asian,
Latino, and Native American students. Frustrated at the dearth of
courses that was representative of or spoke to their ethnic and
cultural experiences, these young radicals demanded that
administrators address and correct what students viewed as chronic
deficiencies in the curriculum. Their steadfast determination
resulted in senior-level administrators, including then President
S.L. Hayakawa, surrendering and incorporating ethnic studies courses
into the university by establishing a School of Ethnic Studies.
This
victory inspired other students and faculties of color across the
nation to follow San Francisco State University’s lead and
stage their own strikes. A few years later, in 1972, the National
Association for Ethnic Studies was founded to bring together scholars
from diverse disciplines to promote interdisciplinary research.
Throughout
the early to mid-1970s, ethnic studies programs and departments
continued to flourish. One major difference, though, was that groups
that previously worked in solidarity became more territorial,
demanding departments and programs focused on their particular
cultures. Thus, fields such as Black Studies, Latin American Studies,
Native American Studies, Chicano Studies, and others were
established. Often such departments worked in unison with one
another, but sometimes fights over power, prestige, recognition, and
resources occurred.
By
the late 1970s, as the U.S. economy fell into recession and the 1978
Supreme Court decision in Regents
of the University of California v. Bakke
took aim at race-based affirmative action in higher education, more
Americans focused on how race was being addressed in higher
education. A backlash began toward issues or institutions viewed as
having a racial agenda. Anything seen as “too race-identified”
was viewed with a suspicious eye.
Such
sentiments continued after Ronald Reagan defeated incumbent president
Jimmy Carter in November 1980 to become the 40th president of the
United States. While the backlash against racial identification and
perceived racial preferences, no matter how misguided, had begun in
the late 1970s, such reactionary attitudes became even more
pronounced as the 1980s progressed. Aggressive attacks on social
programs, the safety net, welfare programs, higher education, labor
unions, people of color, Jews, and any group associated with the
specter of liberalism became institution or issue non
grata.
By
the 1980s, business and engineering were the degrees du
jour on
college campuses. Liberal arts were considered passé and all
but dead. While majors such as English, history, philosophy, and
others declined, the drop-off was even more acute in ethnic studies
programs such as Black Studies and Chicano Studies. In some cases,
funding became harder to secure from hostile, suspicious, or outright
indifferent state legislatures; some programs or departments closed
outright, while others were severely scaled back or folded and housed
into other departments on campus. It was a less than robust time for
ethnic studies at many institutions. Interestingly, during the same
period, women’s studies programs were established on many
campuses.
By
the later 1980s, many employers had realized that their business,
engineering, and hard science graduates were often good at crunching
numbers, figuring out equations, and processing data, but deficient
in concrete abstract and critical-thinking skills. This posed a
dilemma for corporations whose companies needed workers who could
think outside
the box.
Thus, the much-maligned and dismissed liberal arts majors were
suddenly back
in demand
and being eagerly recruited.
This
trend continued into the 1990s. In contrast with the previous decade,
when the field had been largely marginalized, employers suddenly
wanted and demanded graduates in communication, philosophy, history,
literature, and similar majors as part of their workforce. In higher
education, issues such as diversity, and academic perspectives rooted
in multiculturalism or intersectionality became mainstream.
Institutions suddenly became committed (at least in theory) to
diversifying their faculty ranks, which had been (and in truth still
are today) overwhelmingly white.
After
languishing on the academic sidelines throughout the 1970s and 80s,
the often overlooked and neglected stepchild - Ethnic Studies - was
finally becoming recognized as a valuable entity in higher education,
and such majors increased tremendously in popularity. For several
years, Black American Studies became the discipline du jour. Much of
this was due to the immense popularity
of scholars such
as Cornel West, bell hooks, Patricia Williams, Henry Louis Gates Jr.,
and many others.
Suddenly,
Ivy League and other prestigious institutions were developing African
American and other high-powered, well-funded ethnic studies
departments or programs. Colleges and universities appeared eager to
hire, recruit, and retain faculty of color. Ethnic studies enjoyed
the positive reception that had previously eluded it. A new day had
seemingly emerged in the ivory tower.
While
a renaissance of sorts did indeed occur, not everyone was pleased
with this sudden coronation being bestowed upon race, ethnic, and
gender studies. There were those who saw this new recognition of the
contribution of color as an attack on “classic,
well-established (read Eurocentric) scholarship” that had
supposedly “stood the test of time.” The much-touted idea
of “culture wars” reared its intense, combative head
throughout the mid-1990s. These battles were primarily waged in the
liberal arts, most notably in history and English departments.
To
say debates were fierce is akin to saying that water is wet. It
appeared that everyone from academics to the mainstream media to
politicians and private citizens found it appropriate to weigh in
with commentary. Heated debates took place across the political
spectrum as men and women from the political and cultural left,
center, and right took to the airwaves on radio programs, penning
passionate arguments on the op-ed pages of well-respected newspapers,
highbrow magazines, upscale journals, and other avenues to defend
their positions.
By
the late 1990s, it appeared that a cease-fire
had occurred,
and all parties involved had decided to “live and let live.”
At the risk of troubling long-settled waters and reopening old
wounds, I would argue that proponents of the new school - the
deconstructionists, post-colonialists, and social and cultural
historians - were successful in integrating their work into the
literary and historical canon. It is now a given that the works of
non-white, heterosexual men and women will remain in the curriculum
of many humanities courses, despite grumblings from certain
right-wing quarters.
During
the first two decades of the 21st century, stark cuts to higher
education by state legislatures, a declining college-student-aged
population, overreliance on adjunct faculty, the skyrocketing cost of
college, and the rise of online education and for-profit colleges,
coupled with similar roadblocks, have had a dramatic impact on higher
education. Some colleges have been forced to merge or close down.
Such predicaments have left many parents (and students) questioning
the value of a college education.
In
an era of such endemic uncertainty, it is not surprising that parents
are more cautious and determined to ensure that the money they spend
on their children’s education will result in tangible outcomes.
In essence, only the most
economically privileged students
can afford the supposed “luxury” of pursuing a liberal
arts education. Arguments from the early to mid-1980s regarding the
profitability of certain degrees have suddenly resurfaced. But this
time, business has been eclipsed by STEM and healthcare-related
fields.
Once
again, the humanities
are under fire
and
viewed as being worthless in the job market. Ethnic studies courses
have faced particular ire. They are often the first
programs/departments to be severely downsized or terminated. The more
things change, the more they stay the same.
But
have we not heard this argument before? Ethnic studies and the
humanities have routinely been targeted for ridicule. Yet when
considered down for the count, they always seem to rise from the
ashes, turn a corner, and find themselves back on the road, riding
comfortably down the highway. Something tells me this time will be no
different. For one, rapidly changing racial, ethnic, and cultural
demographics in our nation will demand that such courses become
permanently etched into the fabric of the educational curriculum for
K–12 and beyond. Secondly, our increasingly global economy and
the world at large require such a situation to become the norm.
Ethnic studies are the epitome of resilience. I would not bet against
the discipline; such courses are more important now than ever.
|