10/20/2009

The Final Word on Morehouse College.

RETHINKING THE CULTURE WARS AT MOREHOUSE COLLEGE
By Frank Roberts 
Written for The Washington Post/ TheRoot.Com


The conversation regarding the new dress-code policy at Morehouse College has been hijacked by a vociferous gang of socially conservative black pundits: some of them simply politically misguided, others merely proud homophobes; a few of them the ideological love-children of Ward Connerly and Bill Cosby. In the short week and a half since I became the first writer to report the news of Morehouse’s new policy, the college has become the subject of an intensifying national debate within Black Diasporic America regarding the role that style plays in producing (or constraining) black male substance.

By now, there is no need to explain what went “down” at Morehouse. You already know. But while you may have already heard the details of Morehouse’s new “no grills or purses” policy, it’s quite possible that you have yet to hear an impassioned defense of Grillz and Purses in the spirit of Morehouse’s most illustrious progenitors.

There are those who have argued that it is inappropriate to incite a national public dialogue about what’s happening at a private, independently funded college. Amidst the cacophonous roar of the blogosphere, we have heard comments in recent days such as “What goes on at Morehouse is a private affair between its students, alumni, and administrators. There is nothing illegal about a private school enforcing a dress code. Any student who is unhappy with the dress-code has the liberty to leave.”

These voices are misguided and unsophisticated. Morehouse College is much more than simply a “private institution,” it is a black cultural pillar. In other words, the institution we call “Morehouse” is quite similar to the institution we call “the Black Church.” One does not have to be a member of these institutions in order to be effected by what goes on within their walls. Given Morehouse’s stature as a historical pillar, all African American men (not just those who are students or alumni of the institution) have an ethical obligation to contribute to this national dialogue about the politics of the college’s policies—especially in instances where it promotes a climate of rampant anti-ghetto-culture- classism and femphobia.

The bourgeois classism and femphobia embedded in Morehouse’s policy are symptomatic of a stubborn refusal on behalf of African Americans to have open discussions about 1] the sizable presence of gay men within our community, including (and perhaps especially?) at institutions like Morehouse and 2] the continued popularity of black urban culture on the stylistic sensibilities of our black male youth. The idea that young black men on college campuses are so developmentally arrested that the only way that they can distinguish between what to wear in the classroom vs. what to wear in "corporate America" is by prohibiting them from wearing sagging jeans at all times, is not only absolutely ridiculous, it’s also quite racist. Young black men are all too familiar with having our cultural fashions and stylistics pathologized as deviant, criminal, or dysfunctional. It is thus painfully ironic that an administration such as Morehouse—run by and for black men—would promote a policy that implies that baggy jeans are a visual marker of anti-achievement.

Moreover, simply being a private college does not give Morehouse the ethical license to engage in fascist tactics. The vast majority of the nation’s top institutions (ranging from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to Yale University) do not depend on dress codes to “make sure” that their students are intelligent enough to deduce that walking into a medical school interview with Gold Teeth might not make for a stellar first-impression. Instead, these institutions realize that even in the most challenging of intellectual environments, students should be allowed to express themselves on campus freely, in whatever clothing suits their interests.

Turning Morehouse College into a playground of men with Cardigans and Brooks Brothers bow-ties will not substantively increase the institution’s rapidly declining graduation rates (at last check, only 64% of Morehouse Men graduate within six years). Nor will it help to reverse the college’s longstanding inability to attract superstar black faculty in the humanities or social sciences (I doubt that a new undergraduate ‘dress-code’ would be appealing to the likes of Bell Hooks or Cornel West). Nor will it beef up the resources that one would expect to find on the campus of a purportedly ‘elite’ college (such as better library holdings, laboratories, or facilities). So the question becomes: what’s really behind this decision?

Morehouse College is at crossroads, and it’s one that has nothing to do with cross-dressing. The institution is suffering from a financial and vision mismanagement crisis that threatens to rock the foundation of the college’s pedigree. The administration has failed repeatedly to substantively raise the college’s meek endowment (currently only at $117 million, a far cry from Spelman College’s $291 million and Howard’s comparatively colossal $490 million). Moreover, the administration has still not effectively come up with a strategy for raising the college’s national ranking (Both Spelman and Howard have recently ascended into U.S. News & World Report’s coveted “Tier 1” classification, while Morehouse lags behind in “Tier 3,” one rank above the lowest possible designation).

Thus the college’s decision to regulate the fashion trends of its undergrad student body is nothing short of a lazy attempt to shift the focus away from a failing administration that has had a less-than-stellar “job performance” in the crucial arenas of endowment, rank, and matriculation. The administration’s buffoonish emphasis on attire instead of actual academic achievement is perhaps precisely why the college finds itself in the unfortunate situation it has inherited. Prohibiting feminine clothing and “ghetto gear” is simply an easy way of refusing to get down to the more serious, knitty-gritty work of revitalizing Morehouse’s scholastic legacy.

Moreover, the sexual politics of Morehouse’s dress code not only sends out a disheartening message to the legions of feminine or gender non-comforting black boys who one day hope to attend “The House” (long ago, I was one of them), it also promulgates an openly hostile climate towards current students on Morehouse’s campus who have an alternative vision of what a “Morehouse man” actually looks like. The policy is not so much “homophobic” (indeed, many gay men do not wear women’s clothing, therefore it is unfair to assume that the policy is directed towards gay men at large) as much as it is “femphobic” (an attempt to vilify the subset of gay men who choose to express themselves in women’s clothing).

But perhaps most disturbingly, the new dress-code policy at Morehouse College is a stunning retrenchment of the prophetic vision once made famous by the institution’s most distinguished alumnus: Dr. Martin Luther King. It was Dr. King, of course, who prophesied the dawn of a political landscape where men would be judged first and foremost by the “content of their character” rather than by the superficial trappings of color (or, by extension, clothing). Morehouse’s dress code policy is nothing short of a reversal of the ethical sensibility of Dr. King, who warned us repeatedly about the ruse of the exterior (color, gender, etc.) over the more substantive interior (intelligence, character, integrity). Perhaps this administration might rethink its policy in relationship to the man who most Americans see as the true embodiment of the institution’s political promise.

As African American men, we all ‘belong’ to Morehouse College, and Morehouse belongs to us. Doing the work of transforming the politics of sexuality and class within the black community is no easy task. But perhaps the best place to begin is in the halls of our “House.”

View the full article here:

10/14/2009

Barkley L. Hendricks: Birth of the Cool

Before there was Kehinde Wiley, there was Barkley Hendricks. Ya' heard?



Barkley L. Hendricks: Birth of the Cool

Dates:
October 17, 2009 - January 3, 2010
Location:
Fisher Brooks Gallery, Samuel M. V. Hamilton Building

Description:
"PAFA is proud to present the first career retrospective of Barkley L. Hendricks, a Philadelphia native and PAFA alumnus.  Hendricks has received acclaim for his life-sized portraits of people of color.  Having come of age in the Civil Rights era and the Black is Beautiful movement, Hendricks created cool, empowering, and sometimes confrontational images that explore the complexity of black identity.  This exhibition of fifty-seven paintings has been heralded as one of the top ten exhibitions in New York in 2008.

During the course of the exhibition, Hendricks will present a public lecture and critique current students' work at PAFA.  The exhibition will be accompanied by an array of programs, including free programs every Sunday, a lecture by curator Trevor Schoonmaker, as well as a symposium, and will also partner for events with regional performing arts groups.

A major catalogue, with full-color illustrations and a series of incisive essays, is available for purchase at PAFA's store Portfolio.

The exhibition will extend PAFA's commitment to serving the African-American community, as evident in recent exhibitions of the Harold A. and Ann R. Sorgenti Collection of Contemporary African-American Art, Betye Saar, and Jacob Lawrence.

Curator:
Barkley L. Hendricks: Birth of the Cool originated at the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University in 2008, curated by Trevor Schoonmaker, and then traveled to the Studio Museum in Harlem and the Santa Monica Museum of Art. Following the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia, the exhibition concludes at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston (January 30 – April 18, 2010).
Julien Robson, Curator of Contemporary Art

Sponsors:
The exhibition is sponsored in part by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc., the National Endowment for the Arts, which believes that a great nation deserves great art, the Mary Duke Biddle Foundation, and the North Carolina Arts Council with funding from the State of North Carolina.
Funding for the tour of Barkley L. Hendricks: Birth of the Cool to the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts has been provided by The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage through the Philadelphia Exhibitions Initiative.

Additional support provided by an American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 grant through the National Endowment for the Arts, Mr. & Mrs. Harold Sorgenti, the Edna W. Andrade Fund of the Philadelphia Foundation, the Lomax Family Foundation, and StoneRidge Investment Partners, LLC.

For more visit. 


Media support provided by The Philadelphia Tribune."


Back on the road again...


Headed to beautiful Irvine, California for the annual Conference of Ford Fellows. Looking forward to meeting new scholar-friends, as well as catching up with some old ones. Excited to hear about all the amazing research being done by talented scholars of color.

To learn more about the Ford Foundation, visit here.

Enjoy the weekend.
www.frankrobertsonline.com

10/08/2009

Beyond the Trope of Black Masculine Respectability: Notes on Morehouse College's New Dress Code Policy

Beyond the Trope of Black Masculine Respectability:
Notes on Morehouse College's New Dress Code Policy


Written for The Daily Voice


Like many graduate students, I suffer from a serious “cant-get-any-work-done-in-my-apartment” syndrome. Try as I may, each time I sit down to write an article or dissertation chapter, I find myself having to venture out of my apartment and into a more open, public setting (libraries or cafes work well for me).

So there was nothing unusual about my decision today to pack up my laptop and head over to Morehouse College’s Jazzmen Café to work on my dissertation amidst a comfortable climate of Pumpkin Lattes and innocently-arrogant Kappa Alpha Psi undergraduates. At 6’clk, after I had managed to spend three hours working, I decided to grab a bite to eat at Morehouse’s Cafeteria.


As I paid my $6 Non-Morehouse student fee to enter the cafeteria, I was told that in order to enter  I would need to remove my red, fitted-baseball cap. “Uhm…ok” I thought to myself. It seemed a bit strange to me that baseball hats would be prohibited in a stinky, old cafeteria lounge, but hey, then again this was Morehouse College, an institution hell-bent on promoting images of black middle class respectability and propriety.


I didn’t think anything of the no-red-fitted-caps-in-the-cafeteria policy until I glanced over at a headline from the October 6th Issue of The Maroon Tiger (Morehouse’s 84 year old student newspaper). “Administration Announces New Attire Policy.”


Immediately, I dropped my spoon in the stale cafeteria macaroni.


The administration’s new policy (which goes into effect this month) is spear-headed by Morehouse’s new President, Dr. Robert Michael Franklin Jr.


Here is a verbatim copy of the policy. It's almost too-good to be true:


Morehouse College Appropriate Attire Policy
October 2009


It is our expectation that students who select Morehouse do so because of the College’s outstanding legacy of producing leaders. On the campus and at College-sponsored events and activities, students at Morehouse College will be expected to dress neatly and appropriately at all times.

Students who choose not to abide by this policy will be denied admission into class and various functions and services of the College if their manner of attire is inappropriate. Examples of inappropriate attire and/or appearance include but are not limited to:

  1. No caps, do-rags and/or hoods in classrooms, the cafeteria, or other indoor venues. This policy item does not apply to headgear considered as a part of religious or cultural dress. 
  2. Sun glasses or “shades” are not to be work in class or at formal programs, unless medical documentation is provided to support use. 
  3. Decorative orthodontic appliances (e.g. “grillz”) be they permanent or removable, shall not be worn on the campus or at College-sponsored events. 
  4. Jeans at major programs such as, Opening Convocation, Commencement, Founder’s Day or other programs dictating professional, business casual attire, semi-formal or formal attire. 
  5. Clothing with derogatory, offense and/or lewd messages either in words or pictures. 
  6. Top and bottom coverings should be work at all times. No bare feet in public venues. 
  7. No sagging—the wearing of one’s pants or shorts low enough to reveal undergarments or secondary layers of clothing. 
  8. Pajamas, shall not be worn while in public or in common areas of the College. 
  9. No wearing of clothing associated with women’s garb (dresses, tops, tunics, purses, pumps, etc.) on the Morehouse campus or at College-sponsored events. 
  10. Additional dress regulations may be imposed upon students participating in certain extracurricular activities that are sponsored or organized by the College (e.g. athletic teams, the band, Glee Club, etc). 
  11. The college reserves the right to modify this policy as deemed appropriate.
    *All administrative, faculty, students and support staff members are asked to assist in enforcing this policy and may report disregard or violations to the Office of Student Conduct. "

Wait a second: tell me this doesn't really say no “pumps” or “purses” at college sponsored events? And wait, are they really trying to ban gold grillz? What’s up Morehouse?

I must be missing something. Is there some kind of growing, critical mass of high-heel wearing, gold-toothed boys threatening to take over the campus? (if so, Big Ups).

Morehouse: I love you, but I’m going to need you to rethink this. Instead of prohibiting baggy jeans and non-normative gender attire, perhaps you might want to celebrate the fact that there is such a rich plurality of black styles and expressive self-fashionings found among Morehouse’s all-male population. And less we forget, Morehouse is still a liberal arts college, right? Whatever happened to the idea of letting young undergraduate men “find themselves”—even if that means letting them sag their jeans a little bit or even throwing on a little black nail polish every now and then.

I wonder if Dr. Franklin would have banned Afros and Jerry-Curls back in the 70s and 80s, had he been President of the College back then?

As an African American man who has deep sense of admiration for Morehouse’s legacy (confession: I was very close to choosing Morehouse over NYU for college), I’m disturbed. This “proper attire” policy not only obviously contains an egregiously heterosexist bias, it also contains a deeply problematic class-politics.

Let’s be real, Morehouse Pres: are we afraid that if these Morehouse boys wear baggy jeans, they might look a little too much like the local, poor community of the Castleberry section of Atlanta (where Morehouse is located)?

This is nuts. I was very proud of the college’s recent decision to fire an employee who sent out homophobic emails to Morehouse’s staff. Lets keep the ball rolling in that direction and not turn our backs on all those Durag-wearing, Timbs and Jeans rockin, Heels and Pumps-prone undergraduates we know you have all over your campus.

How do you feel about this? Am I just trippin'?

10/05/2009

Way out in Black Wonderland...


With today’s radio & television airwaves overwhelmed by an endless parade of monotonous Beyonce B-sides, chances are you’ve never seen or heard of Warner Brothers recording artist Shanelle Brown, aka Ms. Brown. Do me a favor boys and girls: turn up your laptop speaker, grab an L, and sit back and take in the vocals of this dope, 20 year old, Atlanta-based, Morgan State college drop-out.

A musical amalgamation of Jazmine Sullivan, Janelle Monae, and Alice Smith, Ms. Brown still manages to resist coming across as simply a prepackaged, manufactured, corporatized afro-punk ingenue. There’s something funky fresh about this woman that deserves attention, that demands a second and third listen.

Take for instance her debut single “Wonderland.” Pure afro-futuristic deliciousness, right? You’ll watch this video and find yourself struggling to figure out what the hell is going on visually. Is this an E-pill gone wrong? Perfect.

Afterwards, visit Ms. Brown on myspace (yeah, homegirl doesn’t have an “official” website yet) and listen to “Frivolous,” “You’re the World,” and “Suicide.” I guarantee you, you wont be disappointed.

Is this too good to be true? Or rather, why is it that all the truly good black artists are still only found underground?


Watch the video here.

10/01/2009

Headed to Virginia to speak at the NAACP...

NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund
Civil Rights Training Institute 2009
Airlie Conference
Warrenton, Virginia
September 30th to October 2nd, 2009


Panel:
“Advocating for Racial Justice in a ‘Post-Racial’ World”
view full conference schedule here.

Panelists:
Moderated by Charles Ogletree
(Professor of Law, Harvard Law School, Founding & Executive Director of
The Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice)

John Payton
(President and Director Counsel, NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund)

Barbara R. Arnwine (Executive Director, Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law)

Frank Leon Roberts
(Ford Foundation Dissertation Fellow, NYU; Visiting Scholar, Emory University)

Thomas A. Saenz (President, Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund)