Contradictions: An African-American View of Aggieland
Transcription
Contradictions: An African-American View of Aggieland
CITE Spring 41 1331 13 CONTRADICTIONS AN AFRICAN-AMERICAN VIEW OF AGGIELAND C L V H M M Had. Prairie View A I M University, S. I. M o n i t A i t i x i a l n and W. Norm Moslcy Assoriotes, onhitetts, 1976. If A&M is to be a w o r l d - c l a s s university, then some aspects of r e g i o n a l i s m must be dispensed middle-class African-American with a doctoral education in the history of architecture give me a different perspective. It is not that I perceive the quantitative and qualitative characteristics of space differently, but in my analysis of architecture the sociological aspects of space and power are questioned, and conventions are not taken for granted. * Anderson Hall, Prairie View A&M University, Louis Edwin Fry, arihilcrt. / WKSI.KY H. HENDERSON with. F l rom a distance, the sight of Texas A & M University is awe inspiring. | Tall skyscrapers rise above the trees, .1 massive football stadium rides like an ocean liner on the prairie, stout and sturdy square buildings cluster together. At a closer view, there are immense lawns, tree-lined vistas along roads, and manicured flower beds. This is what the majority of people see, and, indeed, that image is cultivated and intentional. Yet, as a minority person, I see things differently. My views cannot speak tor every AfricanAmerican, but my life experiences as a lis.is \ \ \ 1 is a sei ol secminglj con tradictory concepts that students, faculty, and administrators try to resolve into a synthetic whole. For example, A & M is a land-grant college established in a rural setting, yet it feels somewhat urban. Student-,, faculty, staff, and other pedestrians mill about on plazas and walks, especially hi the precincts in which vehicles ate restricted. A & M is Texas's oldest statesupported university, and one feels this at the core of the campus, yet its edges have new buildings. Images rich in tradition, history, and ok) power vie with images of new power, sophisticated technology, and new research facilities. I hesitate to call this progress, because in this mix the personalized and customized compete with the large, bland, and impersonal in setting an overall ambiance, and there is no clear dominance. Also there are many agencies, the state agriculture extension and school of veterinary medicine for example, that are not focused cm teaching undergraduates but draw many outside visitors to campus. I'hcse agencies have a strong visual presence, not just because of their CITE 14 i i hers nt iIK- c o m m i i i u u recognize these pie. 1 also w o n d e r w h o the first female c o n t r a d i c t i o n s , a n d in the case o f B o n f i r e student was? W i l l she receive some sort have p r o p o s e d tree p l u m i n g ; as a n a m e l i o - o f s p a t i al c o m m e m o r a t i o n ? r a t i o n . I lere is an i m p o r t a n t n e w t r e n d . W h i l e m a n y students d o n o t necessarily I c a n n o t recall any b u i l d i n g s m i o r near the c a m p u s t h a i were designed by belong to the ecology movement, there is A f r i c a n - A m e r i c a n architects , b u t in H o u s - a g r o w i n g awareness o f the i m p o r t a n c e of t o n , D a l l a s, San A n t o n i o , a n d A u s t i n the n a t u r a l e n v i r o n m e n t . M o r e c o n - there are such b u i l d i n g s w e l l k n o w n t o t e n t i o n s battles w i l l c o m e o v e r a n i m a l the local c o m m u n i t y . I c a n n o t recall any experimentation and human fetal experi A 6 c M African-American architecture m e n t a t i o n . Ideally, o l d t r a d i t i o n s d o n ' t graduates w h o c o u l d realistically c o m p e t e have h> end. Inn new ones are needed thai f o r c a m p u s c o m m i s s i o n s against the large can reach o u t t o m i n o r i t i e s , w o m e n , a n d m a j o r i t y f i r m s . H o w e v e r , some n o t a b l e f o r e i g n students. I have s e l d o m seen m e m - A f r i c a n - A m e r i c a n graduates o f o t h e r u n i - bers o f m i n o r i t y g r o u p s p a r t i c i p a t e i n versities in Texas have o b t a i n e d c o m m i s - events at w h i c h the intent is t o b u i l d c a m - sions o n campuses of t h e i r a l m a maters. pus unity. It is f u r t h e r u n l i k e l y that a n o n - A g g i e , M o s t o f the A f r i c a n - A m e r i c a n people I see o n c a m p u s are s u p p o r t statf members A f r i c a n - A m e r i c a n a r c h i t e c t w i l l get a c o m m i s s i o n , but there .ire plenty o f g r a d - such as m a i n t e n a n c e , j a n i t o r i a l , c u s t o d i a l , uate architects f r o m A c v M ' s sisier system a n d f o o d service w o r k e r s , w h o wear u n i - school at Prairie V i e w w h o c o u l d c e r t a i n - li n nis that s y m b o l i c a l l y obscure their ly c o m p e t e for c o m m i s s i o n s o n the m a m i n d i v i d u a l i d e n t i t y . O c c a s i o n a l l y , however, c a m p u s . A logical s o l u t i o n at this p o i n t an a t h l e t i c - l o o k i n g A f r i c a n - A m e r i c a n stu- w o u l d he t o encourage m a j o r i t y a n d dent passes by. b o t h sets o l people arc m i n o r i t y architects t o design join t venture invisible u n t i l they are needed. O n e per- campus projects. son m a u n i f o r m changes ligh t b u l b s . A n o t h e r p e r s o n , also in a u n i f o r m , T i n s leads t o a q u e s t i o n m a n y ask: Is Prairie V i e w A t f c M U n i v e r s i t y p a r t o f becomes .1 g l a d i a t o r t o d o battle w i t h Aggieland? N o , h ut the t w o are d e f i n i t e l y a n o t h e r school's g l a d i a t o r s o n the c o o n tied together by h i s t o r y a n d a d m i n i s t r a - o r field. W h a t is missing at I e \ a s t i o n . W h e n the A g r i c u l t u r a l a n d M e d i a n - A\'M Toai AIM Uninisity, Cwpt ballalton h front »f the John K. William* Admiimlration Building. The u l t i m a t e c o n t r a d i c t i o n is t h a t A g g i e l a n d is changing buildings, but because of the logos on their ubiquitous vehicles. Many European-American students anyway. al friends are negative a b o u t the C o r p s , I is average African-American students. The ical College o l Texas was f o u n d e d in C o l - note that the m i l i t a r y is one o r g a n i z a t i o n subtle message o n c a m p u s is t h a t i f y o u lege Station w i t h federal l a n d - g r a nt b i n d s where A l r i c a n American s have done w e l l . are n o t an athletic superstar o r a s u p p o r t i n I X7f>, the e d u c a t i o n o f new K freed easily a n d u n c r i t i c a l l y accept these c a m - I'erhaps this friendliness is due t o edict p e r s o n, there's n o o b v i o u s role t o r y o u slaves w a s a c o n c e r n . In a c c o r d w i t h the pus c o n t r a d i c t i o n s as the m a n d a t e a n d and d i s c i p l i n e , but it sets an a m i a b l e a m i n o place t o just he yourself. separate-but-equal p o l i c y o f the d a y , legacy o f h i s t o r y a n d t r a d i t i o n . O f course, tone. Despite the conservativ e dress a n d I he concept o f v i s i b i l i t y has a h i s t o r i - I'rairii \ lew [ u u t i a l b called Alia Vista A g r i c u l t u r a l College] was established for some m i n o r i t y students a n d f a c u l t y m e m - lifestyles o f must students, there are rela- cal d i m e n s i o n . W h i l e statues a n d m c m o r i bers, i n c l u d i n g myself, also come t o tively few rebel flags i n sight in c o m p a r i - als to European-American male alumni A f r i c a n - A m e r i c a n s the same year. Even accept the o l d - l i n e A W I t r a d i t i o n s , b u t son t o o t h e r Souther n campuses I have are visible t h r o u g h o u t the c a m p u s , n o 1 h o u g h it w a s n o t u n t i l 1947 t h a i the they d o so at a psychologica l price. W h y visited. M y theory is that m a n y students s i m i l a r r e c o g n i t i o n exists for A f r i c a n - school o f f i c i a l l y became p a r t o f the I ex,is is ihis acceptance an issue? T r a d i t i o n s are here are f r o m r u r a l a n d s m a l l - t o w n areas A m e r i c a n s at A t f c M . Perhaps this is a task A & M system, it has, 111 practice, been i m p o r t a n t at A & M , a n d m a n y of t h e m a n d wear t h e i r usual a t t i r e — jeans a n d f o r an A f r i c a n - A m e r i c a n o r g a n i z a t i o n , b u t part o f the system all a l o n g . T h e separate- began l o n g before A f r i c a n - A m e r i c a n s stu- w o r k shirts — a n d thus have less need t o some c o m m e m o r a t i o n o f the A f r i c a n - dents were legally a l l o w e d t o e n r o l l . T o m a n u f a c t u r e a s y m b o l i c tie to the r o m a n - A m e r i c a n presence o n c a m p u s s h o u l d be some, p e r p e t u a t i o n o f t r a d i t i o n s is equat - ticized O l d S o u t h . M o s t o f the C o n f e d e r - o b v i o u s t o casual a n d f i r s t - t i m e visitors. ed w i t h r e t a i n i n g o t h e r values o l those ate flags I see are o n the T-shirts o f Frater- W h o w a s the first A f r i c a n - A m e r i c a n stu- limes in regard t o race. I lence, a presnp nity members w h o l o o k affluent a n d f r o m dent at A & M ? W h o w a s a n o t a b l e p o s i t i o n a b o u t A S c M is t h a t racial p r e j u - s u b u r b a n areas. A n d yes, there are < <MI A f r i c a n - A m e r i c a n athlete? O t h e r u n i v e r s i - A&M dice is r a m p a n t a n d i n g r a i n e d , but that is lederate Hags o n p i c k u p t r u c k s a r o u n d ties, even in the S o u t h , have taken steps to sinipl 1stu a n d not c o m p l e t e l y accurate. It t o w n t o o . It A c x ' M is t o be .1 w o r l d J.iss recognize a c c o m p l i s h e d A f r i c a n - A m e r i c a n is a f r i e n d l y c a m p u s . L o t s o l people speak university, then some aspects o f r e g i o n a l - a l u m n i : James M e r e d i t h .11 Ok- M i s s , t o me as I w a l k a r o u n d c a m p u s , especially ism must be dispensed w i t h . t l i . i i l a y n e I l u n t e r - C a u l t at the U n i v e r s i t j members o f the C o r p s o f Cadets. A l t h o u g h some o f m y Caucasian liber- This c o n u n d r u m comes u p w i t h such Aggie t r a d i t i o n s as B o n f i r e . Astut e m e m - o f G e o r g i a , a n d O . |. Simpson at the U n i versity o f S o u t h e r n C a l i f o r n i a , f o r e x a m b u t - e q u a l strategy m i g h t have w o r k e d it equal facilities had actualK been p r o v i d e d , h u t the concept w a s h y p o c r i t i c a l l y a n d even c y n i c a l l y i m p l e m e n t e d , f a c i l i t i e s were never equal a n d never meant to be. N o w , the idea o f a system is a n a d m i n i s t r a t i v e f i c t i o n . Prairie V i e w receives few, if any, benefits f r o m being p a r t o l the A & M System. |-"or e x a m p l e , in the academ i c a r c h i t e c t u r a l r e a l m , there is n o formalized exchange o f faculty, resources, students, o r guest lecturers. Students a n d CITE 41 faculty at the main campus are only dimly aware ol Prairie View and probably have never been there. Faculty and students at Prairie View are afraid of being absorbed by A & M and then not treated well. The credibility of A & M system officials with Prairie View people is minimal due to years of neglect. This is sad, because both architecture programs are good ones, but they have different areas of strength, Both would be stronger with a cooperative, complementary strategy. But in terms of architecture, the two campuses share much, especially at their older cores. Both campuses have BeauxArts and Art Dcco buildings that have been neglected. Both went through building booms in the r ' s l K , 1960s, and l l '~(k, and new construction at the outer edges ol each campus during the I'JNOs and 1990s has not been well integrated with the rest of the campus. Both campuses have parking and traffic problems, even though each has large amounts of land, and new Rightist- buildings are exacerbating parking shortages. Although A & M has regarded its stewardship as benevolent, it has also been paternalistic. Even though some of the pre- I'J.sll buildings were designed and built by African-Americans, the system chose majority architects during the building boom that lasted from the 1950s to the |y~IK. lh.it was a sore point with Prairie View graduates and contributed to the erosion ol trust in the A & M system. Contemporary buildings by African-American architects at Prairie View did not come until Wilhclmiiu Dclco, a Prairie View alumna, obtained access for Prairie View in 1l'S4 to the oil-rich Permanent University Fund, which since the 1930s have financed extensive building programs at both Texas A & M University and the University of Texas. It is practically impossible to ascribe differences in a building's design to the ethnicity of the architect; architectural students m the United States have pretty much [lie same education, \lthough Prairie View buildings appear, like those II i ollege Station, tequisitely institutional, they are used slightly differently from those at A & M . Ar Prairie View there is more of a communal sense in dormlounges and a different sensibility about background music. Too, the colors are stronger. The landscape at Prairie View is also subtly altered. Outdoor plazas are used for Creek Step Shows, and fraternity members gather ar specific painted trees, artisricall) individualized for their fraternity. African-American architects may be more sensitive to these ust patterns. Some points follow this logic, but they are contentious: Would Prairie View be a better environment if more buildings were designed by African-Americans? Rather than try to answer that question, my ideal solution here would be the same strategy proposed lor the A & M main campus: more majority and minority firms should undertake projects as joint ventures. Another, more obvious question is. Why not merge Prairie View and A & M ? Prom A & M ' s viewpoint, a merger would be benelici.il, long-term demographic trends do not favor A & M . In the past, the typical A & M student has been a white male from a rural area or small town. Although some small towns arc growing, most population growth in Texas is now in the suburbs of the larger cities. These suburban students are not quite the same as those Irom more homo geneous farm towns; they are a more diverse group, and they have different college expectations. Current enrollments in Texas elementary and secondary schools show that minority college students will soon be die majority. Can A & M as it currently exists attract them? Probably not. In the I'WOs other Texas universities are attracting higher percentages ol minorities in their freshman classes than Texas A & M is.' Why? For one thing, compared to the Prairie View campus, the main A & M ( ollege Station campus seems cold and iiiiperson.il and does not provide a supportive network lor an average AlricanAmerican. A few individuals with strong constitutions can take it and make it, but evidence ol African-American and even Latino culture is not visible on campus. Musi, il not all, responsible officials at A & M genuinely want more minoriu students. But again, contradiction arises. Administrators and many EuropeanAmerican students at A & M might have a hard time dealing with a large number of African-Americans. These students would make up a diverse group, but there would surely be an attempt to treat this group in a monolithic way, inevitably leading to awkward situations. Several scenarios are possible: African-American students would be spread all over the campus, negating the possibility ol an effective support network. Or they would cluster, potentially creating a small ghetto or series of ghettoes. An ideal cluster might consist of African-Americans from rural areas and small towns, but that proportion ol people is shrinking faster than the S p iin • percentage of small-town EuropeanAmericans. Another cluster could consist of cultural nationalists, but problems associated with such a group are exemplified by what happened in Jester dormitory at the University of Texas, where a lounge was renamed the Malcolm X Lounge, and photos of radical and controversial African-American leaders lined the walls. Non-African-American students felt uncomfortable there. The most problematic duster might be an enclave of hip hop, urban rap culture. Conservative A & M now just barely tolerates such a cluster for its athletes, and this presents another contradiction. A predictable misunderstanding occurred ar a January party sponsored by an African-American organization. The party got our ol hand, and it was described as a "riot" in the campus newspaper.- The result of such an overreaction is that African-Americans vote with their feet and go to Prairie View, where such parties are routinely handled with much less fanfare. If Prairie View closed any rime in the near future, African-American students, those both brilliant and marginal, would be the losers, But is it possible for A & M ' s officials to devise another, more satisfactory SCO nario that will work? In the l l 'f>(K the \ & \ l president, |. I ail Kudder, realized that A & M must change. He steered the university in a radically different direction, admitting women and making military studies optional. Enrollment grew, and new buildings rose, if Texas A & M today is compared to Virginia Military Institute or The Citadel, it is clear that Rudder helped A & M ease into the inevitable. A comparable caliber of leadership and vision is now needed to recruit and educate members ol minority groups. It would be immensely helpful il a young African-American alumnus could be identified to serve as a role model for potential African-American students. Such a person would need to have a comfortable media presence and be able to work with politicians and state legislators to keep funds flowing. Lastly, many people equate Aggieland with the whole Bryan College Station area. But I do not, Aggieland is a conceptual space as well as a physical one that exists in the minds ol students, faculty, M.ill. and community members. \ n inch cator of where Aggieland really is can be found on business and shop signs. Near the campus, references to Aggies abound. but on the north side of Bryan, a predominantly African-American area, you see T 99 8 none of this. To a European-American student who stays mostly around campus, the north side of Bryan is pretty much invisible. Equally invisible are the African-American neighborhoods ol Park Place and Eleanor Street in t ollege Si ition. Aggieland is physically awesome. But not everyone understands the diversity of ways in which this physical setting is perceived and used. Is that a problem? N o , for the majority; yes, for the minority. There are no easy solutions for alternative modes of the social construction of space. Most residents ol Aggieland proKihlv do not want it to change and would actively resist rapid or extreme change. The ultimate contradiction is that Aggieland is changing anyway, but in seemingly gradual and unplanned ways, in reality, the changes are not so gradual and would be far more successful if managed. But who could manage fairly. .^\u\ what mandates would new leadership need? Leaders must actively foster diversity and inclusion. Such a position is not politically popular at the moment, but the coaxing of public awareness should be a goal. Architects, via their architecture, have an opportunity and a responsibility to help bring about a more inclusive, less regional environment in which both Prairie View and Texas A & M can be considered worldclass institutions. • 1. Klin Schmidt, "VandiviT Unveils Minority Plan," Ww Battalion, [anuary 20, 1983, and Courtni'v Walker, "I as I ban i lull <>i Accepted Minorities Enroll," Tbt Battalion, October 4, I''1'!'. See abo "Minorities,* vertical file-, U-XJS A&M I'rmrrsm Archive*, i mains. 1 il>r.in 2.1.ymkiv Naiux, *< unpin Disturbance Prompts Mi-i-niitu" rite Rjit.ilion. huuiary to. I^S. Robert Smith. "Task him- to t nick Down on Party Guide Inn-.." Tht Battalion, February 1, ll<m. 15