Printer Friendly
The Free Library
19,607,059 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Before the revolution: Arthur C. Danto on the 1968 student revolt at Columbia University.


I OFTEN THOUGHT, in the years that followed the great student uprising at Columbia in late April 1968, of the singular political inventiveness that shaped the event. It defined the form student uprisings were to take on campuses all across the country, almost as if a script had been pasted together in the heat of social action that was reenacted, year after year, as a kind of political drama, adaptable to local circumstance but essentially the same. The occupation of university buildings, the list of nonnegotiable non·ne·go·tia·ble  
adj.
1. Difficult or impossible to settle by arbitration, mediation, or mutual concession: a nonnegotiable demand.

2. Nonmarketable.
 demands, the Ad Hoc For this purpose. Meaning "to this" in Latin, it refers to dealing with special situations as they occur rather than functions that are repeated on a regular basis. See ad hoc query and ad hoc mode.  Faculty Group, the Radical Caucus, the armbands and slogans--these became a kind of general-purpose protest kit. Living through it for the first time was another matter. It taught me what it was like to live in history, which consists in the sense that something momentous is taking place, without anyone's knowing how it is going to come out. The protest was an exercise in performative per·for·ma·tive  
adj.
Relating to or being an utterance that peforms an act or creates a state of affairs by the fact of its being uttered under appropriate or conventional circumstances, as a justice of the peace uttering
 improvisation.

My own feelings that spring were deeply engaged from the beginning. I and my peers on the Columbia faculty felt it our role to mediate between the student protesters and the administration. I had no particular love for the central administration of the university. It was cold, distant, and unresponsive unresponsive Neurology adjective Referring to a total lack of response to neurologic stimuli , especially in the person of its then-president, Grayson Kirk. But I believed that as a great university, Columbia exemplified the values with which I identified as a scholar and teacher--free inquiry, respect for knowledge and truth, intellectual openness, and, because of Columbia's situation in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, a certain cosmopolitan spirit. American universities had recently survived attacks from the Right, preeminently from McCarthy ism. The Free Speech Movement at Berkeley in 1964 was, in part, a response to that bit of history. Now there was an attack from the Left, different, to be sure, but no less hostile to the defining values most of us took for granted. Obviously, my university was not the university of the protesters, who saw it as complicit com·plic·it  
adj.
Associated with or participating in a questionable act or a crime; having complicity: newspapers complicit with the propaganda arm of a dictatorship.
 in racism and in the conduct of an unpopular war--a war that, of course, many on the faculty opposed, myself included. On the other hand, they were our students, and there were powerful bonds between us. But passions ruled the day, and there was little opportunity for rational debate, though in truth, the protesters, for all the vehemence of their rhetoric, were largely nonviolent. They were confrontational but--with several egregious e·gre·gious  
adj.
Conspicuously bad or offensive. See Synonyms at flagrant.



[From Latin
 exceptions, including holding a dean hostage for twenty-six hours--not physically coercive.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Even after the initial occupation of a classroom building on April 23, there was no real violence to speak of until, early in the morning of April 30, police brutalized the protesters as well as those on the faculty who interposed themselves in an effort to shield the students. By the end of the bust at least 150 people had suffered injuries. But as the drama was unfolding, there was no way of knowing when or whether violence would erupt, if not from the protesters, then from outside forces. In later years, the Years, The

the seven decades of Eleanor Pargiter’s life. [Br. Lit.: Benét, 1109]

See : Time
 Weather Underground--which counted several of these Columbia students among its number--would become more or less terrorist in its means. But in the week of the uprising there seemed a singular restraint on all sides. That is why President Kirk was condemned for breaking the spell and calling in the police. In truth, he would have done it earlier, but he was apprehensive of bringing in constituencies he could not control. When these fears faded, he yielded to trustee pressure, and the event was over, leaving a residue of bitterness and resentment in its wake--and, of course, the myths that history always leaves.

The uprising took everyone by surprise. The driving force was a kind of creative impulsiveness. On Tuesday, April 23, the day it all began, I was one of a group of faculty invited to have lunch with some prospective students that the admissions committee was anxious to recruit. A sort of omnibus demonstration had been announced--principally in opposition to disciplinary action against student leaders, defense contracting at the university, and the building of a new Columbia gym in Harlem. But in those days, at Columbia certainly, demonstrations were commonplace. I do remember an unusual number of leaflets up and down the staircases in Hamilton Hall
There is also a Hamilton Hall at Columbia University, see Hamilton Hall (Columbia University)


Hamilton Hall was a hall of residence for the University of St Andrews, Scotland, between the years of 1949 and 2006.
, Columbia College's main classroom building, where I had my office. Later that day, a large group of frustrated students, after a failed effort to invade the construction site of the contested gymnasium, returned to campus and occupied Hamilton's lobby. As if they wanted to turn this into an educational opportunity, one of the occupiers phoned me at home, asking me to come talk to them. They had also asked George R. Collins, an art historian, who had done research on Frederick Law Olmsted, the great designer of New York's park system, including Morningside Park, which was built into a rise between the Columbia campus and Harlem. It was there that the university was erecting its new gymnasium intended to serve both Columbia students and Harlem youths. The gym was a classic example of an idea that had seemed good at one moment but bad at another. Columbia people were to enter at campus level, Harlem people at the lower level. Because of the gym, the celebrated urbanist Jane Jacobs Noun 1. Jane Jacobs - United States writer and critic of urban planning (born in 1916)
Jacobs
 had singled Columbia out, in The Death and Life of Great American Cities (1961), as one of the few institutions that showed itself to be sensitive to the needs of the community. But in 1968, the two-tiered architecture seemed an intolerable symbol of segregation to everyone who thought about it.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

By the time I got to Hamilton, the students had taken a hostage--Henry S. ("Harry") Coleman, a former athlete, now acting dean of the college. It was a pretty wild scene. I climbed to the lobby's upper level and explained that I would talk about anything the students wished, but only if they released Dean Coleman Dean Coleman (born September 18 1985 in Dudley, England) is an English footballer, playing for Kidderminster Harriers.

Coleman began his career at Football League club Walsall in 2004, playing in two games during the 2004-05 season, before being released by the club in May
. Someone said that he could leave anytime he wanted. I went into Harry's office and asked him if he wanted to leave, and he said he did. When I communicated this to the students, some said that he was free to go, but one of them said that they were free to kick the shit out of him if they wanted. At that point, I tried to make a moral case against holding a person prisoner in this way. Somebody called out, "Should we take out our notebooks?" and I was howled down. As I left the building, I was told by several students that I didn't understand what was happening, that this was the revolution! Well, revolution was much in the air. How was I to know? How was anyone?

Early the next morning, the phone rang. Someone said, with great urgency, that I had to get over to campus immediately, that the black students had taken over Hamilton Hall. I asked what he thought I could do, and he answered: "Negotiate!" It was still pretty dark, and I remember seeing Mark Rudd, the leader of the Columbia chapter of Students for a Democratic Society Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), in U.S. history, a radical student organization of the 1960s. In the influential Port Huron (Mich.) Statement (1962), the organization, founded in 1960, presented its vision for post–Vietnam War America and called for  (SDS 1. (company) SDS - Scientific Data Systems.
2. (tool) SDS - Schema Definition Set.
), loping across the campus. He was heading toward Low Library--the university administration building, home to the president's office--which I was shortly to find had been occupied by the white students who had been thrown out of Hamilton. "Are the blacks still in Hamilton?" I asked. Rudd answered, "I wish I were in there with them!" From that point on, the event becomes a blur to me. I remember a meeting at Lionel Trilling's apartment, the gist of which was, What could we do to save the university? That was the first meeting of what came to be the Ad Hoc Faculty Group, which met throughout the crisis in the Graduate Students' Lounge in Philosophy Hall. Living in history has, in retrospect, something of the form of a partially restored mural, in which irregular islands of painted incident are all that remain, set into a wall of blank white plaster. There is no better example of what I mean than Fabrizio's disconnected battlefield experiences, in Stendhal's Charterhouse Charterhouse [Fr.,=Chartreuse], in London, England, once a Carthusian monastery (founded 1371), later a hospital for old men and then a school for boys, endowed in 1611. The school, which became a large public school, was removed (1872) to Godalming, Surrey. W. M.  of Parma, in what he afterward learns was the Battle of Waterloo.

What I did learn from the meetings of the Ad Hoc Faculty Group was how such groups move in increasingly radical directions. It was like it must have been in the French Revolution. Initially, you have moderates making impassioned but rational speeches to one another. But then the Jacobins move in and discourse takes a more and more vehement tone. At Columbia in 1968, at least, this phenomenon was the consequence of external uncertainties. First there was the critical question of what Harlem was going to do, now that the SAS--the Society of Afro-American Students--was in possession of Hamilton Hall. It has to be remembered that there had been no full-fledged rioting in Harlem after Martin Luther King's assassination Assassination
See also Murder.

assassins

Fanatical Moslem sect that smoked hashish and murdered Crusaders (11th—12th centuries). [Islamic Hist.: Brewer Note-Book, 52]

Brutus

conspirator and assassin of Julius Caesar. [Br.
 earlier that month. Mayor John Lindsay This article is about the American politician. For other people of this name, see John Lindsay (disambiguation).
John Vliet Lindsay (November 24, 1921 – December 19, 2000) was an American liberal politician who served as a member of the United States House of
 had gone uptown after King's death and managed, with the help of black politicians, to keep the peace there, when ghettos all over America were exploding in anger and frustration. Looking up from Harlem, Columbia's buildings on Morningside Heights must have seemed like the embodiment of white power. Dire rumors swept the campus. Friday was payday in Harlem! Alienated blacks were going to swarm up through Morningside Park to join their brothers in Hamilton Hall! The university was going to go up in flames! Not a building would be left standing!

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

By that time I was more or less living on campus, sleeping on the floor, when I was not participating in one or another meeting devoted to the issue of negotiation. For a while I worked as faculty spokesman on WKCR, the university's radio station, about the status of things. I found out about the actual state of negotiations from Paul Starr Paul Starr (born May 12, 1949) is a Pulitzer Prize-winning professor of sociology and public affairs at Princeton University. He is also the co-editor (with Robert Kuttner) and co-founder (with Robert Kuttner and Robert Reich) of The American Prospect , a reporter for the Columbia Spectator, the Spectator, The

Daily periodical published in London by Richard Steele and Joseph Addison from March 1, 1711, to Dec. 6, 1712, and revived by Addison in 1714 (for 80 issues). It succeeded The Tatler, launched by Steele in 1709.
 student newspaper, who has since become a prominent sociologist. I had the sense that the negotiations were getting nowhere. The students saw themselves as living the life of guerrillas in Oriente Province in Cuba. They now occupied five buildings and could have occupied others. The administration had no intention of meeting their demands.

Friday night came. At some point there was a huge ruckus outside. I ran out of Philosophy Hall with a fellow veteran, the medievalist me·di·e·val·ist also me·di·ae·val·ist  
n.
1. A specialist in the study of the Middle Ages.

2. A connoisseur of medieval culture.


medievalist
1.
 James Walsh James Walsh can refer to the following:
  • James T. Walsh, American politician from New York State, serving in the U.S. House of Representatives
  • James J. Walsh (New York), American politician from New York State, serving in the U.S.
. A great crowd had gathered along College Walk, where a flatbed truck A flatbed truck is a type of truck which can be either articulated or rigid. It has an entirely flat, level body with absolutely no sides or roof. This allows for quick and easy loading of goods, and consequently they are used to transport heavy loads that are not delicate or  was parked. There was Charles 37X Kenyatta, formerly Malcolm X's bodyguard, dressed in an African garment. He was with a group of followers, playing music. He was beaming. He had clearly come with benign intentions. It was like a dream. In the end, Harlem did not take a lot of interest in events on the Heights. When it came to racism, everyone who feared Harlem had some dose of it. The fear that the university would be blown up vanished with the dawn.

One day I left the campus to see a friend's show at a gallery on the East Side. As I was about to cross Broadway, I was stunned stun  
tr.v. stunned, stun·ning, stuns
1. To daze or render senseless, by or as if by a blow.

2. To overwhelm or daze with a loud noise.

3.
 to see that people were going about their normal business. The students were wrong. This wasn't the revolution. There was no revolution. That was confirmed on Saturday, April 27. An immense antiwar an·ti·war  
adj.
Opposed to war or to a particular war: antiwar protests; an antiwar candidate. 
 demonstration had been scheduled to take place in Central Park. Surely, it was felt, the demonstrators would end the meeting by marching up to Columbia, to celebrate with the protesters. As with Harlem, nothing happened. People were no doubt interested, and without question outsiders had come to be part of the Columbia protest. But for the most part the uprising was restricted to the campus itself. It was less and less "the revolution" the students believed and hoped it was. Told that the police would be coming at any time now, I thought I had heard enough rumors. So I missed the bust, in which so many of the seven hundred students who were carted away to the courts downtown--together with many of their supporters--became genuinely radicalized. The following morning, walking onto the campus, there was a terrible feeling that one's country had been invaded. There were police everywhere, and the debris of battle. The president, who had ordered the police to clear the buildings, had disgraced himself. He did not preside pre·side  
intr.v. pre·sid·ed, pre·sid·ing, pre·sides
1. To hold the position of authority; act as chairperson or president.

2. To possess or exercise authority or control.

3.
 at commencement. For the first time in memory, someone other than the university's president gave the commencement address. The graduation ceremonies took place in the nearby Cathedral of Saint John Saint John, city, Canada
Saint John, city (1991 pop. 74,969), S N.B., Canada, at the mouth of the St. John River on the Bay of Fundy. A major year-round port, it has an excellent harbor, large dry docks, and terminal facilities and maintains extensive
 the Divine rather than on the campus, where they were traditionally held. Many graduates walked out, to join a "countercommencement" on campus. Soon after, President Kirk resigned.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

I have a kind of theory that when great social changes are about to take place, something happens in the arts first--think of Romanticism and the French Revolution, or of the Russian avant-garde The Russian avant-garde is an umbrella term used to define the large, influential wave of modern art that flourished in Russia from approximately 1890 to 1930 - although some place its beginning as early as 1850 and its end as late as 1960.  in the years 1905 to 1915 and of Aleksandr Rodchenko's slogan "Art into life!" That was close to the motto of Fluxus, led by students in John Cage's seminar in experimental composition at the New School in New York. Cage himself was an auditor in D. T. Suzuki's seminar on Zen Buddhism Zen Buddhism, Buddhist sect of China and Japan. The name of the sect (Chin. Ch'an, Jap. Zen) derives from the Sanskrit dhyana [meditation].  at Columbia. Marcel Duchamp Noun 1. Marcel Duchamp - French artist who immigrated to the United States; a leader in the dada movement in New York City; was first to exhibit commonplace objects as art (1887-1968)
Duchamp
 had become an intellectual force through Cage and through the publication of Robert Lebel's study of Duchamp's thought and practice. The students at Columbia in April 1968 believed in some version of the SDS idea that they should participate in the decisions that affected their lives, hence in breaking down the barriers that confined them to what Kant, in his essay "What Is Enlightenment?" called their "nonage Infancy or minority; lack of requisite legal age.

Nonage entails various contractual disabilities and is a ground for Annulment in some jurisdictions. Cross-references

Infants.
."

Columbia students as a whole back then had little interest in advanced art as such. I remember them booing even the Velvet Underground when the band visited campus, along with a showing of Andy Warhol's Blow Job. But the spirit of overcoming boundaries was now part of the culture--and in a sense the protest was a work of artistic imagination. I thought the event extraordinary, as the fact that it was so widely imitated proved. I was really proud of what my university had produced. One day, after the events of April, as I was walking with my colleague the logician Charles Parsons Charles Parsons may refer to:
  • Charles Algernon Parsons (1854–1931), an British engineer known for his invention of the steam turbine.
  • Charles Parsons, Professor in the philosophy of mathematics at Harvard University.
, he said, "For me, the question was never who was to the right and who was to the left, but who was here and who stayed home." Academic men and women can be obsessed ob·sess  
v. ob·sessed, ob·sess·ing, ob·sess·es

v.tr.
To preoccupy the mind of excessively.

v.intr.
 with their text of Pindar, their Uzbek grammar, their monograph on reduction sentences, their history of microscopy. Still, it is the university that guarantees the security they need to undertake these pursuits. Knowledge has to be defended the way the society we want has to be. The faculty in 1968 had to defend the university, and to defend its students. Some boundaries have to be respected. And this point is very much of the moment, as we Americans have been living some seven years under a conservative administration that has tried to erase moral boundaries that once defined us as a nation.

In the aftermath of '68, students at Columbia (and elsewhere) did begin to participate in decision making. They served on committees and in the newly formed university senate. The Morningside Park gym was abandoned (a different one, within campus boundaries, was built instead) and the university disaffiliated with the Institute for Defense Analyses The Institute for Defense Analyses (IDA) runs three federally funded research and development centers (FFRDCs) focusing on defense and scientific issues. Centers
The IDA Studies and Analyses FFRDC is co-located with IDA headquarters in Alexandria, Virginia.
, effectively ending defense-related research at Columbia. But it is difficult to believe that this was what believing in "the revolution" amounted to. The protest was probably, at heart, a deflected effort to stop the war in Vietnam, but there was more to it than that, since student protest became a world phenomenon. There was a shared vision of a freer society, more just and more fulfilling. Shortly after commencement, I flew to Paris with my family, right in time to experience les evenements de mai. I had a free tutorial that spring and summer in student uprisings, which were sweeping the globe. But the deep changes took place in America, where boundary after boundary dissolved. The summer of 1964 had been the Summer of Freedom, when brave white men and women went south to help brave black men and women claim their civil rights. One major cultural change that came from the Columbia uprising was the emergence of radical feminism Radical feminism is a "current"[1] within feminism that focuses on patriarchy as a system of power that organizes society into a complex of relationships producing a "male supremacy"[1] that oppresses women. . The Columbia protesters were by no means feminists. Female protesters in the buildings were treated like subordinates by the males, reflecting the pattern of the times. Ti-Grace Atkinson Ti-Grace Atkinson (born 9 November 1938, Baton Rouge, Louisiana as Grace Atkinson) is an American feminist author.[1]

Atkinson was born into a prominent Louisiana family. From 1956 until 1961 she was married to a high-school boyfriend.
, a graduate student in philosophy, but also president of the New York chapter of NOW--and a defender of Valerie Solanas Valerie Jean Solanas (April 9, 1936 – April 26, 1988) was an American radical feminist writer best known for shooting the artist Andy Warhol in 1968. She wrote the SCUM Manifesto, an essay on patriarchal culture advocating the creation of an all-female society. , Warhol's assailant!--began to define a new and more aggressive feminist agenda, just as Black Power had emerged among the blacks. The spirit of liberation was irresistible. With the Stonewall riots Stonewall riots

(June 28, 1969) Series of violent confrontations between police and gay rights activists in New York City. In response to the second raid in a week by police on the Stonewall Inn, a popular gay bar in Greenwich Village that had been selling liquor without a
 in 1969, the oppression of gays was confronted and began to give way. And, of course, resistance to the war in Vietnam ultimately prevailed. A famous graffito graffito (gräf-fē`tō).

1 Method of ornamenting architectural plaster surfaces. The designs are produced by scratching a topcoat of plaster to reveal an undercoat of contrasting and deeper color.
 in Paris expressed the true spirit of that decade: l'imagination au pouvoir. Aesthetics, for once, changed the way we all lived. Gradually, afterward, I think we all started to see life in new ways. At least I did.

ARTHUR C. DANTO IS A CONTRIBUTING EDITOR A contributing editor is a magazine job title that varies in responsibilities. Most often, a contributing editor is a freelancer who has proven ability and readership draw.  OF ARTFORUM.
COPYRIGHT 2008 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Danto, Arthur C.
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 1, 2008
Words:2876
Previous Article:Repetition compulsion: Amy Taubin on the films of James Nares.
Next Article:Formal proof: Ti-Grace Atkinson on the art in logic.
Topics:

Terms of use | Copyright © 2012 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles