Much of what I’ve learned about the intersection of American and 
African-American history, I’ve learned as an extracurricular activity. 
Whether it was the emergence of the formerly enslaved into positions as 
governor or members of Congress during Reconstruction, the backlash to 
that progress post-Reconstruction, or the heroism of scores of 
African-American soldiers who fought even as they were denied their 
basic rights as citizens, this history has been marginalized.

In much of academe, the saga of African-Americans’ enslavement and 
oppression is relegated to an undervalued major or electives. The 
struggle of black Americans against those who have long deemed them 
inferior — including U.S. presidents, the Supreme Court, and much of the 
academy — has been largely excised from our essential texts even as it 
informs the ways in which black Americans are still regarded today. This 
unexamined legacy of intolerance continues to express itself at even our 
most elite colleges, where meaningful dialogue about race has been 
avoided, if not disdained.

Well into the 20th century, leading universities, museums, scientific 
societies, and journals circulated studies purporting African 
inferiority, an idea at the heart of the nascent field of anthropology. 
In 1921 more than 300 delegates from around the world attended the 
Second International Congress of Eugenics, a pseudoscientific movement 
predicated on white supremacy. The influential congress was hosted by 
the American Museum of Natural History, in New York, with its president, 
Henry Fairfield Osborn — a leading paleontologist and a former dean at 
Columbia University — presiding. Among the notables in attendance were 
Herbert Hoover; Alexander Graham Bell; Gifford Pinchot, the 
conservationist and future governor of Pennsylvania; and Leonard Darwin, 
son of Charles Darwin.

For a significant part of the 20th century, most major American 
institutions — including New York University, where I teach — embraced 
assumptions that justified African-American exclusion. In 1927, nearly a 
century after NYU’s founding, the NAACP challenged the university’s 
discrimination against black students, who were denied access to 
dormitories and classes. In defense, in a statement to The New York 
Times, the university responded: "New York University reserves the right 
to use such discrimination in the selection of students for admission to 
dormitories, classes or courses as seems advisable to promote the 
interests of the greatest number." Two years later, NYU commanded 
national headlines for appeasing the University of Georgia’s demand that 
Dave Myers, a black star player for the football team, be benched for a 
game against Georgia.

Likewise, NYU’s home, in Greenwich Village — long considered a bastion 
of liberalism — had once been populated mostly by blacks until they were 
terrorized and run out by white mobs during the Civil War draft riots. 
Long after emancipation, the tools of oppression — legal and extralegal, 
North and South — were employed to keep blacks at the bottom of society. 
But this history, like most unpleasant racial narratives, usually goes 
unacknowledged while places like NYU and Greenwich Village are 
inaccurately regarded as longstanding citadels of inclusion. Few 
students are exposed to the depth and breadth of American racial 
intolerance or the academy’s complicity in it.

full: http://chronicle.com//article/Academe-Must-Confront-Its/234534
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