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- <text id=91TT0885>
- <title>
- Apr. 22, 1991: Interview:Henry Louis Gates Jr.
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Apr. 22, 1991 Nancy Reagan:Is She THAT Bad?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- INTERVIEW, Page 16
- A "Race Man" Argues for a Broader Curriculum
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>HENRY LOUIS GATES JR. wants W.E.B. Dubois, Wole Soyinka and
- Phillis Wheatley on the nation's reading lists, as well as Western
- classics like Milton and Shakespeare
- </p>
- <p>By Breena Clarke and Susan Tifft/Durham and Henry Louis Gates Jr.
- </p>
- <p> Q. You advocate something you call a multicultural
- curriculum in American education. What does that mean?
- </p>
- <p> A. What I advocate is a more truly diverse notion of
- excellence. What we've done is exclude the best that's been
- thought by everybody but this slender sliver of people who
- happen in the main to be white males.
- </p>
- <p> Now, I wouldn't want to get rid of anything in that
- tradition. I think the Western tradition has been a marvelous,
- wonderful tradition. But it's not the only tradition full of
- great ideas. And I'm not talking about any diminishment of
- standards. Even by the most conservative notion of what is good
- and bad, we will find excellence in other cultures, like the
- great Indian cultures, the great Chinese cultures, the great
- African cultures.
- </p>
- <p> But this notion of calling a regional Anglo-American
- culture the world's only great culture was a mechanism of
- social, economic and political control. We have to expose that,
- critique it and move on, because it's a new world. We can either
- be rooted in the 19th century or we can blast off to a whole new
- millennium.
- </p>
- <p> Q. You describe yourself as a "race man." What is that?
- </p>
- <p> A. In the black tradition it's like being a Talmudic
- scholar, a person of letters who writes about African-American
- culture.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Do you advocate an Afrocentric curriculum?
- </p>
- <p> A. How I feel about Afrocentricity depends on what is
- meant. If you mean, as some people do, that you have to be black
- to teach black studies, or that no white person could ever be
- a professor of African-American studies, I think that's
- ridiculous. It's as ridiculous as if someone said I couldn't
- appreciate Shakespeare because I'm not Anglo-Saxon. I think that
- it's vulgar and racist no matter whether it comes out of a black
- mouth or a white mouth.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Milwaukee announced that it intends to set up two
- schools that will cater to the needs of black boys, in the hope
- that it will help them succeed academically.
- </p>
- <p> A. I think that's ridiculous.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Is it the sex segregation or the race segregation that
- bothers you?
- </p>
- <p> A. Both. I understand the impulse. But I don't think that
- solves the problem. I think it will reinforce the problem. I
- don't see why there should be a boys' or a girls' school in the
- first place. I would never send my daughters to an all-girls
- school or an all-black school, not if I could help it. This is
- America. This is not Nigeria. It's made up of all these
- different cultural strains, and I want them to know about that.
- </p>
- <p> Q. So what's the answer?
- </p>
- <p> A. The image of success is wrong. I read an article
- recently that said that one of the things that was "acting
- white" for black high school kids in Washington was going to the
- Smithsonian. Fewer things have made me more depressed than that
- about the state of black America. When I drive to my house and
- go through the black neighborhood that's between two white
- neighborhoods, I don't see black kids packing books at 5
- o'clock. They have a basketball, and they're going down to the
- courts. We have to change the erroneous assumption that you have
- a better chance of being Magic Johnson than you do of being a
- brain surgeon. There are more black lawyers than black
- professional athletes.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Some music critics say 2 Live Crew is mediocre rap, yet
- during their obscenity trial, you testified that their lyrics
- were comparable to Shakespeare's.
- </p>
- <p> A. In no way did I compare 2 Live Crew to Shakespeare!
- When I was asked if there were instances of lewd language in
- Western literature, I cited a few obvious examples: Chaucer,
- Shakespeare, Joyce. This observation shows that lewd language
- isn't ipso facto proof of obscenity. But that's all it shows.
- </p>
- <p> Q. You also said their lyrics were an example of parody.
- </p>
- <p> A. My interpretation could be totally wrongheaded, but
- it's what I honestly believe. And I have taken an incredible
- amount of flak for it. Nothing I've ever done has attracted as
- much hate mail as my testimony for 2 Live Crew.
- </p>
- <p> Much of the album is obscene and misogynistic. To me
- Luther Campbell's performance made black macho seem silly, made
- it seem unattractive. It's never an easy question to
- distinguish between parody and the thing that's being parodied.
- Like Archie Bunker. Did Archie Bunker critique racism or did he
- reinforce racism? It's an open question.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Andrew Dice Clay, a white, is probably just as
- offensive as 2 Live Crew, but he wasn't put on trial. Why is
- that?
- </p>
- <p> A. I'm convinced that 2 Live Crew's album was seen as
- peculiarly inflammatory because black people are seen as
- peculiarly inflammable. The image is that young black men are
- like dry tinder waiting for an idle spark to set them off. And
- if they get that idle spark, they'll go wilding. I'm sure that
- if the same lyrics had come out of virile-looking young white
- boys, they would never have been prosecuted in the same way.
- </p>
- <p> Q. You have spent most of your adult life in the North and
- moved South only a year ago. Now that you are about to return
- North to teach at Harvard, do you have any observations about
- the difference in race relations between the two regions?
- </p>
- <p> A. Relations are worse in the South because the
- bottom-line historical experience was slavery. In the North it
- was abolition. A black person is not at the same place
- societally in the North and in the South for that very reason.
- </p>
- <p> Here I was the first black person to live in my immediate
- neighborhood. I came home one day and a brick mason, who was
- black, was redoing the walk. And I said hello. And he said, "Can
- I help you?" with a bit of hostility in his voice. And I said,
- "You are helping me. You're fixing my walk." And he looked
- dumbfounded and said, "Is this your house?" And I said, "Yeah."
- And he said, "Do the white people know that you bought this
- house?" I said, "Of course!" And he said, "Of course. I bet they
- know all about you." And we both busted out laughing, like I'd
- been checked out. On the whole I'd rather live in the North than
- in the South.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Only 3% of the nation's college faculty members are
- black. What can be done to get more into the pipeline?
- </p>
- <p> A. A wonderful thing happens when you encounter images of
- your cultural self in a book at an early age. That happened to
- me at 14 when an Episcopal priest gave me James Baldwin's The
- Fire Next Time. I felt like Baldwin was naming me in a way that
- I didn't even know I needed to be named. It changed my life.
- That's where I first got the inkling that I might want to be a
- scholar, to serve my people through print. How could anybody
- deny--left, right or center--the importance of that
- experience in shaping a young intellect? What we have to do is
- change the curriculum so that that experience of identification
- can occur for people who are not Anglo-Saxon.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Everybody agrees that black kids today need healthy
- role models. Who are your nominees?
- </p>
- <p> A. Among the people I like to think of as useful role
- models are author-educator W.E.B. Dubois, civil rights activist
- Mary Church Terrell, Nigerian playwright Wole Soyinka, South
- African leader Nelson Mandela, novelist Toni Morrison. And poet
- Phillis Wheatley: she was a genius. She learned English when she
- was about seven, and by the age of 15 she was publishing poems
- as sophisticated as any American who was publishing in the 18th
- century. We need to make that common knowledge, as common as the
- fact that Michael Jordan can do the triple quadruple backward
- dunk. And it's not.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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