“Movements Come and Go and Are Soon Forgotten”: The Black Campus Movement at Fayetteville State, 1966-1972

Francena F. L. Turner
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Abstract

Broad surveys of college student activism are impossible without the study of individual campuses. Studies of activism on historically Black college and university (HBCU) campuses in the United States tend to focus on larger more well-known campuses or those in large urban areas. Studies of student activism within North Carolina repeatedly highlight only three of the eleven extant institutions. This study contributes to the historiography of Black campus activism by using nine oral history interviews conducted with university alumni paired with extensive archival research to excavate the ways Fayetteville State University students contributed to the Black Campus Movement. This essay is a narrative of student protests between 1966 and 1972. Ultimately, such protests were grounded in major breakdowns in meaningful communication between faculty, administrators, alumni, and students and in HBCU students’ shared desire to have a say in decisions that affected their lives. Fayetteville State’s student body fully invoked James Baldwin’s notion of critiquing America in that they loved their institution more than any other institution in the world, and, exactly for that reason, they insisted on the right to criticize Fayetteville State and demanded that she rise to the occasion for which she was formed.
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“运动来了又走,很快就被遗忘”:费耶特维尔州立大学的黑人校园运动,1966-1972
如果没有对个别校园的研究,就不可能对大学生激进主义进行广泛调查。对美国历史悠久的黑人学院和大学(HBCU)校园的行动主义研究往往集中在更大、更知名的校园或大城市地区。对北卡罗来纳州学生激进主义的研究反复强调,现存的11所大学中只有3所。本研究通过对大学校友进行的九次口述历史访谈,结合广泛的档案研究,挖掘费耶特维尔州立大学学生对黑人校园运动的贡献,为黑人校园运动的史学做出了贡献。这篇文章是对1966年至1972年间学生抗议活动的叙述。最终,这些抗议活动的基础是教师、管理人员、校友和学生之间缺乏有意义的沟通,HBCU学生希望在影响他们生活的决定中拥有发言权的共同愿望。费耶特维尔州立大学的学生团体充分引用了詹姆斯·鲍德温批评美国的观点,因为他们爱自己的学校胜过世界上任何其他的学校,正是因为这个原因,他们坚持有批评费耶特维尔州立大学的权利,并要求她站到她成立的目的。
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