African-American Church
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Introduction
There is great difficulty in defining the field of Cultural Studies, as it takes an interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary approach to studying the art, beliefs, politics, and institutions of ethnic cultures and pop culture. For the Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies at Birmingham, one of the central goals of Cultural Studies was “to enable people to understand what (was) going on, and especially to provide ways of thinking, strategies for survival, and resources for resistance (Grossberg 2). Cultural Studies draws from whatever fields are necessary to produce the knowledge required for a particular project (Grossberg 2). It is a field that has no one unique narrative. Taking that into account, for the purposes of this essay I will examine one of many narratives Cultural Studies derives from — that of the African-American tradition. Even in focusing on it’s derivation from the African-American tradition, this will be but one path, not intended to serve as the sole trajectory within the African-American tradition of Cultural Studies.
The Black Church
The African-American tradition begins with the black church. In the African-American community the black church has always been more than a religious institution. From the establishment of the first black church in America, throughout slavery and beyond, the church has been the foundation of the black community. During the horrific days of slavery it provided relief and nourishment for the soul with its promise of a better life after death. The church permitted self-expression and supported individuality as well as creativity, behavior that could have eventually lead to death. An example is found in the spirituals, gospel and other forms of music that helped blacks explain and endure their sojourn in America. The black church gave slaves a sense of dignity and lead them to believe they too were equal in the sight of God. The black church occupies such an important role in the black community because throughout American history churches were among the few institutions controlled by blacks. Participation in a religious club and related activities historically offered opportunities for social interaction and social status that were not available in the white-dominated society. Because the church was one of few institutions that African-Americans controlled, it served as the primary forum for addressing their educational, social, political, and religious needs (Lincoln 8).
Black Institutions of Higher Education
The black church’s role in educating its parishioners diminished during the Reconstruction Era after the Civil War. Prior to the Civil War, there was no structured education system for black students in white-dominated society. Prior to the Civil War, there was no such notion of a black student, for blacks were slaves -the property of whites. Thus public policy prohibited the education of slaves in various parts of the nation, particularly the South. The Reconstruction-Era after the Civil War enabled blacks to obtain an education, although whites, when not directly thwarting African-American educational progress, sought to determine the nature and purpose of schooling for Blacks. As a response, many African Americans resolved to take control of and re-orient their education to fit their specific needs and use it to achieve racial uplift. Thus, the freedmen and freedwomen, along with their allies and supporters from various sectors, particularly the North, established Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) that would enable them to defend and extend their hard fought freedoms despite their subordinate status. In many cases, federal monetary aid facilitated the development of HBCUs as separate colleges for African-Americans, because white America would not tolerate segregation of its colleges and universities (Anderson 2). Various white educational theorists and philanthropists attempted to derail the purpose of education as African-Americans defined it, yet former slaves and their descendants “persisted in their crusade to develop systems of education compatible with their resistance to racial and class subordination” (Anderson 3). Although HBCUs are institutions of higher education, a major part of their mission in the early years was to address the high illiteracy rate and provide elementary and secondary schooling for blacks who had no previous education, many lacking even the most basic of rudimentary skills, (U.S. Department of Education 1).
From their conception, HBCUs had shockingly poorer facilities, smaller budgets, inadequate libraries and research equipment when compared with traditionally white institutions. The U.S. Supreme Court’s 1896 ruling in Plessey v. Ferguson establishing the “separate but equal” doctrine of public education legally sanctioned the racist practices of both state and federal government’s misallocation of funds for HBCUs. In overturning the ruling in the 1954 U.S. Supreme Court case of Brown v. Board of Education, the court rejected the “separate but equal” doctrine and held that racially segregated public schools was essentially unequal (Allen 35). It is important to note that most black college students continued to attend HBCUs after the Supreme Court decision, as they held pride for their HBCUs. HBCUs offered communal acknowledgement, acceptance, and a cultural space for blacks not available to them in white-dominated society, much less at traditionally white institutions.
Black Minorities at Traditionally White Institutions
As traditionally white institutions began to regularly admit black students in minimal quantities in the 1970s and 1980s, many black students understandably chose to attend the better equipped colleges over HBCUs. However upon arrival on campus, they soon faced the challenges of being the minority. Black students felt alienated and disaffected from their new academic settings and experienced overt or veiled hostility from white classmates, faculty, and administrators (Allen 40). Influenced by the emerging Black Power movement, black students at these predominantly white institutions began to reevaluate the education they received, seeking to make their institutions more receptive to their needs, representative of their culture, and relevant to their situation as blacks in America. However, many institutions were slow or resistant to change. Thus black students created support systems to ensure their psychological and academic well-being at traditionally white institutions by redefining what it meant to be a “successful” Black student (Allen 41).They were able to force change at their respective institutions