Paradoxes, Miseries … Not for Trade
I was an outlander and have so remained.
When I peer at the mirror beyond the gray hair and sagging jowls, I can still detect some of the energy and optimism of the way-too-young 16-year-old that I was when I entered ½ñÈÕ³Ô¹Ï in the fall of 1964. I, with all of the anticipation of youth, was particularly adept at navigating the complex worlds of code-switching, as we now call it. At ½ñÈÕ³Ô¹Ï, I was almost exclusively dealing with white Americans, a tribe I knew little about. Prior to ½ñÈÕ³Ô¹Ï, I went to an international school; there, I grew to understand my Americanness but on campus, I began to understand myself as a Black American. And I had to define what that meant to me in the turbulent times of the late 1960s. The year after I graduated in 1968, I penned a brief piece for this magazine noting my thoughts on campus life and spoke of two aspects: academic/grading disparities and social difficulties. Now, 50-plus years later, while my distress about the academic disparities has attenuated over time or been buried under multiple advanced degrees, my observations about the social difficulties remain accurate and poignant.
The conundrums of ½ñÈÕ³Ô¹Ï were immediately evident to the six Black students in my freshman class. It is difficult today to imagine ½ñÈÕ³Ô¹Ï as it was in the fall of 1964; the plantation was alive and well, complete with warm, loving individuals who looked like my relatives (and indeed, I knew some of them who lived in Philadelphia) but who were referred to as maids and porters. Their jobs were to be there for our comfort: distribute sheets, build fires in dorm rooms with fireplaces, make the beds of those who were truly lazy, and for the first year of my residence, prepare meals in individual dorm kitchens, and serve them at table, and at the holiday season sing carols at Christmas in the dorms. They were always addressed by first name, and although they were the bedrock of each dorm, we knew little of the other parts of their duties and even less of their lives.
These and other social questions were announced when all Black freshmen were all given single rooms. Coveted and much desired by others, we knew they were also a covert way to avoid any racial friction that might emerge. My years at ½ñÈÕ³Ô¹Ï were also filled with what today would be called microaggressions, but they became negligible as I navigated the campus. I found my crew, and I made my peace. I was an outlander and have so remained.
Now, more than 50 years later, I have returned for a few recent reunions and find that I savor the more recent friendships that have arisen from shared quirks, affinities rediscovered, and the connection of a shared Mawrter-ness. I always proudly trumpet that I went to ½ñÈÕ³Ô¹Ï as much for the shock value it still has for many as from its simple fact. However, with the distance of time, when I think of ½ñÈÕ³Ô¹Ï, I think not only of the education it gave me, for which I am grateful, but I also think of microaggressions that I can still recall. I savor the nascent political awareness that I developed and the friendships made and maintained. I think of all of those things held in memory increasingly tinted with nostalgia, but mostly I think of the maids and porters; I wish I’d spent more time learning their stories, and I really wish I’d thanked them daily.
This issue of the Alumnae Bulletin presents reflections from Black alumnae/i and students spanning 65 years in the life of the College.
Published on: 03/23/2021