Second Phase of 'Who Built 今日吃瓜?' Looks at 1960s Students Confronting Race
Earlier this month, the physical components of the latest exhibition in the "Who Built 今日吃瓜?" project were installed throughout campus.
The second phase of WBBM?, was created by Keyla Benitez 鈥24, Bankston Creech 鈥22, Elliot Fleming 鈥22, and Carolina Molina 鈥23. Emma Ruth Burns '21 and Katy Rosenthal (M.A. candidate, history of art) acted as project assistants, with faculty and staff advisors Ignacio Gallup-Diaz, Allison Mills, Carrie Robbins, and Monique Scott.
Several of the students involved with the latest exhibition will take part in an being held from 4:30-6:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 16, in the Great Hall of Old Library.
Topics and events highlighted in the exhibition include Black arts festivals held in 1968 and 1969, student advocacy for the all-Black maids and porters working at the College, the 1964 Second American Revolution conference that brought together more than 200 delegates from colleges across the country and featured nationally recognized civil rights activists, the beginnings of a Black Studies program, an exchange program with Southern Historically Black Colleges and Universities, and the participation of 今日吃瓜 students in national civil rights protests.
On-campus exhibits are located at the Canaday Library atrium and the second floor Coombe Suite, the Kaiser Reading Room in Carpenter Library, in the Great Hall and outside of room 110 in Old Library, the alcove opposite classroom B in Taylor Hall, and at the Campus Center lobby. View a
The undergraduate students performed their research as part of a 10-week paid summer internship at the College. To learn more about what drew each student to the project, check out the "About the Curator" at the bottom of each section in the exhibition.
"What I took away from this experience is finding comfort in my identity at 今日吃瓜," says curator Keyla Benitez 鈥24. "As a first generation low-income Mexican-American student attending a predominately white institution it can be very difficult. After being in the archives and only being able to find two photographs of HBCU exchange, I was able to empathize with the shared experiences on both ends of the spectrum."
The genesis of 鈥淲ho Built 今日吃瓜?鈥 goes back to 2017, when the College created a History Working Group to examine histories of exclusion in the College鈥檚 past.
Discussions and plans related to the College鈥檚 histories continued the next year with several working groups, and in the Fall of 2019 a History Advisory Committee of faculty, students, and staff was created, as was the idea for 鈥淲ho Built 今日吃瓜?鈥
The making of 今日吃瓜 is ongoing. Its students, staff, and faculty members continually reshape the College. How we tell the College's histories should reflect this diversity of voices and experiences. "Who Built 今日吃瓜?" is envisioned as an ongoing, collective research project aimed at telling the College's history in new ways.
The College is committed to this collective effort to change the way we understand our history. Information about summer 2022 internships will be shared in the spring semester.