Special Project

Overview
The Brown v. Board of Education Jubilee
Commemoration is a year-long, multi-faceted, and very ambitious
project that bears the distinctive stamp of Chancellor Nancy Cantor’s
interest in diversity in higher education. It is not an exaggeration
to say that there is hardly a unit at UIUC that has not been touched
by, or taken an active hand in the Brown Commemoration.
The Ethnography of the University (EOTU) is pleased to take on the
Ethnography of the Brown Commemoration (EBC) knowing that
the commemoration—its particular shape and life on our campus—offers
a window on the university’s diverse understanding of itself at
this important historical juncture. Currently there are four paid
undergraduate researchers attending Brown Commemoration events,
interviewing participants, and writing up field notes that will
be used next summer as undergraduates, graduate students, and faculty
pull together a lengthy document that assesses the commemoration’s
accomplishments.
Although the Brown Commemoration has a distinct origin—namely,
the recommendation of a Diversity Committee that resulted in Chancellor
Cantor’s appointment of a Brown Commemoration Planning
Committee—by today the commemoration is a very dispersed venture
that has been realized by many units, constituencies, and individuals.
For example, when the Housing Division engaged the Brown Commemoration,
it naturally worked through its own chain of command, down to the
resident directors, and from them to the resident assistants, and
so on. There is, then, neither a single Brown Commemoration,
nor a single vision enlivening the Brown Commemoration.
Thus, in the day-to-day events and activities comprising the commemoration
we find many and competing ideas about what it means to remember
the Brown v. Board of Education decision, and
what it means to commemorate it here and now. There are in turn
the many consumers of the Brown Commemoration, ranging
from people who attend commemoration events, to those in classes
affected in some way by commemoration programming. Like the Brown
Commemoration producers, these consumers bring a broad range of
understanding to their encounters with the commemoration, and in
turn they participate in the commemoration dialogue in particular
ways. Furthermore, the Brown Commemoration takes on life
beyond formal events, for example in off-stage conversations, in
passions ignited by the events, and in the forging of new social
connections. Clearly, the Brown Commemoration’s domain
is expansive: in it are represented many and diverse visions, many
and diverse consumers, and many and diverse after-lives. EBC aims
to capture the life and feeling of some of this; we make no pretense
to cover the commemoration exhaustively.
Ethnographers
Rene Bangert, Paul Davis, Nicole Ortegón, and Teresa
Ramos
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| Paul and Teresa |
Rene (foreground) |
Nicole (foreground) |
Faculty Coordinators
Nancy Abelmann, Mark Aber, Bill Kelleher, and Peter Mortensen
Graduate Coordinators
Kory Ching and Amy Wan
Steering Committee
Abbie Broga, Laura Haber, David Roediger, Kent Ono, Nathaniel
Banks, Gardner Rogers, Marc Goldman, Kathryn Rybka, and Denise Green
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