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WRITING OVER THE WHITE-OUT
The Politics of Representation in Campus Media
Karen Leung
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| DRAWING: JERONE HSU |
f the campus
journalism community is the student body politic, it has a white
beating heart. Josie Swindler made this point in the February 2006
Blue & White article "The White Pages," which
took the Spectator to task for its lack of diversity. What's
happened since? Earlier this year, Respecting Ourselves and Others
Through Education (ROOTEd) hosted the three-day Allied series on
power and representation in campus institutions, attended by
Spectator and others. Some publications have also undergone
anti-oppression training with the Office of Multicultural Affairs.
Why the relentless
whiteitude on publications? One tempting answer: their editors simply
lack racial consciousness. Student campaigners for Ethnic Studies
were disappointed when they read an April 12 Spectator piece
covering the Students Promoting Empowerment and Knowledge (SPEaK)
Ethnic Studies teach-in, which declared, "Professors Criticize
Ethnic Center." The article missed the point of the event,
failed even to describe the basic premise of Ethnic Studies, and
misconstrued the teach-in as faculty-driven. In other words, the
reporter didn't capture why it was newsworthy. Without this
awareness, the reason the event was covered at all seemed like an
unimpressive effort to cover student of color issues - the most
misguided attempt at diversity, a cursory concession to identity
politics. But this conclusion is also the wrong one.
's
editors have seriously considered the issue of diversity. According
to Spectator Editor-in-chief John Davisson, "Diversity
means both improving diversity of staff - we want a wide range of
people in the same way that any institution of higher learning does -
and taking advantage of reporting to improve… quality and
depth." Representation is a genuine concern in the editorial
staff of other publications as well. For Blue & White
Editor-in-chief Taylor Walsh, "It would be ideal if our staff
reflected Columbia University." She wants "not diversity
for diversity's sake, but diversity of ideas." They know the
dangers of sameness: Lydia DePillis, BW managing editor and
Bwog editor, is afraid that a too-homogeneous staff could mean "we're
missing [events] entirely or we interpret them as isolated incidents
when they're systemic" - a possibility for a staff Walsh
describes as "mostly Columbia College kids, but not exclusively;
mostly white, but not exclusively; mostly liberal, but not
exclusively." And Davisson says the state of coverage of student
of color issues at the Spectator is "lacking, but improving."
These editors generally
want diversity of thought, more students of color on staff to better
represent the University, better coverage of students of color
issues, and to avoid unfairly tokenizing contributors. But for all
that he may be the face of the paper, John Davisson is not the
Spectator; and publications are not their editors' admirable
intentions. As institutions, these publications move more slowly. And
their pace has a price.
Activism and the
consequences of the diversity problem
Bryan Mercer trails
acronyms impressively: he is a member of SPEaK, the Black Students
Organization (BSO), and the Student Coalition on Expansion and
Gentrification (SCEG). Too often, Mercer says, activist groups will
reach out to publications to make coverage possible, only to find
that their event has been misconstrued "by misquoting, or
focusing on one aspect of it without covering its full breadth, or
only casting it in a humorous light." Poor reporting has serious
consequences: it pulls student of color issues to the margins of
campus discourse, and if news coverage fails to show why those issues
are actually important, encourages students to think of them as an
exercise in political correctness. And, Mercer says, "They’re
not misunderstood because we're not articulating well, but because of
more structural issues."
Too often, Mercer says, activist groups will reach out to
publications to make coverage possible, only to find that
their event has been misconstrued “by misquoting,
or focusing on one aspect of it without covering its
full breadth, or only casting it in a humorous light.”
Where student turnover
is quick, and ambitious contributors may soon become editors, those
structural issues are very much a part of the nature of institutions
like the Spectator. Mercer expressed concerns that the paper's
bureaucratic ladder puts experienced journalists out of the field.
Several of the pieces he's found lacking have come from inexperienced
reporters who haven't done the necessary research or follow-ups to
write well on events. And when the journalism fails, student groups
mitigate what harm they can: they may get an apology or an offer to
write an opinion piece, and a correction may run, but the damage is
done. He sighs, "The problem is not the graciousness of the
apology, but the persistence of the mistakes."
Bad reporting also,
unfortunately, shapes campus discourse, which disappoints Mercer
especially when the Spectator fumbles: "For the very
institution that shapes what we think about Columbia to have no
institutional memory is for Columbia to have no institutional
memory." He finds this particularly cutting with the Ethnic
Studies campaign, because the background needed to make an article
well-researched (information on the 1996 hunger strikes, for
instance) could be culled from the Spectator's very own
archives. And as Tina Musa - a SPEaK member, co-founder of Filasteen
and a Comparative Ethnic Studies major - argues, bad reporting can
subvert the mission of activist groups. Of the Spectator's
recent headline for a story on the first New York City Asian American
Student Conference ("Asian Studies Dominates Conference"),
Musa said, "Asian studies is a colonial project" that Asian
American studies replies to and counters. The headline both botched
its emphasis because the conference wasn't dominated by any
discussion of academic studies, Asian, Asian American or otherwise,
and seemed to present students as agitators for a project they would
never endorse. The activists' message wasn't just muddied. It was
defied.
is probably the most crucial of all the publications - and it has the
most difficult job. Its conversation with readers in the news section
is always hectic, reactionary, and weighted with the responsibility
of breadth. Other publications cover what they see as widely
important as well as what seems interesting to them, which may be
less (or at least less obviously) significant. We might call the
ability to be fixated on some issues, but not others, the luxury of
idiosyncrasy - one that a daily newspaper largely cannot afford.
Almost every publication on campus, including this one, accepts
pitches for potential story ideas. Magazines tend not to be a survey
of the important issues of the day, but anthologies of particular
obsessions, having the freedom to cover both the "mainstream"
and the more offbeat. Even if editors see an important gap in
coverage - as many do - and propose a story to staff, it may not get
picked up. To say that publications have failed to cover student of
color issues, and that they should, is to say that they may have to
heave themselves out of their idiosyncratic groove. Although it gives
publications their character and, wonderfully, brings us articles on
fat presidents and bathhouses, this idiosyncrasy also has a material
effect on the politics of inequality: it changes who and what is
considered important and fundamental to campus discourse. As the
whiteness of staff and coverage on publications show, that effect has
not served students of color well. The challenge is to develop
idiosyncrasies which are somehow more equitable, and coverage that
does not treat diversity issues as foreign.
The tension between
idiosyncrasy and the need for diversity plays out in an interesting
way on The Columns, the newly launched blog of the Columbia Political
Union. The site's creators designed a two-pillar system of
non-partisan CPU features and multi-partisan posts that aim to
generate diverse political discussion. Editor-in-chief Jason Bello
wrote via email, "we want to make sure that we treat everyone as
an equal member of the community who represents their own views
only," and that the blog avoids tokenizing its writers because
it "[does] not expect an individual to write about racial
politics simply because that he or she belongs to a given racial or
ethnic group." Yet the admirable vision can be undermined in
practice. Some writers will claim to be more representative of groups
than others, and some may act like representative caricatures. So The
Columns' ambition for equality will probably never quite be
translated into the real thing. It's one example of the disjunction
between intent and product that can stand in the way of diversity.
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What to do, what to
do
Musa calls the
diversity problem in coverage "an expression of what kind of
education people are receiving." The editors are obviously not
deliberately discriminatory: quite the opposite. But student of color
issues, by their very position of marginality, can demand analysis
from a somewhat unfamiliar place (it's not common knowledge that area
studies were created as a "colonial project," for
instance). The double illiteracy of interpretation - the misreading
of activist group events, the organizers of whom then misread the
writers' and editors' intentions - begins, as Musa says, with
education. But also long before it. Caroline Kao, this semester's
diversity beat chief for the Spectator, says that solutions
will have to consider that "Racialization doesn't just happen at
Columbia. It starts way before that." The diversity problem is
an acquiescence to the undertow of whiteness. It's less overt racism
(and here we see how inadequate that word can be) than an entire
architecture of inequality.
Trying to
counter that architecture is hard work. The life of many regularly
published magazines is a life of almost-extinction: the frantic
schedules, the short deadlines, the financial challenges, can make
projects like minority recruiting fall to the wayside. Recruiting in
general has slowed down for the Blue & White since the
beginning of the year, in part because the staff has had to redirect
energy to the magazine's financial troubles, which almost prevented
its final issue from coming out at all.
Publications have been trying to work
through the problem in their own ways, with varying degrees of
success. Walsh and DePillis discussed a prospective project where BW
staff would approach University Writing instructors to canvass for
contributors. This strategy would help mitigate disadvantages
students may face during recruiting, and the effects of student
self-selection. The Spectator recently arranged for a
recruiter from the newspaper company McClatchy to speak to staff
about improving diversity, and Davisson is considering the
institutionalization of diversity training. He also assigned a
particularly trusted reporter to be in charge of outreach efforts to
student of color and activist group. But the strategy has had its
hiccups - the writer was the author of the piece on the Ethnic
Studies teach-in.
Right now, students of color may be
best represented on staff and in coverage in Columbia's alternative
media - places like (re), SPEaK's annual magazine, the Proxy, the
African diaspora magazine, and yes, AdHoc. But many of these
publications were vexed into existence after students gave up on the
larger forums, and they still speak from the margins. Students of
color shouldn't be consigned to the student body politic's sagging
extremities. We need a blow to the heart.
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