A Prospectus
The Legacy of Activism at Cornell will be an online archive housed in
the Cornell University Library and accessible to the Cornell community
and the public in large part through the DSpace Open Access
Repository, CUL's venture in online curation and Internet-first
publishing . At present, the project consists of a set of categories
for organizing major eras and phases of activism at Cornell and a
60-page
narrative written by Paul Sawyer and Brian Eden to accompany a
photo exhibit presented in Willard Straight Library in April 2006. As
the archive materializes, external web interfaces may be added to
organize and thematize these materials. The accompanying table of
contents of the narrative suggest the projectt's scope.
Background: The project grew out of a photo exhibition, set up in the
Willard Straight Library in April 2006, with an accompanying catalogue
that functioned as a preliminary, rough sketch of the history of
activism as a field of study. The exhibit ran concurrently with a film
showing, a visit by Father Daniel Berrigan, and a conference on the
Divestment Movement of the 1980s. Our aim was to capture for
contemporary audiences some of the very rich history of political
engagement on this campus since the 1950s, a narrative typically
omitted from official university histories and often overshadowed by
the institutional tendency to single out the Straight takeover of 1969
as the one significant moment in Cornell's activist history. Our
informal surveys confirmed that even such massive events as the four-
year Divestment Movement are unfamiliar to contemporary
undergraduates. In our research we were not surprised to learn of the
wealth of material on the Straight takeover, much of it housed in the
Rare Books and Manuscript Collection of the library; we were surprised
to learn of the variety and volume and imaginativeness of
extra-curricular political activities on this campus.
Scope: In defining the subject, we found that the University's
(equivocal) resistance to the
McCarthyite? inquisition of the 1950s was
the logical place to start. We also realized that the word
"activism" cann't be limited only to massive, public
confrontations--against American foreign policy or against a
Cornell administrative policy. Activism can be and typically is quiet,
painstaking, laborious, and long-term; it includes agreements
peacefully arrived at, programs established, position papers written
and revised. It includes the struggle over Redbud Woods but also the
Kyoto Now! agreements; the occupation of Carpenter Hall in the 1970s
but also the extensive community outreach programs of the 1960s and
the founding of the Womenn's Studies Program. We had no wish to
subsume the archive under a set of opinions; that's the work of
scholars and readers. This is not, in other words, an ideological
project except indirectly--insofar as we believe activism is an
important part of an undergraduatee's moral and political
education and insofar as we recognize that activist events usually
(but not always) spring from movements associated with the left. The
archive certainly contains space for actions and publications by
conservative students and faculty.
Aims: As suggested above, our primary aim is the preservation of
memory. When completed, the archive should consist of personal papers,
oral interview, publications, memoes and fliers, newspaper articles,
photographs, and other materials. These materials should produce and
ultimately naturalize a conception of a tradition at Cornell that is
as important as any exclusively scholarly legacy, since activism is
among other things a form of intellectual debate--a way of
thinking, arguing, and imagining that complements the work done in
classrooms and laboratories. Ideally, the archive will serve as a
source through which generations of activists can learn from their
predecessors. Students today should realize that if they fail to
participate in this tradition, they will have missed out on an
opportunity Cornell richly provides.
To achieve this aim, the archive also needs to be large and
comprehensive enough to function as a research source. It should be
useful to scholars and available to teachers assigning research
projects. It will include some materials already housed in the Rare
Book and Manuscript Collections and so in that sense will supplement
those collections. It should also be very easy to access, since we
plan a clear and full cross-referencing system. (Library materials are
often difficult to locate under the rubric "activism" or
indeed under any single rubric.)
Needs and next steps: At present no materials have been put online,
though we have some materials (the organizing narrative and a set of
interviews amounting to an oral history of the Redbud Woods conflict)
in preparation. We need funding to digitize materials accessible to
us, including library resources and to hire research assistants to
collect, identify, and catalog materials to enter the archive. We also
need the participation of current and previous Cornell activists to
canvas for and in some cases create materials pertaining to the
various themes in the collection. We neeed, too, to form a small
advisory body of faculty, students and former students, and people
with curatorial and technical expertise in preparing these materials
for distribution.
--
StuartDavis?