Welcome to a New Student Movement: Dispatch from a Liberated Library
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It’s just past one in the morning, and in the UC Berkeley Anthropology Library, students squint at their laptops, scratch out equations in their notebooks, and chat in hushed voices. It’s midterms weekend, and some students are just now catching up on a half-semester’s worth of work.
The scene almost looks typical for a weekend reserved for studying. But an impromptu snack bar sits in the corner – three chairs pushed together, piled with boxes of bread, homegrown vegetables, Cliff Bars, hummus, and nuts. The sound of a human beatbox travels over the stacks: across the room, a student raps in front of a large group of his peers, who laugh and shout at his rhymes about the library, the law, and the university president, Mark Yudoff. After him, another student stands and reads an original poem about racial privilege and the police.
This is no typical late-night cram session. This is a liberated library.
In the spring of 2008, I was invited to sit on a panel on the topic “From Vietnam to Iraq.” As a master’s student and one of the organizers of a week-long series of protests and events related to the war in Iraq, I had been asked to address the state of youth activism today. Looking out at the audience, largely composed of veterans of the 1968 Columbia University student uprisings, I could think of only one thing to say: “I am a pallbearer.”
Today, a year and a half later, I’m writing to say that that has changed.
Today, I’m writing to you from a liberated library, a space reclaimed by some 300 members of the University of California, Berkeley – students, faculty and staff who have come together to take hold of public education, to tell the administration and the state, This is OUR university!
Our university – recognized as the best public university in the world – is in peril. While a proposed 32% fee hike for undergraduates threatens to limit our student body to a privileged and wealthy few, faculty and staff face pay cuts and imposed furloughs. Many departments no longer have phones or voicemail. Others only have access to administrative staff four days a week. And all but one of the libraries – the heart of a vibrant research university – are now closed on Saturdays.
The reaction on the part of the campus community – certainly in Berkeley, and perhaps across the state as well – can only be described as a movement. No isolated group of activists is left to perform their necessary protest duties. Nor is political action on campus dominated by or limited to the often-stifling and self-serving partisan politics of student congress.
See more stories tagged with: anthropology, uc berkeley, mark yudoff
Ph.D student in anthropology at UC-Berkeley.
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