Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Perspective affects progression

Legal desegregation took place on campus at the University of Georgia fifty years ago but that doesn’t mean all the race issues are resolved and everyone is treated equally.

The world is “still very prejudiced, [some] don’t want to be associated with black people and its not uncommon,” Dr. Elwood Beck said. “It’s the public display of racism which was widely accepted is now not widely accepted. Now what you have is much more private.”

Beck is a sociology professor at the University of Georgia and has studied race relations for many years for his Sociology of the South class.

“The University of Georgia at that period was, not only was it segregated, but it had a different philosophy of how to relate to students,” Beck said. “It was a time of parentis, the idea and notion was that when your parents dropped you off here the university became your parent so they told you where you could go, when you had to be in your dorm, what you could do and a variety of things that if applied to you today you would just find totally and completely unacceptable. “

Beck describes how society has transformed from legal segregation to self-segregation.

“Now you are choosing to be with people that you are comfortable with,” Beck said. “That is not the same as being told you cannot go into a place.”

He said that the first is empowering because people have the choice to sit with people they know they like. This in itself shows a big shift in society.

Since Beck lived through the time of segregation, he sees the difference in society now.

“I’m still amazed. The other day I was walking across on campus and a black guy and a white girl were walking. They were just talking, they weren’t holding hands, they were just talking and God knows what they were talking about,” Beck said. “But what struck me was, my God, fifty years ago he would have been killed. I mean literally he would have been killed.”

Sara Lorusso, 63, was a student at UGA from 1966-1970. She describes her experiences growing up as positive in regards to race relations because she was sheltered from most of the harassment and racism.

Lorusso remembers ‘colored folks’ moving out of her way when she walked down the sidewalk in her hometown.

She also recalls seeing separate water fountains and bathrooms but it never phased her because its what she thought that’s the way it was supposed to be.

However, as Lorusso got older, she realized that wasn’t true.

“I heard a lot of terrible things about Martin Luther King, Jr. and people who worked with him as they slowly began to work through the south and create the momentum for the Civil Rights Movement,” Lorusso said. “But I can tell you that I personally never had a bad experience through all that. I heard people say bad things; I still hear people say bad things.”

“We were on the progressive side of the [Civil Rights Movement] and I saw it from that angle more than from the negative angle,” Lorusso said. “So it was a very interesting experience, very eye-opening and I feel very grateful to have lived through it. And I think I have a greater appreciation for race relations than those who did not live through it.”

She said she saw the people who were in the movement as ‘patriots’ and thinks they made a real difference in this country and what its like now.

However, Lorusso also said that there are still a lot of problems in this country and that it’s still segregated in many ways.

“Maybe more economically than racially but it kind of works out to be the same thing,” Lorusso said. “So I still think we have a long way to go to being a color-blind society.”

Both Beck and Lorusso agree that the face of the University is changing because the students did not experience a truly segregated society.

“My generation remembers what segregation was like, both if you’re black or if you’re white, if you grew up in the south, you knew what segregation was like and can see the change,” Beck said. “For [the new] generation, its part of what they’ve always accepted so there are very little changes that they’ve observed in their lifetime. But yet there’s a monumental change that’s happening in southern society.”

3 comments:

  1. Jojo,
    Good story, you did a very good job of using your quotes. The very first quote almost seems like it was cutoff, but all the other integration was very smooth. Well done. To coin Joe's favorite term, I think you need to "sex" up your lead a little bit. Other than that, good article.

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  2. I like the idea of legal segregation versus self-segregation. I've never even heard of the idea of self-segregation, and I wish you'd say more about it. Also I love the quote about the black guy and the white girl talking and walking. If you could have gone into more detail about the reasons why he would have been killed, I think that would make the story more interesting. Would it have been just because he was talking to a white girl, or would people have tried to make it into something more than it really was?

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  3. I also enjoyed the idea of self-segregation in todays world. Actually, Devin's story touches on that when she talks about kids sitting together with people like themselves in the dining halls (because they're comfortable with them). I think the quotes make the story. Good job blending them in. I would also like to know why he would've been killed, not growing up in that time, I don't know why that would be.

    A third interview would really finish the piece. I'm excited to see the final.

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