¹û½´ÊÓƵ

Kathryn Mapps ’86 as a student
Kathryn Mapps ’86 as a student

In Our Own Words

¹û½´ÊÓƵ Magazine surveyed Black alumni across the years about their experience at the college.

July 12, 2021

In an attempt to capture the variety of lives impacted and enriched, here’s a sample of the responses, edited for brevity and clarity.

What was your life like on campus? How did your Blackness influence your experience of ¹û½´ÊÓƵ rites like Paideia, Thesis Parade, Hum conference, and/or dances on campus?

I really loved being a student at ¹û½´ÊÓƵ, but it definitely wasn’t a place where I felt affirmed as a Black student. Even now, 20 years later, I can remember walking into the Hum lecture hall, and there was this sea of white students, and this older white guy at the podium below, and me. The feeling of being out of place really hit home in my first seminar following that lecture. Students were discussing The Iliad as if they’d been groomed to have these sorts of discussions all the time. ¹û½´ÊÓƵ was a place where I felt free to explore who I was and how I wanted to be in the world, but it wasn’t an environment where ideas about what it meant to be minoritized in white spaces was explored. And the dances? Wow, that was like an anthropological study on non-rhythmic flailing. It was, um, different. —Alicia Brizzi ’02

â–  â–  â– 

I am from the San Francisco Bay Area, which is very diverse, but I had gone to a wealthy private school in Portland for my last three years of high school. So I had already experienced the culture shock of being in a mostly white learning community, in a mostly white city and state, before getting to ¹û½´ÊÓƵ. In fact, compared to my high school, the students at ¹û½´ÊÓƵ were friendlier and easier to relate to. —Kathryn Mapps ’86

â–  â–  â– 

It was unlike anything I’d ever gone through before. I grew up outside of DC in one of the most diverse areas in the country. Moving to Portland and then attending ¹û½´ÊÓƵ, where I was one of a very small handful of Black students in my year, was jarring. Being a Black woman was even harder—I spent a lot of time not really knowing how to navigate romantic relationships or even friendships. There were a lot of cultural shocks during my first year—I didn’t really know how to culturally relate to a lot of my classmates. —Maya Campbell ’15

â–  â–  â– 

Horrible. Constant micro-aggressions or full-blown racism from professors and students alike. Absolutely no support for or understanding of Black students. I went at a time when [the] BLM [protest movement] was just starting. In an effort to show “solidarity,” white and non-black ¹û½´ÊÓƵies were constantly posting and talking about Black death. It caused a lot of anxiety and rage. It felt like the only way I was allowed to be Black was through being angry at racism. —Jaelin Cola ’17

â–  â–  â– 

I lived on campus two out my four years at ¹û½´ÊÓƵ. During my freshman year, I was harassed so often by CSOs that I chose to live off campus. I was routinely asked leading questions, followed off campus, not believed when I told the truth. ¹û½´ÊÓƵ didn’t do a great job at educating its students on racism. We had kids who wanted to fight for black liberation and study in CRES [Comparative Race and Ethnic Studies] courses; we also had a kid who called me a “negroid.” One other experience I had was when Thesis Parade had the theme ‘Bling Bling’ or something like that. That was a lot… —Nick Frangenberg ’19

â–  â–  â– 

I didn’t participate. Too busy being married and working and studying.... —Clifford McGlotten ’70

â–  â–  â– 

It was definitely eye opening. All of the campus events showed me how much Black creations are appreciated, but how little Black students are cared for. For example, playing early-2000s hip hop/RnB while banning Lewis and Clark students (the majority of whom were Black) from campus. —Tessa Verbal ’19

â–  â–  â– 

The ¹û½´ÊÓƵ experience was a major change for me. Coming from Oakland, I was used to a diverse high school (teachers, staff and students). I was not as academically prepared as many of the white students, their backgrounds and experiences were so different from mine, but I was a hard worker. Being the only black in classes at ¹û½´ÊÓƵ did not bother me, except when a student used the “N” word just one time.  Humanities did not make sense, seeming irrelevant. I did participate in many of the school activities and enjoyed them.  Joining the Black Student Union and taking a few Black Studies classes gave me a feeling of belonging as well. However I remember so many black students were unhappy and left ¹û½´ÊÓƵ because they did not feel that they belonged.

I would not say I felt “out of place” at ¹û½´ÊÓƵ but at times I did not feel “in place” either.

To this day, I still question whether ¹û½´ÊÓƵ is a good place for black students. —Mary Frankie Forte ’71

â–  â–  â– 

While I was thrilled to be accepted to ¹û½´ÊÓƵ, my campus experiences were severely detached from the mainstream. I’m certain this was attributed to my not living on campus, attending college in my late 20’s and early 30’s and being Black. Neither of my parents had attended college, so I didn’t arrive with the same foundation as many of my contemporaries. The ¹û½´ÊÓƵ rites were simply foreign to me; I didn’t understand them, and no one seemed to care if I participated or not. —Kimberly Loving ’00

â–  â–  â– 

I sometimes thought that ¹û½´ÊÓƵ had a hard time understanding that “Black” is very culturally diverse; we are a diaspora all over the world. One who didn’t grow up in the United States is not going to understand the perspectives and experiences of one who did. —Melody Harvey ’10

â–  â–  â– 

My Blackness was a major influence on life on campus. Campus had a handful of Black students who were spread far and wide on campus. In regards to the other events, being Black impacted my participation because there was no emphasis or recognition of Black people, so I was more a guest in the white culture on campus. —Miles Crumley ’07

â–  â–  â– 

I struggled in Hum because it felt like a study in white identity. Many students at ¹û½´ÊÓƵ at that time were from the coasts and imposed their narrow beliefs about the South onto their perception of who I was. It took a long time for me to build up the confidence to speak up. —Erica Lee ’12

Tags: Alumni, Diversity/Equity/Inclusion