Reparation and Reconciliation: The Rise and Fall of Integrated Higher Education

Reparation and Reconciliation: The Rise and Fall of Integrated Higher Education

by Christi M. Smith
Reparation and Reconciliation: The Rise and Fall of Integrated Higher Education

Reparation and Reconciliation: The Rise and Fall of Integrated Higher Education

by Christi M. Smith

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Overview

Reparation and Reconciliation is the first book to reveal the nineteenth-century struggle for racial integration on U.S. college campuses. As the Civil War ended, the need to heal the scars of slavery, expand the middle class, and reunite the nation engendered a dramatic interest in higher education by policy makers, voluntary associations, and African Americans more broadly. Formed in 1846 by Protestant abolitionists, the American Missionary Association united a network of colleges open to all, designed especially to educate African American and white students together, both male and female. The AMA and its affiliates envisioned integrated campuses as a training ground to produce a new leadership class for a racially integrated democracy. Case studies at three colleges—Berea College, Oberlin College, and Howard University—reveal the strategies administrators used and the challenges they faced as higher education quickly developed as a competitive social field.

Through a detailed analysis of archival and press data, Christi M. Smith demonstrates that pressures between organizations—including charities and foundations—and the emergent field of competitive higher education led to the differentiation and exclusion of African Americans, Appalachian whites, and white women from coeducational higher education and illuminates the actors and the strategies that led to the persistent salience of race over other social boundaries.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781469630694
Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
Publication date: 12/05/2016
Pages: 334
Sales rank: 248,652
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Christi M. Smith is Assistant Dean and Senior Scholar at the Center for Diversity and Inclusion at Washington University in St. Louis.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

Without sacrificing rich and telling historical detail, Christi M. Smith engages large themes, creating a book that will garner attention within important ongoing conversations associated with educational equity, the manner in which segregation is manifested and reproduced, the degree to which such outcomes are fixed or mutable, and, most sweepingly, the legacy of racial (and racist) practices in the United States--a conversation that has taken on renewed salience. With its rich, incisive, and engaging historical accounts, this book can and should speak compellingly to varied audiences.--David Cunningham, Washington University in St. Louis

Deeply researched and original in focus, this excellent book deals with important and fundamental issues in nineteenth-century American history. Christi M. Smith has drafted a leading scholarly work that will be lauded in reviews and cited by colleagues.--Desmond King, University of Oxford

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