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New York Time's Debunked '1619 Project' will 'set the tone' for the school year at Massachusetts' Mount Holyoke College
Campus Reform ^ | 08/23/2020 | Lela Gallery

Posted on 08/23/2020 6:55:13 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

The New York Times' debunked 1619 Project will be the literature that “sets the tone” for the year at one Massachusetts college.

In a school-wide email on August 13, Mount Holyoke College announced that the New York TimesMagazine’s 1619 Project will be this year’s “Common Read.” Holyoke’s “Common Read” tradition started as a component of Mount Holyoke College’s Orientation in 2000, and occurs annually, “designed to give students new to Mount Holyoke College their first intellectual dialogue based on a shared text.”

The program “sets the tone for the community” and “helps collectively frame discussions for the upcoming academic year.”

Published in August 2019, The 1619 Project is a series of essays meant to commemorate the 400th anniversary of the first arrival of slaves in modern-day Virginia. It has been widely criticized for its claims that America was founded on the basis of preserving slavery.

Yet, multiple Pulitzer Prize-winning historians have come out and condemned the project. As the Pulitzer-winning historian of the American Revolution and Brown University Professor Emeritus Gordon Woodput it, the project is “wrong in so many ways.”

Another Pulitzer-winning historian, Princeton University Professor Emeritus James McPherson, said that the essays are an “unbalanced, one-sided account” that “left most of the history out.”

An essayist for The 1619 Project, Nikole Hannah-Jones, was awarded the 2020 Pulitzer Prize for commentary. Jones slammed her project’s critics as “old, white male historians,” who are just “mad at the 1619 Project for pointing out the racism of our founders and one Great Emancipator.”

“We understand the relevance of The 1619 Project now in light of the significant impact of the global movements for #BlackLivesMatter and #SayHerName, which has ultimately challenged us to think more deeply about experiences described by our Black, Indigenous and People Of Color (BIPOC) members of the Mount Holyoke Community,” wrote Mount Holyoke.

“We acknowledge that The 1619 Project is United States-centric, and yet we feel it is essential to foundationally understand the racial hierarchy that exists and remains pervasive globally, but particularly at American higher education institutions,” it added. We believe that if our Mount Holyoke community is to challenge and change the structures of systemic racism, racial injustice and white supremacy - at and within our own College and outside of it - we must all understand the roots of these injustices.”

In a news update posted by the college, some of the selection committee members offered their thoughts on The 1619 Project.

Dean of Studies and Director of Student Success Initiatives Amber Douglas was excited about the choice, saying “Now, more than ever, it is essential that we as a community, engage with the history of the transatlantic slave trade and its enduring legacy of systematic anti-Black racism, oppression and violence in this country."

“For me, The 1619 Project felt urgent before the marches and protests that followed the killing of George Floyd by the Minneapolis police,” said assistant professor of politics Ali Aslam

“My hope is that we can grasp, with the help of the essays, just how pervasive and deeply ingrained slavery and its legacy are in American culture, norms and ideals.”

The college only selected a few essays from the project, including “The Idea of America” by Nikole Hannah-Jones, “Capitalism” by Matthew Desmond, “A Broken Healthcare System,” by Interlandi Jeneen, “Traffic,” by Kevin M. Kruse, “Undemocratic Democracy” by Jamelle Bouie, “Medical Inequality,” by Linda Villarosa, “American Popular Music,” by Wesley Morris, “Sugar” by Khalil Gibran Muhammad, “Mass Incarceration,” by Bryan Stevenson, and “The Wealth Gap” by Trymaine Lee.


TOPICS: Education; History; Society
KEYWORDS: 1619project; college; massachusetts; mountholyoke; mountholyokecollege; newyork; newyorkcity; newyorkslimes; newyorktimes; nyt

1 posted on 08/23/2020 6:55:13 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind
Mount Holyoke annual tuition with room and board: $71,000.
 
2 posted on 08/23/2020 7:05:38 PM PDT by Governor Dinwiddie (Guide me, O thou great redeemer, pilgrim through this barren land.)
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To: Governor Dinwiddie

Is there an upper tier school in the country that is worth a shit anymore with perhaps the singular exception of Cal Tech. [and no MIT is just as much a swamp denizen as it’s rival down the street.]


3 posted on 08/23/2020 7:09:53 PM PDT by AndyJackson
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To: SeekAndFind

Massachusetts ed is almost entirely subsidized by the Chi Coms. The schools are flooded with Chinese kids.


4 posted on 08/23/2020 7:11:49 PM PDT by GreatRoad
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To: Governor Dinwiddie

It is a good school. The kids are a mix between poor-kids with scholarships, and the kids of really, really rich people.

It is, of course, a liberal bastion in a sea of liberalism.

Smith girls are a lot more fun. MH girls have a stick up their ass.


5 posted on 08/23/2020 7:15:14 PM PDT by Vermont Lt
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To: GreatRoad

You realize this is a private college, considered THE best of the high level women’s colleges, right?

This place has zero to do with the MA education system.


6 posted on 08/23/2020 7:16:50 PM PDT by Vermont Lt
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To: SeekAndFind

Interesting that the author of the 1619 project left out a very important part....THAT AFRICANS WERE SELLING THEIR PEOPLE....If you’re not selling,then no one would have been buying....


7 posted on 08/23/2020 7:47:02 PM PDT by Hambone 1934
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To: Governor Dinwiddie

My Alma Mater. Seeking best Freeper suggested reading to propose in my letter to the President and Academic Dean to counter-balance this propaganda


8 posted on 08/23/2020 8:04:32 PM PDT by SFmom
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To: Vermont Lt

Yes. So many of the private colleges are inundated with overseas money and students, not just from China but its a huge pipeline. I finished an MBA in 2019 at a private Boston university and the curriculum had promoted to globalist (of course) but even communist (pro-union) pedagogy - the opposite of actual free market place business.


9 posted on 08/23/2020 8:31:37 PM PDT by GreatRoad
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To: Vermont Lt

Also, Mt Hollyoke has changed in its status, serving women of lesser privilege and the immigrant community. Smith and Wellesley are still far more prestigious and produce much more high profile graduates. No one holds Mt Holyoke equal to them, its really gone down hill.


10 posted on 08/23/2020 8:36:28 PM PDT by GreatRoad
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To: GreatRoad

Chinese ‘’students’’ in America are spies sent here to steal every bit of intellectual property and technology they can.

None of them should be allowed here.


11 posted on 08/24/2020 1:08:33 AM PDT by jmacusa (If we're all equal how is diversity our strength?)
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To: SFmom

Philip Magness...The 1619 Project..A Critique


12 posted on 08/24/2020 2:34:48 AM PDT by Hambone 1934
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To: AdmSmith; AnonymousConservative; Arthur Wildfire! March; Berosus; Bockscar; cardinal4; ColdOne; ...

13 posted on 08/24/2020 10:32:10 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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