海角大神

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What University of Missouri shows us about student activism

After years of being characterized as cynical and apathetic, are students getting their political clout back?

By Maddy Crowell, Staff

University of Missouri President Tim Wolfe announced his resignation on Monday in an emotionally charged speech that brought to life the deep tensions between conservative and liberal views on race.聽

鈥淭he question is: why did we get to this really difficult situation? It鈥檚 my belief that we stopped listening to each other. We got frustrated with each other and we forced individuals like Jonathan Butler to take immediate steps to affect change,鈥 Mr. Wolfe said in his speech. 鈥淭his is not, I repeat, not the way change should come about. Change comes from listening, learning, caring, and conversation. We have to respect each other enough to stop yelling at each other and start listening. Unfortunately, this has not happened.鈥澛

Wolfe鈥檚 resignation is a major move for the 35,000 students at the University of Missouri 鈥 seven percent of which are African American 鈥 and not just because it signifies a deep-seeded racial problem that is plaguing America. It signifies what seems to be a revival era for student activists.

Or, at least, the first time students 鈥渨on.鈥澛

Student activism on college campuses has been ongoing since the 1960s, when students marched in protest against the Vietnam War. In the 1980s, students protested over the Iran-Contra affair and apartheid in South Africa; in the 1990s, sweatshop labor and global warming. Many in the media have criticized the millennial generation for their political apathy, 鈥渃olorblindness,鈥 and self-obsession.

But the Missouri case has highlighted an important shift in student activism 鈥 students are not only still protesting, but the protests are affecting change. And it comes at a time when activism is, if anything, taking on new forms of life.聽

The movement against racial discrimination at the University of Missouri has been ongoing for weeks. Jonathan Butler, a graduate student, went on a weeklong hunger strike in the hopes that Wolfe would resign for his inaction against the 鈥渞acist, sexist, homophobic, etc., incidents that have dynamically disrupted the learning experience.鈥 But historically, rarely have student athletes been involved in student activism until the University of Missouri鈥檚 football team inserted itself into the conversation.聽

海角大神's Jessica Mendoza writes,聽

The Missouri protest comes at the same time as students at Yale University recently cause a kerfuffle over appropriate Halloween costumes 鈥 students are accusing the administration of not being sensitive enough to concerns over culturally insensitive costumes. This is following a recent controversy where a male fraternity was accused of turning away a female student of color.