Congratulations to James
Meredith on the 50th anniversary of his graduation
in Political Science from the University of Mississippi on 18th August 1963. A photo of this momentous event illustrated the first newspaper I
can remember being shown, by my father. Meredith was the first African American to have
succeeded in being enrolled at that institution.
Meredith, with armed bodyguard, enrols |
Meredith was incredibly
courageous. The grandson of a slave, he served in the Air Force, before having
his application to the university twice rejected out of hand. When the Supreme
Court ordered that he should be admitted, and he tried to register, war broke
out on campus. The U.S. army and the Mississippi National Guard had to quell
race riots. Two people died. Over 200 were injured. Throughout his studies,
Meredith was persistently harassed and had to be guarded 24/7.
Uni of Mississippi Lyceum |
The violent showdown took place
at the Lyceum, the university’s oldest building (1848). Its Greek revival
columns still show the bullet marks. It was named after the Athenian school
founded by Aristotle, whose Politics
Meredith will have read as part of his degree, including the philosopher’s weasel-worded
defence of slavery. The influence of Aristotle’s arguments on pro-slavery
campaigners in the 19th century has been shown by Sara Monoson in Ancient Slavery and Abolition, a book of which I am
co-editor, and which (here I burst with pride) Henry Louis Gates Jr HIMSELF emailed to say
was ‘a valuable addition' to his library.
The identification of the Old
South with what it took to be ancient Greece, a society where democracy and
slavery could co-exist in columned porticoes, is nowhere more apparent than in
its universities. It is not only the architecture and the names of the elite fraternities
(the oldest and most prestigious, phi beta kappa, was founded in Virginia at
the College of William & Mary in 1776: the three Greek alphabet marks stand for Philosophia Biou Kubernetes, ‘philosophy is the helmsman of life’).
Basil Gildersleeve |
Classical scholars were embroiled
in the grim Civil War: the endowed Chair of Latin at Virginia is still called
the ‘Gildersleeve’ after the brilliant Hellenist Basil Gildersleeve. He fought
for the Confederate cause both as a soldier and with racist editorials in the Richmond Examiner.[i]
Happy 50th Anniversary! |
Meredith
is still a controversial figure because he ploughed his own furrow rather than
attaching himself to the Civil Rights movement, and has been an active
Republican. He lives in Jackson,
Mississippi. When he graduated he became
a four-year-old’s first hero. I hope he enjoys himself today.
[i] Delicately
analysed by Elizabeth Vandiver and David Lupher in Ancient Slavery and Abolition (Oxford University Press). My co-editors are Richard Alston and Justine McConnell.
I think you are somewhat unfair to Gildersleeve, who wrote '"That the cause we fought for and our brothers died for was the cause of civil liberty, and not the cause of human slavery, is a thesis which we feel ourselves bound to maintain whenever our motives are challenged or misunderstood, if only for our children's sake." His articles were very critical of the Confederate government.
ReplyDeleteFor the full text of his 'Southerner in the Peloponessian War at http://www.gutenberg.org/files/24281/24281-h/24281-h.htm