[For this year’s annual Cville series, I wanted to highlight a handful of inspiring and impressive profs at my hometown school, the University of Virginia (beyond the UVA prof who will always come first in my heart). I’d love to hear about profs—teachers, advisors, mentors, colleagues, friends—you’d highlight in comments!]
On a
historic prof who reflects the worst and best of the institution and city.
When I
wrote my “Segregated
Cville” piece for Activist History
back in late 2017, I was really pretty early still in the process of learning
about my hometown’s histories and ongoing issues around race and racism,
segregation, violence, and more. Over the nearly five years since I’ve
continued to read and listen and learn, to the other professors I’ll highlight
in this week’s series as well as to the tons of thoughtful and engaged Cville
folks I follow on Twitter (a list that includes Caris Adel, Jamelle Bouie, Zyahna Bryant, Molly Conger, Andy Orban, Lyle Solla-Yates, and Allison Wright among others). Through
all those voices and all the sources and resources to which they’ve helped me
connect, I’ve really come to understand not just Cville’s painful and powerful
histories and their enduring legacies into the present, but also the ways in
which the city really reflects so much of American history and identity, in
both the worst and best senses.
There’s
always more to learn on all those levels, though, and a couple months back
Caris Adel shared this Daily
Progress story about Dr. Alan
Feldstein, a University of Virginia math professor whose 1960s experiences
clearly reflect the university’s and city’s struggles with racism and
segregation, with a white supremacist power structure (in both those settings)
that sought to uphold those systems, and with activists like Feldstein who
helped challenge them (and often paid a frustratingly high price for their
efforts). You should all read that story, and then come on back for a couple
more thoughts as we start this week’s series on UVa professors.
Welcome
back! What I mainly wanted to follow up was one quote in that story, from
Feldstein’s wife Felice about what overcame her initial reservations on moving
to a Southern community like Cville. Her husband shared a letter to The Daily Progress signed by hundreds of
residents who supported integration and civil rights, and Felice notes, “That
appeased me. I was happy. There are always pockets of liberalism in places and
especially in college towns.” That was always how I felt growing up about
Charlottesville compared to the rest of Virginia, that it was a clear pocket of
liberalism amidst what was then a very solidly red state. Unfortunately the
more I’ve learned about both the city and the university, the more I’ve
realized that the institutions and power structures were and in many ways remain
just as white supremacist as the rest of the South and nation, as we can see clearly
in the response to Feldstein’s activism. But at the same time, I’d say that
letter and Feldstein alike reflect a counterpoint—that the city and the
university have long featured passionate activists and communities seeking to
create a different dynamic. I’m excited to share four 21st century
examples of that legacy in the rest of this week’s series!
Next UVA
prof tomorrow,
Ben
PS.
Professors you’d add to the weekend post?
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