Simpson, Jennifer S. I
Have Been Waiting: Race and U.S. Higher Education. Toronto: University
of Toronto Press, 2003. 256 pp.
by David M. Jones
It is a challenging task to assess the impact of identity politics and
multiculturalism on higher education in the United States. In I Have
Been Waiting: Race and U.S. Higher Education, Jennifer S. Simpson
makes such an assessment, suggesting that all progressive teachers must
continue the energetic "anti-racism" (17) that was characteristic
of earlier resistance to white supremacy. This course of action is suggested
by the title of the text, which comes from a remark made by a black female
student during a discussion of diversity at a midwestern seminary: "I
have been waiting for the day when white folks start to deal with their
own racism" (x). This comment energized the author to identify and
challenge racism in higher education, among feminists, and in her personal
life. As a whole, this text was thought-provoking in its insights and
adventurous in its approach, although the author's ambitious attempt
to comment in detail on racial politics in classroom teaching, in feminist
epistemologies, and in history and personal memory reaches too far at
times. Beyond its expansive scope, however, this book offers many practical
tips for engaging European-American faculty, feminists, and students and
faculty of color in honest conversation and action.
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