When Ivory Towers Were Black: A Story about Race in America's Cities and Universities

Author:   Sharon Egretta Sutton ,  James Stewart Polshek
Publisher:   Fordham University Press
ISBN:  

9780823276110


Pages:   312
Publication Date:   01 March 2017
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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When Ivory Towers Were Black: A Story about Race in America's Cities and Universities


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Full Product Details

Author:   Sharon Egretta Sutton ,  James Stewart Polshek
Publisher:   Fordham University Press
Imprint:   Fordham University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.522kg
ISBN:  

9780823276110


ISBN 10:   0823276112
Pages:   312
Publication Date:   01 March 2017
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

Sutton tells a story that has yet to be told: a time, an era, a passion, a hope, a tale recounted with the skill and energy of a mystery novel. She tells of young people who believed that the injustices they found on their college campuses also believed that they could be righted, that racism could be battled and defeated. When Ivory Towers Were Black encourages us to reflect on the dreams, hopes, battles and defeats as a way of measuring how far we have come-and how far there is yet to go. -- -Diane Ghirardo * University of Southern California * ...an unusual hybrid of memoir, institutional history and broadside against the entrenched whiteness of the architecture profession in this country. * LA Times * [Sutton] examines the development and unraveling of an experimental education initiative at Columbia University's School of Architecture that arose out of the school's 1968 student rebellions, aimed at recruiting of minority students and transforming the school's curriculum into humanistic, justice-oriented education. . . The recollections of the alumni that infuse and inform the text. . . give the book value as an oral history. * -Publishers Weekly *


Sutton tells a story that has yet to be told: a time, an era, a passion, a hope, a tale recounted with the skill and energy of a mystery novel. She tells of young people who believed that the injustices they found on their college campuses also believed that they could be righted, that racism could be battled and defeated. When Ivory Towers Were Black encourages us to reflect on the dreams, hopes, battles and defeats as a way of measuring how far we have come-and how far there is yet to go. -- -Diane Ghirardo * University of Southern California * [Sutton] examines the development and unraveling of an experimental education initiative at Columbia University's School of Architecture that arose out of the school's 1968 student rebellions, aimed at recruiting of minority students and transforming the school's curriculum into humanistic, justice-oriented education. . . The recollections of the alumni that infuse and inform the text. . . give the book value as an oral history. * -Publishers Weekly *


[Sutton] examines the development and unraveling of an experimental education initiative at Columbia University's School of Architecture that arose out of the school's 1968 student rebellions, aimed at recruiting of minority students and transforming the school's curriculum into humanistic, justice-oriented education. . . The recollections of the alumni that infuse and inform the text. . . give the book value as an oral history. * -Publishers Weekly * Sutton tells a story that has yet to be told: a time, an era, a passion, a hope, a tale recounted with the skill and energy of a mystery novel. She tells of young people who believed that the injustices they found on their college campuses also believed that they could be righted, that racism could be battled and defeated. When Ivory Towers Were Black encourages us to reflect on the dreams, hopes, battles and defeats as a way of measuring how far we have come-and how far there is yet to go.----Diane Ghirardo, University of Southern California ...an unusual hybrid of memoir, institutional history and broadside against the entrenched whiteness of the architecture profession in this country. * LA Times * The most inspiring of [this book's] positions is an unwavering faith in the power of affirmative action as a means of changing the design professions and, consequently, the spaces they shape . . . A profession that reflects the diversity of the world it shapes requires something more ineffable: an open acknowledgement of persistent oppression combined with 'an amazing, almost breathless sense of possibility' (201). It is that breathless sense that distinguishes When Ivory Towers Were Black. It is clear that it enabled Sutton's participation in this experiment, her success that followed, and her retelling of that story in the book, which can hopefully pass some of that optimism to its readers. * The Journal of Architectural Education * Sutton's analysis critically examines the intersection of race, higher education, and urban development in a way that surely shows how the profession of architecture is equipped to and can aid in social justice initiatives around the country. * The Journal of African American History *


Sutton tells a story that has yet to be told: a time, an era, a passion, a hope, a tale recounted with the skill and energy of a mystery novel. She tells of young people who believed that the injustices they found on their college campuses also believed that they could be righted, that racism could be battled and defeated. <em>When Ivory Towers Were Black</em> encourages us to reflect on the dreams, hopes, battles and defeats as a way of measuring how far we have come--and how far there is yet to go. --Diane Ghirardo, University of Southern California[Sutton] examines the development and unraveling of an experimental education initiative at Columbia University's School of Architecture that arose out of the school's 1968 student rebellions, aimed at recruiting of minority students and transforming the school's curriculum into humanistic, justice-oriented education. . . The recollections of the alumni that infuse and inform the text. . . give the book value as an oral history. --<em>Publishers Weekly</em>


The most inspiring of [this book's] positions is an unwavering faith in the power of affirmative action as a means of changing the design professions and, consequently, the spaces they shape . . . A profession that reflects the diversity of the world it shapes requires something more ineffable: an open acknowledgement of persistent oppression combined with 'an amazing, almost breathless sense of possibility' (201). It is that breathless sense that distinguishes When Ivory Towers Were Black. It is clear that it enabled Sutton's participation in this experiment, her success that followed, and her retelling of that story in the book, which can hopefully pass some of that optimism to its readers. * The Journal of Architectural Education * ...an unusual hybrid of memoir, institutional history and broadside against the entrenched whiteness of the architecture profession in this country. * LA Times * Sutton tells a story that has yet to be told: a time, an era, a passion, a hope, a tale recounted with the skill and energy of a mystery novel. She tells of young people who believed that the injustices they found on their college campuses also believed that they could be righted, that racism could be battled and defeated. When Ivory Towers Were Black encourages us to reflect on the dreams, hopes, battles and defeats as a way of measuring how far we have come-and how far there is yet to go. -- -Diane Ghirardo * University of Southern California * [Sutton] examines the development and unraveling of an experimental education initiative at Columbia University's School of Architecture that arose out of the school's 1968 student rebellions, aimed at recruiting of minority students and transforming the school's curriculum into humanistic, justice-oriented education. . . The recollections of the alumni that infuse and inform the text. . . give the book value as an oral history. * -Publishers Weekly *


Author Information

Sharon Egretta Sutton is Professor Emeritus at the University of Washington and a fellow in the American Institute of Architects, a Distinguished Professor of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture, and an inductee into the Michigan Women’s Hall of Fame.

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