How can college students help heal the gap between their school and its town?

A very thoughtful friend posted on Facebook about the huge social divide between her college and the town where it is located, seeking advice on how to improve the state of things. I unintentionally ended up writing a bit of a novel in response, and I thought I’d share it here incase it might be useful for anyone else. I’ve removed the name of the school and the town to make it more about the general situation, rather than the specific place.

I wrote it as a Facebook comment, so please forgive the even-more-informal-than-usual style. Names are references to other folks in the thread.

Here goes:

I think Matt hit the nail on the head: Making friends is a big deal. Getting to know someone in the community, and them getting to know you, is a huge thing. You don’t necessarily have to be besties, just get to know each other on some level. It really does make a difference.

On an individual level, I’d say get out there and start meeting people in the community. Go to where they are.

A huge part of the battle is just showing up. In our North Side/McKee efforts, it has blown minds when young shiny Wash U or South Side types show up and want to know what they can do to help us. Even just the interested presence of people listening and caring does make a difference. I realize in this case it’s a specific battle rather than a more general situation, but it does feel like we are invisible and a lot of people who claim to care never appear, and… yeah, just seeing people here and knowing that people care that we exist is huge. So often, people teeter on the brink of fear, of worrying they will do the wrong thing or feeling overwhelmed by the hugeness of the problem/gap, and they let that keep them from showing up. But when folks don’t show up, we have no way of knowing that they are sitting there thinking about us and meaning well. You’ve gotta come to the table.

Going by yourself or with just 1 friend is the way to roll. Safety’s important in certain situations, but if there are just 1-2 of you it’s a lot easier to start conversations. Too many people and you become a self-contained pod.

Where to go is up to you: a bar, a neighborhood meeting, an art opening, a governmental meeting, somewhere social. I think volunteering can be good, if you show up outside of the context of your school. Volunteering is always helpful, but as others have pointed out, the traditional college day of service model can be pretty hierarchical. Its core assumption involves the students being superior to the community members…. not that the work isn’t needed! Here in the neighborhood we do really love it when a huge phalanx of university kids shows up and helps, it makes a HUGE difference, but one isolated day is not the foundation for a feeling that they care about us in some sort of long-term way. It’s not bad, it’s just the limits of that mode of interaction. Like Meredith wrote, pitching in totally outside of the context of school, where everyone but you and your pal are non-[school]ites and it’s [town] people in charge/setting priorities, is the way to go. It tells people you care about them besides just when you “have to.”

I use my camera a lot as an excuse to talk with people about their business, church, etc. It gives a reason for my presence, allows me to ask questions, etc. Of course, having a camera is also a socially hierarchical gesture, but if you’re sensitive and always ask permission before shooting, it can be a good jumping off point. And “I’ll bring you by some prints of my favorite shots” is a great excuse for following up on a good conversation. Plus, almost everyone likes a nice portrait of themselves, their pet, their Christmas decor, their business, etc.

Some forays will be fruitful, some won’t, and many will be uneventful. Stick with it. Despite being an StL city native and having spent big chunks of my childhood in North City, as a geeky white girl I’ll always be a bit of an outsider here…. And in my outsiderly role, having curiously wandered in many a door…. Sometimes you have a good conversation, sometimes it’s a dud, and sometimes you end up talking about race and class into the wee hours and doing shots with the owner of the bar until you throw up. It’s not gonna happen unless you show up.

Where the distrust runs deep, sometimes it will take time and sometimes people might not want you there, and that is their right. I don’t know if that applies to your situation, but it certainly applies in St. Louis. And I guess I’m also thinking of my future home of Detroit, which is the subject of enough attention right now that some natives are getting downright angry at the decay tourists, who come and go. Yeah, I’d say that’s one difference to keep in mind besides class differences: They’re in it for the long haul and you’re just visiting for a few years. That’s no one’s fault and it’s not irreconcilable, but understand that it flavors your presence to locals. Anyway, back on track….

Once you start getting to know individuals and the broader community better yourself, you can start helping other [school] friends dive in here and there. Take people with you to events. Invite people to places they wouldn’t go otherwise. It doesn’t have to be a big, conspicuous thing of WE ARE GOING TO GO MEET THE COMMUNITY NOW and in fact probably shouldn’t be–more of a “hey, let’s go check out this neat place or hit up this fun event” is best.

And when you talk with people, they will have ideas about how [school] can do better by the community. They know better than anyone. Listen to what people need, and if you hear themes emerging or there’s one thing that really stands out as a change you in particular are interested in, go for it. Make it happen. (I love this, so much easier said than done, bwahahahaha….)

On the institutional level, I really don’t know the specifics, but perhaps the school could find some way of encouraging people to respectfully explore the community on their own. Perhaps the school could approach leaders in the community–I’m thinking people somewhere between mayor and block captain–about what some of the community’s greatest needs and frustrations are, and identify some of the school’s greatest resources, and see how those things could be sustainably combined in a way that helps. Again, the traditional volunteerism/charity model is one to steer away from as much as possible–people as individuals and as communities are always best served when they are treated as equals and as fellow stakeholders, and when their dignity is preserved. And heck, the college could probably do more to include the community in a lot of extant programs and events it does. Being a North Sider and an inner city resident, well… Traditional white progressive/arts types often put on events feeling that they are universally interesting and then are surprised when “the community” doesn’t show up and they’ve got a homogenous room, BUT when you’re dealing with a community that has been historically disenfranchised and excluded, if you don’t explicitly let us know that we are invited and that the proceedings will be relevant to us, we’re likely to assume otherwise and stay home. I realize I’m putting most of the onus on the school and students here, but in situations like this it’s up to those who have traditionally held higher social standing and power to act.

And yeah, I’m sure particularly at [school], people are worried about being judged as art weirdoes or the like by the community. Your average Midwesterner may not share your views on all things political, but there are a lot of things about the stereotypical liberal arts college liberalism that I personally don’t agree with myself. And just because you might not vote the same, doesn’t mean you don’t have a lot in common. There are plenty of other topics to talk about. Being strongly political, dressing in an artsy manner, things like that…. It may be the most conspicuous layer of difference to you, but it’s probably just one more layer of difference of many to the person you’re talking with. And heck, sometimes being a little goofy helps. When I dyed my hair NEON fuschia on a whim a couple of summers ago, I worried terribly afterwards that I’d done something that would make it a challenge for me to continue getting around North City on foot, camera in hand. Not so: the pink hair actually became a great conversation starter, and it seemed to signal to most people who saw me walking that I knew what I was doing, because I’d be a fool to go some of the places I did looking like that if I *didn’t* know where I was! So you never know.

••••••

I’d love to hear your thoughts and experiences on the matter, readers.

Published in:  on October 25, 2009 at 9:55 pm Comments (4)

METROLINK PROM is *NOT* postponed!!!

PROM IS STILL ON FOR THE ORIGINAL DATE AND TIME! Facebook sent our message out a day late, but yeah: Prom is on for Friday the 23rd. Be there.

Published in:  on October 23, 2009 at 10:01 pm Leave a Comment

MetroLink Prom 2009 flyer: Cinderella, don’t ride in a pumpkin!

I posted it at the main post about the event, but wanted to share it in a separate post because 1) some people read via RSS and 2) I worked really hard on it.

For more info about MetroLink Prom, please see the big post about it.

Published in:  on October 20, 2009 at 7:35 pm Leave a Comment

In a song: what I see in St. Louis, what I see in Detroit

The first time I heard Neko Case’s song “Thrice All American,” I was visiting St. Louis from my then-home in Chicagoland. My friends wanted to stop in Vintage Vinyl. Foolishly, foolishly, I thought I’d avoid buying anything by perusing a listening station rather than browsing. I popped on the giant headphones, idly flipped here and there through songs without any of them particularly catching my attention, and then…. I heard this wonderful song. Frugality be damned, I bought the CD and announced to my friend that we’d be playing it in her car right away. We put it in the discman-rigged-to-tapeplayer set-up and rolled down the windows of her grandma-given hooptie and turned it up and drove down Delmar. 

Neko Case’s lyrics are about her native Tacoma, but when I first heard “Thrice All American,” all I could think was St. Louis St. Louis St. Louis. As Detroit has increasingly become a part of my life, I’ve begun to picture its streets as well when I hear the song.

Lyrics follow:

“Thrice All American”

I want to tell you about my hometown
It’s a dusty old jewel in the South Puget Sound
Where the factories churn and the timber’s all cut down
And life goes by slow in Tacoma

People they laugh when they hear you’re from my town
They say it’s a sour and used up old place
I defended its honor, shrugged off the put-downs
You know that you’re poor, from Tacoma

Buildings are empty like ghettos or ghost-towns
It gives me a chill to think what was inside
I can’t seem to fathom the dark of my history
I invented my own in Tacoma

There was nothing to put me in love with the good life
I’m in league with the the gangs, and the guns, and the crime
There was no hollow promise that life would reward you
There was nowhere to hide in Tacoma

The people who built it they loved it like I do
There was hope in the trainyards that something inspired
Once was I on it, but it’s been painted shut
I found passion for life in Tacoma

Well I don’t make it home much, I sadly neglect you
But that’s how you like it away from the world
God bless California, make way for the Wal-Mart
I hope they don’t find you, Tacoma

If you’d like to hear the song, there’s a charming, gleeful fan video for it on youtube.

I can’t say it any better than she does in her own words, but I like that Neko Case does not treat a town and its residents being down on their luck as some wholly, monolithically terrible thing. I don’t mean to sugarcoat decay or to in any way dismiss the struggles of people who live in communities like, well, mine, but damn it we have pride and history, too. It’s not all bad, and to focus only on pathology-centric accounts of places like this is to deny our communities their human complexity.

My last Dewey Decimal Drinks: Thank you. Now, let’s party.

October’s Dewey Decimal Drinks will be the last under my jurisdiction, and maybe the last ever. As I’ve written recently, I’m relocating to Detroit in a few weeks.

I’d like to say THANK YOU for 2+ wonderful years, my dear alphabetizers. It has been a ton of fun. It has been an honor to get to meet you all (and introduce y’all to each other). It’s been great watching new connections, friendships, and occasionally even romances form. I have learned a lot about librarianship as a broad field, and affirmed my belief that librarians are a curious, diverse, and dangerous bunch. Don’t ever let anybody tell you that librarians are boring, or that we don’t know how to party.

Please join me for a massive Dewey Decimal Drinks on Thursday, October 15th @ 7pm. We’ll be at Luckett’s Lounge, 4616 Delmar. Luckett’s is cash only, and we will be ordering pizza, so please bring paper money.

I’m making some kind of decorations. I’ll be raffling off bookends to benefit the Gary Public Library. And I may or may not wear a garment made out of thrift store dime novels. Just come on down, and bring lots of nerdy pals. It’ll be a good time.

If anyone would potentially be interested in taking over Dewey Decimal Drinks, please contact me: clairelovesthecity {at} gmail.com.

Thank you, thank you, thank you.

Forever reading between the lines,
Claire-ian the Librarian

P.S. Thanks to local activist Tom Duda for modeling for the flyer!

Published in:  on October 14, 2009 at 9:55 am Comments (1)

MetroLink Prom 2009: The Enchanted Ride ….event information!

Join us for a fairytale evening of dancing and finery aboard the MetroLink! It’s time for MetroLink Prom 2009: The Enchanted Ride. You don’t need a fairy godmother to help you get home when you’re transit savvy.

MetroLink Prom will take place on the evening of Friday, October 23, 2009. Be at the Forest Park platform at 7:30. From there, we will ride west to Clayton and then take another train back east to Laclede’s Landing. En route, we will elect a prom king and queen, slow dance, line dance, and take prom portraits. If you’re up for even more dancing, we’ll head to Morgan Street Brewery on the Landing for an afterparty. We’ll take the last MetroLink back to Forest Park from there, before the train turns into a pumpkin for the night.

Bring dollar bills for your train fare. Formal wear (from any decade) is strongly encouraged. Bring a date, bring a friend, bring your block captain, bring your kid, bring everyone you know! Prom will go forward rain or shine.

Last year’s MetroLink Prom was the first ever. Over 80 people attended, and a good time was had by all. We hope you’ll join us for this year’s magical evening aboard public transit. A lot can happen when you don’t have to drive.

 

P.S. PROM IS STILL ON FOR THE ORIGINAL DATE AND TIME! Facebook sent our message out a day late, but yeah: Prom is on for Friday the 23rd. Be there.

 

PS. PS. If you took photos at prom and would like to share them, please e-mail a link to clairelovesthecity {at} gmail.com and I will post it here in the coming days! Thank you!!

In love with the journey,
Miz MetroLink, Claire-ian the Librarian, Melissa, Chris, & Annemarie
The MetroLink Prom Committee
Inquiries: clairelovesthecity {at} gmail.com

EDITED 11/23/09 to add: MetroLink Prom photos I am aware of are up here. If anyone has any more online, post the link in the comments section and I will post them!

Published in:  on October 9, 2009 at 9:34 pm Comments (9)

Announcement: Moving

I’m going to be moving to Detroit in a few weeks,

because I just can’t get it off my mind.

Published in:  on October 5, 2009 at 4:29 am Comments (6)