The incendiary story of conquest, racism, warfare, and historical amnesia at one of the world's most celebrated and ostensibly enlightened public universities. "This is a land acknowledgment." --Ruth Wilson Gilmore, author of Abolition Geography: Essays towards Liberation "The Scandal of Cal is a template for scrutinizing other land-grant universities ... This is a beautifully written and heartbreaking narrative." --Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, author of An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States The University of California, Berkeley--widely known as "Cal"--is admired worldwide as a bastion…mehr
The incendiary story of conquest, racism, warfare, and historical amnesia at one of the world's most celebrated and ostensibly enlightened public universities. "This is a land acknowledgment." --Ruth Wilson Gilmore, author of Abolition Geography: Essays towards Liberation "The Scandal of Cal is a template for scrutinizing other land-grant universities ... This is a beautifully written and heartbreaking narrative." --Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, author of An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States The University of California, Berkeley--widely known as "Cal"--is admired worldwide as a bastion of innovation and a hub for progressive thought. Far less known are the university's roots in plunder, warfare, and the promotion of white supremacy. As Tony Platt shows in The Scandal of Cal, these original sins sit at the center of UC Berkeley's history. Platt looks unflinchingly at the university's desecration of graves and large-scale hoarding of Indigenous remains. He tracks its role in developing the racist pseudoscience of eugenics in the early twentieth century. He sheds light on the school's complicity with the military-industrial complex and its incubation of unprecedented violence through the Manhattan Project. And he underscores its deliberate and continued evasions about its own wrongdoings, which echo in the institution's decision-making up to the present day. This book, above all, illuminates Cal's culpability in some of the cruelest chapters of US history and sounds a clarion call for the university to undertake a thorough and earnest reckoning with its past. It is required reading for Cal alumni, students, faculty, and staff, and for anyone concerned with the impact of higher education in the United States and beyond.
Tony Platt is the author of more than ten books on race, inequality, and social justice in American history, among them Beyond These Walls: Rethinking Crime and Punishment in the United States, The Child Savers: The Invention of Delinquency, and Grave Matters: The Controversy over Excavating California's Buried Indigenous Past. Platt, now a professor emeritus, taught at the University of Chicago, UC Berkeley, and CSU Sacramento, where he received awards for teaching and scholarship. Platt has written for the Los Angeles Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, History News Network, Monthly Review, and the Guardian, and his commentaries have aired on NPR. His publications have been translated into four languages. Platt lives in Berkeley and Big Lagoon, California.
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