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From The Root:

The conversation regarding the new dress-code policy at Morehouse College has been hijacked by a vociferous gang of socially conservative black pundits: some of them simply politically misguided, others merely proud homophobes; a few of them the ideological love-children of Ward Connerly and Bill Cosby. In the short week and a half since I became the first writer to report the news of Morehouse’s new policy, the college has become the subject of an intensifying national debate regarding the role that style plays in producing (or constraining) black male substance.

RELATED: Morehouse Bans Do-Rags, Grills, And Sagging Pants In New Dress Code

By now, there is no need to explain what went “down” at Morehouse. You already know. But while you may have already heard the details of Morehouse’s new “no grills or purses” policy, it’s quite possible that you have yet to hear an impassioned defense of grillz and purses in the spirit of Morehouse’s most illustrious progenitors.

There are those who have argued that it is inappropriate to incite a national public dialogue about what’s happening at a private, independently funded college. In the blogosphere, there have been comments in recent days such as “What goes on at Morehouse is a private affair between its students, alumni and administrators. There is nothing illegal about a private school enforcing a dress code. Any student who is unhappy with the dress code has the liberty to leave.”

These voices are misguided and unsophisticated. Morehouse College is much more than simply a “private institution;” it is a black cultural pillar. In other words, the institution we call “Morehouse” is quite similar to the institution we call “the black church.” One does not have to be a member of these institutions in order to be affected by what goes on within their walls. Given Morehouse’s stature as a historical pillar, all African-American men (not just those who are students or alumni of the institution) have an ethical obligation to contribute to this national dialogue about the politics of the college’s policies—especially in instances where it promotes a climate of rampant anti-ghetto-culture classism and femiphobia.

RELATED: Morehouse Shooter Gets Diploma While Victim Does Not

The bourgeois classism and femiphobia embedded in Morehouse’s policy are symptomatic of a stubborn refusal on behalf of African Americans to have open discussions about 1) the sizable presence of gay men within our community, including (and perhaps especially) at institutions like Morehouse and 2) the continued popularity of black urban culture on the stylistic sensibilities of our black male youth.

The idea that young black men on college campuses are so developmentally arrested that the only way that they can distinguish between what to wear in the classroom vs. what to wear in “corporate America” is by prohibiting them from wearing sagging jeans at all times, is not only absolutely ridiculous, it’s also quite racist. Young black men are all too familiar with having our cultural fashions and stylistics pathologized as deviant, criminal or dysfunctional. It is thus painfully ironic that an administration such as Morehouse—run by and for black men—would promote a policy that implies that baggy jeans are a visual marker of anti-achievement.

Moreover, simply being a private college does not give Morehouse the ethical license to engage in fascist tactics. The vast majority of the nation’s top institutions (ranging from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to Yale University) do not depend on dress codes to “make sure” that their students are intelligent enough to deduce that walking into a medical school interview with gold teeth might not make for a stellar first impression. Instead, these institutions realize that even in the most challenging of intellectual environments, students should be allowed to express themselves on campus freely, in whatever clothing suits their interests.

Turning Morehouse College into a playground of men with cardigans and bow ties will not substantively increase the institution’s rapidly declining graduation rates (at last check, only 64 percent of Morehouse men graduate within six years). Nor will it help to reverse the college’s long-standing inability to attract superstar black faculty in the humanities or social sciences. (I doubt that a new undergraduate “dress code” would be appealing to the likes of Bell Hooks or Cornel West.) Nor will it beef up the resources that one would expect to find on the campus of a purportedly “elite” college (such as better library holdings, laboratories or facilities).

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Tags: HBCUs, Morehouse
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  • http://www.blackplanet.com/Eolufemi/ Eolufemi

    Neither will NYU bloggers…

  • http://www.blackinfo.net/?p=5308 Black Info.Net – African American News Hub | Black Info.Net

    [...] here to read more. Read more here: OPINION: Morehouse Dress Code Won’t Fix Administration Problems Related ArticleWhite House Official: HBCUs Are Stuck In “Survive” Mode Posted in The 411 [...]

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/Rei777/ Rei777

    Called it 100%. I went to Morehouse for a few years and this is a perfect example of how they choose to focus more on image than substance. Yeah, our classrooms and materials are older than Jesus and we don’t even have our own library. But, you’ll look great as you tell everyone that you go to Morehouse, sans du-rag and grill. Because that’s what’s important. Gotta make crappiness look good, right?!

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/Da_J_Rok/ Da_J_Rok

    Thank U Rei777… Teaching and Learning dont have anything to do with APPERANCE!!!

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/Eolufemi/ Eolufemi

    Morehouse has the highest graduation rate for black male college students in the country. They must be doing something right.

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/NYCsmoove/ NYCsmoove

    Good move….now the students can focus on education without the distractions.

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/NYCsmoove/ NYCsmoove

    @ Da_j_Rok

    Appearance can have affect on teaching and learning. Students can become more interested in how they look as opposed to what they should be learning. College students shouldn’t be wearing saggy pants and blingin in their mouth. Black students should be held to higher standards especially, at a HBCU.

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/Da_J_Rok/ Da_J_Rok

    I understand @ NYC… But if clothing can distract you from learning you stupid in the first place

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/Rei777/ Rei777

    Yeah, I would hope that Morehouse would have the highest graduation rate of black males, see that THAT’S WHO THE SCHOOL IS FOR! That’s like saying a strip club has a higher rate of topless women than a regular club. Well, yeah, because that’s what a strip club is for! That doesn’t mean that the rate is good or that these students are getting the best education possible. It just means they’re leaving with paper. I mean, after all, people graduate from online degree factories too. Doesn’t mean they’re good quality workers or that they’ve gotten proper education…

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