Plus de Donovan Livingston

Education is no equalizer — rather, it is the sleep that precedes the American Dream. So wake up. Lift your voices until you've patched every hole in a child's broken sky.

DL

Donovan Livingston

Harvard University Convocation 2016, 2016

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Livingston opened his poem by quoting Horace Mann's 1848 declaration that education is 'a great equalizer of the conditions of men,' then spent the rest of the poem systematically dismantling that claim. At the time Mann spoke those words, Livingston noted, he — as a Black person — 'couldn't read, couldn't write. Any attempt to do so, punishable by death.' The wordplay on 'the American Dream' was the poem's most devastating rhetorical move. If education is not the equalizer but the sleep, then the American Dream is literally a dream — something experienced while unconscious, not while awake and active. The call to 'wake up' was both a metaphorical call to consciousness and a literal command to action. Delivered at Harvard — an institution that is simultaneously one of the world's greatest educational achievements and a symbol of educational inequality — the line carried extraordinary tension. Livingston was using the platform that elite education gave him to argue that education as currently practiced perpetuates the very inequalities it claims to solve. The poem ended with a declaration of cosmic possibility: 'No, sky is not the limit. It is only the beginning. Lift off.'

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