Painting a varied picture: an interview with Courtland Lee - Interview
Mary Christine PhillipsCourtland Lee has written extensively
on the psychological and social
development of African-American
male youth, including two books,
Empowering Young Black
Mates (1992) and an
updated edition, Saving the
Native Son: Empowerment
Strategies for Young Black Males (1996). Lee, a
professor of counselor education in the Curry
School of Education at the University of Virginia,
was recently elected to be president of the American
Counseling Association. Until then be edited The
journal of African American Men, a peer-reviewed,
interdisciplinary quarterly that was started by the
National Council of African American Men to
conduct scholarly inquiry into the issues and
challenges that confront African-American male
youth.
How would you characterize the
situation of Black men in America
in the waning years of the 20th
century?
If we give a balanced picture, you will
find that on the one hand scores of
Black youth are doing very well. They
have been the recipients of the social
progress we have made in the last forty
years or so. But on the other hand, we
have a major problem. Black males are
not being afforded the full advantages of
society, vis-a-vis the full advantages of
education and social advancement
overall. It is a varied picture. I think
what is important for us to bear in mind
is if we don't continue to do the kinds of
things we are doing in many of our
communities in terms of the mentoring
programs and other outreach projects,
we will lose a substantial portion of the
next generation of our Black youth.
Increasingly, the subject of loss is
one that is associated with Black
males. Why is that?
I can run off a list of statistics for You,
statistics that show that the Black male
has a one-in-three chance of being killed
by another Black male by his 18th
birthday. In other words, the homicide
rate for Black males is higher than in
any other group of people in the United
Sates. In fact, between the ages of about
fifteen and twenty-four, homicide is the
greatest health threat to Black males.
There are more Black males in prisons
than there are in colleges and
universities; their unemployment rate
generally runs higher than any other
racial or ethnic group in this country;
and Black women, usually between the
ages of 20 and 40, outnumber Black
males seven- or eight-to-one in some
cities. That is because Black men are
either dead, on drugs, or in jail.
How can you, from a scholarly
perspective, change that?
I think one of the things we need to do
is to have a scholarly analysis of all of
the issues and challenges that confront
Black men. Hopefully, The Journal of
African American Men can provide a
forum for solutions to some of the issues
that confront Black men by doing
scholarly inquiry that could impact social
and educational policies.
What is the state of available
statistics on African-American
men?
The data bases are really terrible. I've
written two books on African-American
males and in order to get to the data,
you have to dig through all kinds of
materials. Some comes from the federal
government, some comes from private
agencies.
Again, if we are to talk about the
scholarly perspective, we have to
include Black men in the academy.
Do you address such concerns in
the journal?
The journal has been in existence for a
year, and data on Black men in the
academy have been very, very
sketchy. One of the things we know for
certain, there are more Black women in
the academy than there are Black men.
The reasons for this stem from what I
talked about earlier, and that is Black
men find themselves getting into
disciplinary actions in the legal system
that ends up sending them off to jail.
Many of them don't make it to an age
where they can enter the academy
because of the homicide rate,
Nevertheless, Black males are a presence
on most campuses both as faculty and
staff as well as students. Unfortunately,
sometimes the Black male presence at
many of our institutions is because of the
athlete component at the school. There
are certainly some colleges
where if you find a Black male on
campus, chances are he is either a
football player or basketball player. We
know today that many times college
athletics and academics do not
necessarily go together, so they are
there to play ball and very little else. But
at the same time, we have an awful lot of
Black males who are doing very, very well
in the academy as students and faculty
and staff members. I think it is a very
variable picture.
The Black male presence on
campus as athlete has been a
concern for many scholars. What,
in your opinion, can be done to
stress the importance of an
education over athletics?
It's more than just in the academy, it is
in society overall, I think the more
complex our society becomes, the more
we look for outlets -- entertainment
outlets -- and athletics is a very big
entertainment. It is also big business, and
historically Black men have -- always had
an outlet in sports, and sports have been
an entree into social and economic
advancement. Basically we are talking
about big business, and that has a lot of
allure for young Black men. They see
Black men bouncing basketballs, they don't
see a lot of Black men sending rockets
into space or running Fortune 500
companies or doing other kinds of
things. There is no glamour and allure
there. [But] there is glamour and allure
in sports figures. The academy is one
small part of this because of the fact that
we have glorified to such a level college
basketball and football, which in this
country seems to be dominated by Black
males. What we have to do in the academy
is to find ways to put more pressure on
society at large to change our priorities
when it comes to how we value sports
and sports figures.
I don't see a real de-emphasis
anytime soon on college athletics.
There is just too much money involved
in it now. If there is some
way we can put college athletics back
into perspective in the academy, that
will help. It would make sense for us to
make student-athletes students first and
athletes second so when Black males
come into the academy as athletes, they
would realize that they are students first
and they will be there for four years to
get a degree, while playing their sport
becomes secondary to their academic
pursuits. Unfortunately, because sports
have gotten so blown out of proportion
in society, that does not happen
anymore.
Given the breadth of studies and
statistics available today, is
enough being done by the Black
community and society in general
to redress the problems that
plague the Black male?
Ever since the Million Man March last
October, there has been a lot of
attention on the whole notion of
community involvement. But even prior
to the march, more and more
community programs -- grassroots
programs -- have been coming into
existence to address the problems of
young Black men. They fall under the
heading of "Rites of Passage" programs -- programs
where older men in the
community are taking it upon
themselves to reach back and develop
mentoring programs for Black male
youth in the communities.
Are the problems of young Black
men very different from those of
young Black women?
That's a good question. It is more of a
qualitative kind of difference in many
respects. There is a lot of historical and
sociological contexts that need to be
understood even though the problems
that face African Americans are similar
across gender. Qualitatively, things tend
to be different for Black men only be
cause of the fact that throughout history
Black men, in a wider social context,
have been seen as a threat to the
established social order. Black women
haven't. So the women have had the
opportunity to have greater entree into
the dominant society, so to speak. That
has not been the case for Black men.
Does higher education have a
special responsibility to young
Black men?
Yes, but we're not expecting higher
education to solve all the problems that
young Black males face. We're looking
to colleges and universities to turn out
people across disciplines who can go into
communities and deal with some of the
health, education and social issues facing
African-American men.
But it is not the responsibility of
higher education to take up the banner
of young Black males to the exclusion of
any other population in the U.S.
Can you point to solutions for the
problems facing young Black
men?
People keep talking about the solution
and what we are talking about are a
number of complex factors that need
intervention at a number of levels.
Government has a role to play, education
has a role to play, and the African-American
community has a role to play.
All of it has to do with rebuilding what I
call the triangle of support. We need to
find ways to strengthen families,
strengthen schools and strengthen social
institutions such as churches, and other
organizations like the Boy Scouts.
COPYRIGHT 1996 Cox, Matthews & Associates
COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group