The Strawberry Statement

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The Strawberry Statement
OCLC
5595

The Strawberry Statement is a non-fiction book by

April 1968 protests and takeover of the office of the dean of Columbia by student protesters.[1]

Explanation of title

The book's title was a reference to a statement made by

Herbert Deane, vice dean of Graduate Faculties, in an April 1967 interview with Columbia Daily Spectator, the student newspaper. Speaking about the role of students in university policy, Deane said that "student or faculty opinion should not in itself have any influence on the formation of administrative policy". "A university is definitely not a democratic institution," he added. "When decisions begin to be made democratically around here, I will not be here any longer."[2] Deane concluded with what students widely mocked as "the strawberry statement": "Whether students vote 'yes' or 'no' on a given issue means as much to me as if they were to tell me they like strawberries."[3][4]

Deane frequently said that he had been misunderstood on the matter. In a 1988 interview with campus radio station

WKCR
, he said student opinions about university policy did matter to him, but if they were offered without reasoned explanations, then they meant no more to him than if a majority of students liked strawberries.

Film adaptation

A film loosely based on the book, but fictionalized, was released in 1970.

See also

  • Columbia University protests of 1968
  • Morningside Park (New York City)
  • Morningside Heights, Manhattan

References

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  2. .
  3. .
  4. ^ Starr, Paul (Spring 2018). "How the '68 Uprising Looks Today". Columbia College Today. Retrieved July 14, 2018.