Atlanta and the Death of Civil Rights Scholarship
Atlanta continues to struggle to understandwhat it has done in retrieving the Martin Luther King manuscripts from Sotheby's auction. The terms of the agreement between the King Estate and the city's private lenders are secret, but David Garrow,"Civil Rights Era for Sale," Los Angeles Times, 30 June, points to some obvious problems.
King's admirers once built a building, the Martin Luther King Center for Nonviolent Social Change, to house the documents in its archive. They were to be the" cornerstone" in the country's leading archive of the civil rights era. The bulk of the city's King manuscripts continue to be there, in a building that the King Estate has allowed to deteriorate and wants to sell to the National Park Service. Several years ago, the Park Service estimated that it would take $11 million to restore the King Center to acceptable building standards. Meanwhile the roof leaks on the world's largest collection of civil rights movement documents.
When the $32 million loan to purchase the King holograph documents from the King Estate is paid off, they and the 1000 book library retrieved from Sotheby's will be owned by King's alma mater, Morehouse College, and at least temporarily housed in the Atlanta University Center's Robert W. Woodruff Library. There, at least, qualified archivists will manage the collection in a facility that is yet underfunded and understaffed. Still, on the one hand, Morehouse President Walter Massey talks of a future possibility in which the College will erect its own archive to feature King's manuscripts as a showcase of college pride. For 20 years, however, the College has held 40 boxes of Benjamin Mays manuscripts under lock and key, denying access even to its own faculty member, Walter Fluker, who edits the Howard Thurman Papers. Clayborne Carson, editor of The Martin Luther King Papers, Benjamin Mays biographers, Vernon Burton and Randal Jelks, and I have all been denied access to the Mays papers. It doesn't bode well for Morehouse's stewardship of the King documents.
On the other hand, with tourist traffic foremost in mind, Atlanta's Mayor Shirley Franklin and former Mayor Andrew Young talk about building a new $100 million civil rights museum downtown, in which the King documents would be the" cornerstone." Framing and hanging King's manuscript notes on its walls, Sotheby's described them as"works of art." Mayors Franklin and Young apparently drank the auctioneer's kool-aid and dream of their potential for display. Are your dissertation and lecture notes works of art? Can't you just see some poor doctoral candidate schlepping from one museum's"work of art" to another and hurriedly keying notes into her laptop? If, like Evan Roberts and Caleb McDaniel, the hapless doctoral candidate tries to use a digital camera instead of a laptop, I'd guess the Estate-police will seize it, kick her out of the museum, and subsequently indicate a willingness to sell her camera back to her.