Booker Prize-winning author Bernardine Evaristo has urged the management of Goldsmiths, University of London, to think again amid claims that courses including a 鈥済round-breaking鈥 master鈥檚 in black British literature could be imperilled by cuts at the institution.
The programme 鈥 the first of its kind when it was launched in 2015 鈥 is among those that could be undermined alongside another master鈥檚 in queer history that has been run since 2017, according to the University and College Union (UCU).
Goldsmiths is听looking to shed 130 academic jobs, one of the most significant restructures in a听current wave of cuts across British higher education, with 11 of its 19 departments affected.
The union claimed that the job cuts could leave the master鈥檚 degrees unviable.
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Professor Evaristo, author of the critically acclaimed novel听Girl, Woman, Other,听who teaches creative writing at Brunel University London,听said it was 鈥渟hocking鈥 that the only master鈥檚 in black British literature was now under threat.
鈥淐ompare this with African American literature, which is widely taught at all levels throughout academia in the US, with many dedicated master鈥檚 programmes including at Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Berkeley and Columbia,鈥 she said.
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鈥淐onversely, British universities have historically only offered token gestures to include black British writers on the curriculum. Yet this field is expanding exponentially and deserving of focused critical attention, with many talented new writers emerging every day in a continuum that extends back to the slave memoirs of the 18th century.鈥
Professor Evaristo, also the president of the Royal Society of Literature, said the master鈥檚 鈥渟houldn鈥檛 be seen as dispensable but as an essential course that is intellectually and culturally enriching for academia, the college and society鈥, and it needed 鈥渢o be protected from cuts at all costs鈥.
Goldsmiths has blamed 鈥渁 funding system that is widely acknowledged to be no longer fit for purpose鈥 for the need to make cuts, with the institution facing rising costs while fees are frozen and recruitment stalls.
But Catherine Rottenberg, a member of the executive of Goldsmiths University and College Union (UCU), said 鈥渉uge savings鈥 had already been made via a voluntary severance programme and jobs freeze, and the scale of the plans听was 鈥渘either justified nor acceptable鈥.
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The branch has voted in favour of taking industrial action and last week announced that听a marking and assessment boycott听would begin听on 19 April.
Other writers and alumni have joined the criticism of the plans to close courses. Angelique Golding, who completed the master鈥檚 in black British literature in 2019, said she had never previously 鈥渆ncountered many of the authors on the MA reading list 鈥 who had, unfortunately, been hidden in plain sight鈥.
鈥淭o lose such an important degree will be a backwards step that will impact future scholars and scholarship and work, once again, in the service of undermining the black voice and presence in the UK,鈥 she said.
A Goldsmiths spokesperson said: 鈥淲e are consulting on proposals with the union to deal with the unprecedented challenges that Goldsmiths and other universities are facing from a funding system that is no longer fit for purpose. The proposals are part of a wider plan aimed at ensuring that Goldsmiths continues to be a beacon for radical research and innovative teaching as well as an entry point for students who are the first in their family to go to university.听
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鈥淲e鈥檙e proud to have widened scholastic learning with the introduction of the MAs in Black British literature and queer history and are committed to both protecting and enhancing arts and humanities subjects in the best way we can.鈥澨
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