![]() I was so focused on trying to do well in my classes - and being on scholarship, making sure my grades stayed high - even as I worked multiple jobs (both work study and off campus) and did lots of activism and then got on Spectator. What, if anything, about your College experience would you do over? (I’m pretty sure there were three Moore sculptures when I was on campus, and I loved them all!) I was particularly partial to those close to The Thinker or the Henry Moore bronze sculpture that you could turn - there was something comforting about how solid and beautiful they were. I loved Low Library because you could be up there and feel like you had your own contained, “up above things” part of the campus, a comfortable few steps away from the bustle and bigness of the Steps and College Walk and Broadway or Amsterdam. ![]() I always loved the benches and little hideaway places where you could sit and read, especially in the spring when the flowers and trees were blooming on either side of the Steps. And I credit that course with shifting my lens to the issues that have become my life’s work.ĭid you have a favorite spot on campus, and what did you like about it? So, I critiqued it - I guess you could say “from the left” - saying the privacy doctrine didn’t take into account class and race and the ways those limit the choices women can make. Wade, and insisted that it be a serious critical analysis. Professor McClintock let me write a paper on Roe v. But this was the late 1980s and women’s reproductive rights were under attack, so I started paying attention to that. If I had time outside the Core, I focused on political science courses, especially international relations, and had been really politically active in those kinds of things. In my junior year, I took a class with Anne McClintock GSAS’89 about gender and literature –– but it was even more than I expected, because her scholarship was about race and gender and sexuality, and imperialism and globalization (or whatever we were calling it then). (Oh, and food service was all you could eat - what?!?!) I was kind of adopted by an amazing group of people who lived on 9, some of whom remain among those I hold most dear in my life. I tried not to take it as a bad omen that the elevators were broken my first day there! I still remember the little group of us who lived at the end of the hall and around the corner from the lounge (where we had MTV, which I thought was magic). ![]() I had a single on the 13th floor of John Jay. What do you remember about your first-year living situation? Everyone was so welcoming and interested in learning about each other because, in truth - regardless of where we went to school or how much our parents made, or whether they were able to help us settle in - it was new to all of us, and it was up to us to create our own “Columbia family.” Because as overwhelming as it was to find myself completely out of my element, it was also exhilarating. When they got to me, I said “South.” And everyone was like, “South what?” And then we all laughed. I’ll never forget when we went around in a circle in my freshman orientation group to say where we went to high school, and hearing places like Choate and Andover and Georgetown Prep. My family was pretty poor when I was growing up, so I showed up at Columbia by myself (no parents with me), with all of my worldly possessions stuffed into two green Army surplus duffle bags. I went to public junior high and high school in Minneapolis, which was “the big city” to me, having spent my childhood living for a year, maybe two, in places like Port Sanilac, Mich. I was an absolute neophyte - everything was new and different and completely foreign to me. What were you like when you arrived at Columbia? A nationally recognized expert in reproductive rights and women’s health, Miller has been a leader and a consultant at a host of nonprofit, advocacy and philanthropic organizations for more than two decades. Andrea Miller ’89 is president of the National Institute for Reproductive Health and the NIRH Action Fund, organizations that build power at the state and local level to change public policy, galvanize public support and normalize women’s decisions about abortion and contraception.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |