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- <text id=91TT0714>
- <title>
- Apr. 01, 1991: Upside Down In The Groves Of Academe
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Apr. 01, 1991 Law And Disorder
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- IDEAS, Page 66
- Upside Down in the Groves of Academe
- </hdr><body>
- <p>In U.S. classrooms, battles are flaring over values that are
- almost a reverse image of the American mainstream. As a result,
- a new intolerance is on the rise.
- </p>
- <p>By William A. Henry III--Reported by Anne Hopkins and Daniel
- S. Levy/New York, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> Imagine places where it is considered racist to speak of the
- rights of the individual when they conflict with the
- community's prevailing opinion. Where it is taboo to debate the
- moral fitness of homosexuals as parents, and sexist to order
- a Domino's pizza because the chain's chairman donates money to
- an antiabortion group. Imagine institutions that insist they
- absolutely defend free speech but punish the airing of
- distasteful views by labeling them unacceptable "behavior"
- instead of words--and then expel the perpetrators.
- </p>
- <p> Imagine a literature class that equates Shakespeare and the
- novelist Alice Walker, not as artists but as fragments of
- sociology. Shakespeare is deemed to represent the outlook of
- a racist, sexist and classist 16th century England, while
- Walker allegedly embodies a better but still oppressive 20th
- century America. Finally, imagine a society in which some of
- the teachers reject the very ideas of rationality, logic and
- dialogue as the cornerstone assumptions of learning--even
- when discussing science.
- </p>
- <p> Where is this upside-down world? According to an increasing
- number of concerned academics, administrators and students, it
- is to be found on many U.S. college campuses. And it is
- expanding into elementary and secondary school classrooms.
- </p>
- <p> For most of American history, the educational system has
- reflected and reinforced bedrock beliefs of the larger society.
- Now a troubling number of teachers at all levels regard the
- bulk of American history and heritage as racist, sexist and
- classist and believe their purpose is to bring about social
- change--or, on many campuses, to enforce social changes
- already achieved.
- </p>
- <p> This new thinking is not found everywhere, to be sure, but
- in many places professors contend it is becoming dominant.
- While American universities and colleges have always been
- centers for the critical examination of Western assumptions and
- beliefs, the examination has taken a harsh and strident turn.
- At times it amounts to a mirror-image reversal of basic
- assumptions held by the nation's majority.
- </p>
- <p> To the dismay of many civil libertarians, the new turns of
- thought are fostering a decline in tolerance and a rise in
- intellectual intimidation. Says Leon Botstein, president of New
- York's liberal Bard College: "Nobody wants to listen to the
- other side. On many campuses, you really have a culture of
- forbidden questions."
- </p>
- <p> Obfuscatory course titles and eccentric reading lists
- frequently are wedded to a combative political agenda or
- outlandish views of the nation's culture and values. At Duke
- University in North Carolina, an English-department course uses
- plays and films to pursue the theme that organized crime "is
- a metaphor for American business as usual." Another Duke
- offering condemns a heterosexual bias in traditional Western
- literature; its professor has written about such topics as
- "Jane Austen and the masturbating girl."
- </p>
- <p> A University of Texas professor of American studies has
- constructed a course on 19th century writers to alternate
- between famous white men one week and obscure women the next,
- in part to illuminate "the prison house of gender." A woman who
- has been visiting professor at both the University of Hawaii
- and the University of Texas describes traditional liberal arts
- as prone to "a fetishized respect for culture as a stagnant
- secular religion." Mary Louise Pratt, a Stanford professor of
- comparative literature, has objected to "the West's relentless
- imperial expansion" and its "monumentalist cultural hierarchy
- that is historically as well as morally distortive."
- </p>
- <p> Although most students at most colleges continue to take
- courses bearing at least some resemblance to what their
- predecessors studied, even the traditional curriculum is often
- read in new ways. Valerie Babb, an assistant professor of
- English at Georgetown, is teaching a course this semester
- called White Male Writers. Among them: Hawthorne, Melville and
- Faulkner. The title reflects one of the course's chief
- assertions: that just as women or black writers are studied as
- a class that shares a particular sensibility, so too should
- these white male artists be. However great their works might
- be, they speak merely as "one element of the large and
- diversified body of literature."
- </p>
- <p> The flowering of new and at times exotic theory is in
- keeping with the great tradition of liberal-arts education. But
- many of the new critics have a hostile view of traditional
- scholarship and seem to judge ideas by their "political
- correctness" (abbreviated as P.C.)--that is, on the basis of
- whom they might offend.
- </p>
- <p> The University of Delaware barred Linda Gottfredson from
- accepting money for her educational research from the
- controversial Pioneer Fund because it had financed unrelated
- studies into possible hereditary differences in intelligence
- among the races. The review committee judged that by
- underwriting such studies, Pioneer had exhibited "a pattern of
- activities incompatible with the university's mission." The
- University of Michigan student newspaper condemned sociologist
- Reynolds Farley for, as he phrases it, "lack of ideological
- perspective, for not directly attacking gender and racial
- differences in wages." A male philosophy professor at Pomona
- College in California has been fighting a lonely and losing
- battle to get a course critical of feminist theory listed among
- women's studies. Several schools have punished students for
- expressing religious objections to homosexuality or, as at the
- University of Washington, questioning a professor's assertion
- that lesbians make the best mothers.
- </p>
- <p> Taboos on fields of inquiry are increasingly accompanied by
- bans on language. According to a growing number of academic
- theorists, the First Amendment guarantee of freedom of speech
- can be legitimately laid aside for worthy reasons. Chief among
- them is if it interferes with what is billed as a new and
- nonconstitutional right: the right to avoid having one's
- feelings hurt, or what Botstein calls a "subjective
- interpretation of harm." Thus dozens of universities have
- introduced tough new codes prohibiting speech that leads to,
- among other things, a "demeaning atmosphere," and some of them
- have suspended students for using epithets toward blacks,
- homosexuals or other minorities, not only in classrooms but
- also in dormitories, in intramural sports and even off campus
- altogether.
- </p>
- <p> "Freedom of expression is no more sacred than freedom from
- intolerance or bigotry," says John Jeffries, a black who is
- associate dean of the graduate school of management and urban
- policy at New York City's New School for Social Research. But
- on some campuses, hostility to white males is more or less
- condoned. The University of Wisconsin at Parkside suspended one
- student for addressing another as "Shaka Zulu"; yet the
- university's Madison campus held that the term red-neck was not
- discriminatory. At some schools, professors teach that white
- males can never be victims of racism, because racism is a form
- of repressive political power--and white males already hold
- the power in Western society.
- </p>
- <p> At Brown University, President Vartan Gregorian redefined
- the racist, wee-hours tirade of a drunken student as
- unacceptable behavior rather than as protected free speech and,
- having thereby finessed First Amendment concerns, expelled the
- offender. Although Gregorian insists he was responding to the
- whole set of circumstances, his explanation is widely disputed.
- Says Village Voice columnist Nat Hentoff, a First Amendment
- activist: "Gregorian is engaged, unwittingly I suppose, in
- classic Orwellian speech."
- </p>
- <p> In an unlikely tactical alliance to ban such activities,
- Representative Henry Hyde of Illinois, a conservative
- Republican, this month introduced a bill with the backing of
- the American Civil Liberties Union. The measure is designed to
- discourage private colleges from disciplining students "solely
- on the basis of conduct that is speech or other communication."
- It is given a good chance of passage.
- </p>
- <p> In the nation's elementary and secondary schools, the
- polarization is not yet so extreme. But increasingly
- curriculums are being written to satisfy the political demands
- of parents and community activists. In some cases, expediency
- counts for more than facts. New York State officials, for
- example, have responded to pressure from Native American
- leaders by revamping the state high school curriculum to include
- the shaky assertion that the U.S. Constitution was based on
- the political system of the Iroquois Confederacy. In Berkeley,
- chicana activist Martha Acevedo, who is vice chairman of the
- school board, has blocked adoption of new textbooks despite
- state approval for their multicultural approach. According to
- her, the books lack "positive role models." She cites the
- depiction of a 19th century Hispanic Robin Hood-style figure
- who is shown in one text on a wanted poster.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps the most problematic development is the emergence
- in dozens of cities of "Afrocentric" curriculums. All of them
- legitimately seek to bolster black children's confidence in
- their ability to achieve and to debunk the patronizing notion
- that black American history and culture began with the
- Emancipation Proclamation. When pursued with intellectual
- discipline, the Afrocentric idea can be inspirational. Says
- Franklyn Jenifer, president of Howard University, in recalling
- his own education at that historically black school: "Every
- course I took was infused with some sense of our destiny or my
- personal destiny and the possibility of my achieving it."
- </p>
- <p> But through zealotry or inadequate research, too many of
- these courses have expanded their claims far beyond the
- generally accepted list of black attainments. Among the most
- controversial assertions: that ancient Greece derived--no,
- stole--its culture from black Africa; that black Africans
- invented science and mathematics; that the Egypt of the
- pharaohs was a black culture; and that a racist white
- Establishment has systematically hidden these and other black
- achievements. The hazard of such courses is that they may
- instill less pride than resentment.
- </p>
- <p> Ethnic material increasingly is taught to children of all
- races; conventional history increasingly is not. In
- education-minded Brookline, Mass., where 79% of high school
- graduates go on to college, parents have had to fight to
- restore a European-history course that was canceled as
- Eurocentric and elitist. Meanwhile, students have been enticed
- into fringe electives with such sales pitches as "Have you
- ever wondered what goes on in the mind of a voodoo doctor?"
- </p>
- <p> Why are Western cultural and social values so out of favor
- in the classroom when so much of the rest of the world has
- moved, during the past couple of years, to embrace them? Roger
- Kimball, conservative author of Tenured Radicals, a book
- harshly critical of the trend, blames the coming of age of the
- academic generation shaped by the struggles of the '60s. Its
- members, he says, vowed back then to transform campuses into
- engines of ongoing social change; now they are in a position
- to impose their will. A much less conspiratorial interpretation
- is that American schools and colleges are dealing with a
- demographic change that will take another couple of decades to
- grip society as a whole--the shift, because of higher birth
- and immigration rates among nonwhite and Hispanic people, from
- a majority-white to a truly multiracial society. These nonwhite
- and Hispanic students want a curriculum that gives them more
- dignity. So do women and gays--and faculty from all those
- groups. Says the Rev. Clarence Glover Jr., who teaches a course
- about the sins of "the European-American male" at Southern
- Methodist University in Dallas: "People of color have always
- been a majority in the world and are now becoming a majority in
- America. The issue becomes, How do we begin to share power?"
- </p>
- <p> Courses that explore these questions are increasingly
- popular among students in general, but the primary audience for
- minority-oriented curriculums is usually the minorities
- themselves. Typically, they seek courses that reassure as much
- as instruct them. At San Francisco State College and also in
- that city's two-year City College, students can minor in gay
- and lesbian studies, with such offerings as Gay Male
- Relationships and Sexual Well-Being. The City College department
- was founded in 1989, says chairman Jack Collins, because "it
- will raise the self-esteem of lesbian and gay students who will
- realize that they are complete people, that we do have
- recognizable and describable cultures."
- </p>
- <p> The chief risk in any ideologically based curriculum is that
- it can promote tribalism and downplay the value of discovering
- common cultural ground. The very idea of the melting pot, of
- assimilation, indeed of a common American identity, is under
- fire in some academic circles. Warns Diane Ravitch, adjunct
- professor of history and education at Columbia: "If we teach
- kids to connect themselves to one group defined by race or
- language or religion, then we have no basis for public
- education. We need to retain a sense of the common venture."
- </p>
- <p> Colleges are as subject to fad and fashion as the rest of
- society--perhaps more, for the client base of students turns
- over quickly. But few scholars believe the current intellectual
- battles will end soon--particularly as the confrontation
- permeates other levels of education. In the process, the
- American tradition of tolerance in diversity, an uneven
- tradition at best, may be strained as rarely before.
- </p>
- <p>BULLETINS FROM THE P.C. FRONT
- </p>
- <p> SANTA CRUZ, CALIF. A University of California administrator
- has sought to ban such phrases as "a chink in his armor," "a
- nip in the air" and "call a spade a spade" because they contain
- words that in other contexts have been used to express
- prejudice.
- </p>
- <p> SAN FRANCISCO. Students who signed up for a fall-semester
- course in Black Politics at San Francisco State picketed it
- instead, and most eventually dropped out. Their complaint: it
- was listed in the catalog under Political Science rather than
- Black Studies.
- </p>
- <p> AMHERST, MASS. A "straight pride" demonstration by
- conservative students at the University of Massachusetts in
- March was broken up by gay protesters. (Last year the event was
- billed provocatively as the "Burn a Fag in Effigy" rally.)
- </p>
- <p> SANTA MONICA, CALIF. Last week the social-science department
- at Santa Monica College censured economics professor Eugene
- Buchholz for arguing ethnic- and gender-based studies
- "sidetrack students who could otherwise gain useful disciplines
- or skills."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-