Two Frameworthy Statements
Here’s the one I wanted to comment on no matter what. In a discussion of that perennially popular subject, why are there so few conservative academics. I simply wanted to point out (actually I want to frame in gold leaf, and embroider, and carve in stone, and issue in a limited edition with illuminated initials and gold binding) this comment, which pretty much sums up a lot of what B&W is about and what prompted it in the first place:
The labels ‘conservative’ and ‘liberal’ take on new and peculiar meanings in Academia. For instance, I believe in affirmative action, increasing taxes on the rich, socialized medicine, I am pro-legalized abortion, hold Christianity to be institutionalized ignorance, and donate to the ACLU. In all you could say I am pretty left wing. Except when I was a grad-student in Classics. Then I was called at various times a Nazi, a Fascist, compared to the French Aristocracy prior to the revolution, and labelled ‘arch-conservative’ more than once. Why? I rejected relativism, ridiculed deconstructionism, was in favor of the traditional Canon as core reading in the Humanities, had the audacity to point out the many egregious historical errors that certain Black Studies and Women’s Studies professors made (the former blatantly making stuff up about Egypt, the latter Crete). I also ‘proved’ I was a right-winger by explaining the etymology of the word ‘history’, after someone used the term ‘herstory.’ Intellectual conservatism and political conservatism are quite different things.
There it is. The day the left became associated with anti-rationalism and left rationalism to conservatives – that was one bad day.
It’s fascinating to see Stanley Fish saying something similar. I don’t know if this is a clarification or a change of views. I had thought he was a fairly Rortyish (or do I mean Rortyesque) pragmatist, but this doesn’t seem very Rortyesque:
It’s hard to see how anyone who believes (as I do) that academic work is distinctive in its aims and goals and that its distinctiveness must be protected from political pressures (either external or internal) could find anything to disagree with here. Everything follows from the statement that the pursuit of truth is a — I would say the — central purpose of the university. For the serious embrace of that purpose precludes deciding what the truth is in advance, or ruling out certain accounts of the truth before they have been given a hearing, or making evaluations of those accounts turn on the known or suspected political affiliations of those who present them.
But either way, it’s a very eloquent statement of a very important point. Where is that gold leaf…
haha, would you believe that when I first read that comment on CT (yesterday), I immediately thought of B&W?
I also ‘proved’ I was a right-winger by explaining the etymology of the word ‘history’, after someone used the term ‘herstory.’
You’d think the radical wordsmiths could at least be consistent… how about advocating “herstrionics”? Or maybe even “hersteria”?
(er…never mind that the original began ‘hys’ rather than ‘his’. If they ignore etymology, then why should the spelling make a difference? Everything is evidence of patriarchical dominance. Even that which isn’t.)
Yeah and I think I’ll have a big hyssy fit about it.
(Mind you, I have a streak of radical wordsmith myself. I do avoid the default male pronoun, and flinch when other people use it. But I’ve never in my long life said ‘herstory’. Ech.)
I would believe that! Silly me for not getting around to reading that thread on CT until today. Especially since we have an In Focus on the subject. I just didn’t get around to it…
[presses back of wrist to brow in herstrionic manner]
I liked that comment on CT, too. A prof in my own (English) department dismissed as “conservative” the rest of the faculty. Since I’d heard this complaint from other professors before and was perplexed by it (we have one Republican in the department and he’s an emeritus as of last year), I pressed him for details. Here are the objects of his disdain:
–The white “sixties liberals” (his phrase), for being in favor of affirmative action yet not being able to “connect” with minorities. He includes a couple of lesbian feminist profs in this category.
–“Old-fashioned” Marxists (his phrase again)
–Our 2 blue-collar Democrats (“the worst”)
–a queer Derridean deconstructionist, apparently because of his degenerate Western focus on pleasure and the self (!).
Sounds like a bunch of John Birchers to me.
And the stupidity argument is just, well, stupid. We all know poststructuralism and its social-constructionist, anti-rationalist spawn rule the roost. Any student whose research pushes against the orthodoxy risks being called a naive humanist–the uptown label for “conservative.” Such students don’t have to announce their politics at the interview, for crying out loud; their publication histories do all the talking.
Very interesting. It’s all quite circular, really. ‘Our ideas are left because they’re New and Radical and Different so that’s the definition of left and conservative is whatever doesn’t agree and we get to decide and you don’t because we have the New Radical ideas and you don’t. Repeat. Etc.’
‘Yes but are the ideas any good, do they stand up, do they make sense, are they consistent, are they coherent, do they undermine themselves, is there any evidence for them?’
‘You’re a conservative. Go away.’
It’s been my observation that there is no one quite as conservative as a left-wing academic with tenure — at least when you’re talking about changes in his/her/their department.
Pardon my ignorance, but you could you elucidate the bit about Fish not being Rortyish?
Ah but you see Nix, that’s some other definition of conservative. Has to be, you see.
Chris, Rorty is generally skeptical about the word ‘truth’ – so I take Fish’s straightforward assertion of the value of truth to be unRortyish.
History/herstory/hystery —
I laughed so hard I got a himnia.
Nix, your himnia neologism goes into my new vocabulary list. Well done.
Ophelia (if I may), you’re right on the money about the circularity and insularity of the “conservative” label.
I love this site. B&W kicks ass. (Pardon me; I seem to be having a moment.)
Yeah, that made me laugh too, Nix.
Oh don’t apologize, Rose. A blogger a couple of days ago avowed that I personally kick ass – now that’s what I call flattery! B&W is blushingly, simperingly pleased to be told that.
I just googled “himnia” — turns out I’m not as original as I thought.
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&q=himnia&btnG=Google+Search