Man Bites Dog at the MLA

December 31st, 2007 By: Arvak | Tags:

Acting in the name of academic freedom, the Modern Language Association, a professional association of professors largely from English departments, has substituted moderate resolutions for at least some of its usual slate of radically leftist causes. What makes this a “man bites dog” story is that an organization that has recently been interested in academic freedom only as rhetorical underpinning for those causes selected and favored by its “radical caucus” as politically correct has abruptly turned a corner and chosen instead to place the general principle ahead of selective partisan causes. Specifically, where the MLA once joined the charge against pro-Israel speakers and advocates while claiming the mantle of academic freedom for opponents and critics of Israel, it has now approved a substitute resolution that explicitly refuses to favor either side of the political divide over Israel:

Furr was the author of the original resolution on the campus climate for critics of Israel. The resolution as he wrote it said that some who criticize Zionism and Israel have been “denied tenure, disinvited to speak … [or] fraudulently called ‘anti-Semitic.’” The resolution called this a “serious danger to academic study and discussion in the USA today” and then resolved that “the MLA defend the academic freedom and the freedom of speech of faculty and invited speakers to criticize Zionism and Israel.” The resolution made no mention of the right of others on campus to embrace Zionism or Israel or to hold middle-of-the-road views or any views other than being critical of Israel and Zionism.

Nelson offered a substitute — which was approved to replace the original by a vote of 63 to 30 — after heated debate. Nelson’s substitute noted that the “Middle East is a subject of intense debate,” said it was “essential that colleges and universities protect faculty rights to speak forthrightly on all sides of the issue,” and urged colleges to “resist” pressure from outside groups about tenure reviews and speakers and to instead uphold academic freedom. Nelson’s resolution did not identify one side or the other as victim or villain in the campus debates over the Middle East and said that academic freedom must apply to people “to address the issue of the Middle East in the manner they choose.”

While many might see this as just another small-stakes battle within an organization of ideologically isolated and self-absorbed academics, it is emblematic of a broader trend within academia to take academic freedom and professional responsibility more seriously. Those who see college classrooms as appropriate sites for political activism are increasingly on the defensive as even those colleagues who often agree with them ideologically question the appropriateness of such use of professors’ powers to shape students’ minds. Furthermore, a growing wave of public reporting the excesses of mob-based campus enforcers of political correctness by groups such as the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education has raised the public profile of the issue, forcing those who once enjoyed academia as a microcosm of an enforced ideologically homogeneous utopia to justify their demands for conformity before a wider audience than the echo chambers to which they had become accustomed.

When the AAUP begins to admonish the mobs of political correctness that threaten or assault conservative or pro-Israel speakers as well as caution promotion and tenure committees that use inappropriate ideological criteria under the misleading rubric of professional qualifications with the same vigor that it uses in condemning those rare cases where academic leftists come under ideological attack that threatens their careers, we will know that professionalism within academia has finally begun to place principle ahead of ideology across the board.

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  1. Orson Buggeigh
    January 1st, 2008 at 03:36
    Reply | Quote | #1

    One has to wonder how much of the move to moderation is maturation by members of the MLA, and how much is recognition that the radically activist faculty are losing the support of the public.  Note that the moderating language is from someone who has decent left of center bona fides.  This may be a hopeful sign, but I would not bet the farm on it. 

    However, note that there may be another shoe to drop in the coming year.  Three of the un-indicted Duke lacrosse players have filed suit, naming some of the Duke administration as well as the members of the law enforcement community that led the prosecutions.  The discovery process might make public much of the dirt about the behavior of the radicals on the faculty and administration that Duke sought to sweep under th carpet by paying off the the three falsely indicted players.  That could bring some much needed sunshine on the state of the radicalsamong the faculty, and get the public’s attention. 

    As for Ward Churchill, the MLA would have been better served to scuttle the whole resolution.  People from various backgrounds, including several reputable scholars who specialize in American Indian – White relations have utterly discredited Churchill’s work.  The reality is that is seems very probable that he was hired for purely political reasons – because he was a radical – and not on the basis of either his academic credentials, or his scholarship.  The torrent of writings Churchill has released since his hiring has done nothing to discredit the supposition that he is an academic failure.  On the contrary, it has completely convicted him of academic failure.  There is no credible reason any academic with scholarly integrity to regret his firing.  Churchill should never have been hired in the first place.  His firing was predicated on academic misconduct which had been noticed several years before his repulsive but constitutionally protected "Little Eichmanns" essay.  That fact seems to be ignored by the MLA’s radicals. 
    Orson Buggeigh

  2. C
    January 2nd, 2008 at 19:57
    Reply | Quote | #2

    What does it take to get labelled a "radical leftist" by this blog? Suggesting the war in Iraq was a mistake or motivated by something other than the desire to "free the Iraqi people"? The MLA membership considers resolutions that relate to the profession and/or language usage — of course it seems "ideologically isolated" and "self-absorbed" for those outside the discipline, much like proceedings of the physicists’ or historians’ professional organizations would be to me. It doesn’t take a genius to know that Churchill was investigated not for allegations of old academic misconduct, but rather for the furor that erupted after his "little Eichmanns" comment. While it would be nice to ascribe institutional power to the Radical Caucus of the MLA, the fact remains (for anyone slightly familiar to the organization) that the Radical Caucus is a marginalized group whose resolutions rarely are passed as written (they are, incidentally, one of the few groups that actually brings resolutions to the delegate assembly).
     
    Interesting enough, FIRE and its allies (Horowitz for example) never can find any actual examples of "homogenous ideology" on campuses, but that doesn’t seem to stop the hysterical references to "mobs" of thought-police…and that in itself may be the failure of higher education.

  3. Tully
    January 2nd, 2008 at 20:07
    Reply | Quote | #3

    What does it take to get labelled a "radical leftist" by this blog?

    For the most part being or sounding like a radical leftist will do it.

  4. Jason Steck
    January 2nd, 2008 at 21:00
    Reply | Quote | #4

    Well, when they call themselves the "radical caucus", I think that makes it pretty justified too.

    Also, disagreeing with the Iraq war doesn’t do it.  Situating that disagreement in a broader rhetorical context of reflexive neo-Marxism, anti-Americanism, and/or BDS does.

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