Send As SMS

Wednesday, March 01, 2006

Professor's Post: Robert Jensen: Right-wing Distortions About Leftist Professors

I’m constantly attacked by people who have no knowledge of - and as far as I can tell, no interest in learning about - how I teach.

By Robert Jensen PalestineChronicle.com

In an “urgent” email last week, right-wing activist David Horowitz hyped his latest book about threats to America’s youth from leftist professors. The ad for “The Professors -- The 101 Most Dangerous Academics in America” describes me as: “Texas Journalism Professor Robert Jensen, who rabidly hates the United States, and recently told his students, ‘The United States has lost the war in Iraq and that’s a good thing.’” I’m glad Horowitz got my name right (people often misspell it “Jenson”). But everything else is distortion, and that one sentence teaches much about the reactionary right’s disingenuous rhetorical strategy. First, I’m not rabid, in personal or political style. I’m a sedate, non-descript middle-aged academic who tries to approach political and moral questions rationally. I articulate principles, provide evidence about how those principles are often undermined by powerful institutions, and offer logical conclusions about how citizens should respond. I encourage people to disagree with my principles, contest my evidence, and question my logic -- all appropriate activities in a university where students are being trained to think for themselves, and in a nominally democratic society where citizens should to do the same. Second, I offer such critiques without hate. Sometimes my assessments are harsh, such as in evaluating George W. Bush’s invasion of Iraq and concluding the attack was unlawful and, therefore, our president is guilty of crimes against peace and should be prosecuted. Similarly harsh was the judgment that Bill Clinton’s insistence on maintaining the harsh economic embargo on Iraq in the 1990s resulted in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of innocents and, therefore, Clinton was a moral monster who was unfit to govern. None of this has to do with hating either man, but instead with assessments and judgments we should be making. Third, these critiques are not of the United States, but of specific policies and policymakers. No nation is a monolith with a single set of interests or political positions, and it’s nonsensical to claim that harsh critique constitutes rejection of an entire nation. Why would anyone suggest that I rabidly hate the United States? It’s easier to defame opponents using emotionally charged language than engage on real issues. Accuse them of being irrational and hateful. Ignore the substance of the claims and just sling mud. By even minimal standards of intellectual or political discourse it’s not terribly honorable, but it often works. Beyond these junkyard dog tactics, Horowitz’s email also makes one crucial factual error. I did write that the U.S. losing the Iraq war was a good thing -- not in celebration of death and destruction, of course, but because the defeat temporarily restrains policymakers in their dangerous attempts to extend the U.S. empire. But that was the first sentence of an opinion piece I published in various newspapers in 2004, not a statement to students. The distinction is important. Horowitz and similar critics argue that professors like me inappropriately politicize the classroom, forcing captive student audiences to listen to radical rants. No doubt there are professors who rant -- from the left, right and center; there’s a lot of bad teaching in universities. But I’m constantly attacked by people who have no knowledge of -- and as far as I can tell, no interest in learning about -- how I teach. Because they hear me express strong opinions at political rallies or read my newspaper opinion pieces, they assume I treat my classroom like a pulpit and students as targets for conversion. I teach journalism, and in the course of that teaching I regularly discuss how journalists cover controversial topics; it’s hard to imagine teaching responsibly without doing that. When appropriate, I have talked in class about how journalists cover war -- explaining that many people around the world believe the U.S. invasion of Iraq violated international law, observing that U.S. journalists in the corporate commercial media rarely write about that, and suggesting reasons for the omission. There’s always a politics to teaching; the choices professors make about what readings to assign and how to approach a subject are influenced by their politics -- left, right, or center. But that does not meaning teaching is nothing but politics. No one knows that better than professors who hold views challenging the conventional wisdom, those of us who don’t rabidly hate the United States but do passionately love learning and the promise of an open, independent university. -The author is a journalism professor at the University of Texas at Austin and a member of the board of the Third Coast Activist Resource Center. He is the author of "The Heart of Whiteness: Race, Racism, and White Privilege" and "Citizens of the Empire: The Struggle to Claim Our Humanity" (both from City Lights Books). Email to: rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu Copyright © 2003 palestinechronicle.com. All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective owners.

6 Comments:

Anonymous said...

You just proved Horowitz point.

2:21 AM  
Anonymous said...

He doesn't even realize he proved Horowitz's point. Probably because he doesn't understand what the point is.

4:27 PM  
George said...

It is not clear to me which particular point that Horowitz is making has just been proved. Please connect the dots more explictly for those of us who are not clear that this is the case.

10:26 AM  
Anonymous said...

Proved Horowitz' point?
It seems like Horowitz' big point is that teachers should be "neutral" politically in the classroom so that they don't influence students' political views.
Jensen has just argued both against the idea that all teaching is just imparting political points and he's also rejected the model of learning that says students are a sum of what teachers say to them - which is just inaccurate. Teaching focusing on the development of abilities can never be a one-sided depositing of information from the professor, it necessarily involves the student making and pursuing their own work. All of the best professors I've ever had, while they may personally be on the left, have worked diligently with me on projects that broke with their view of the world.

10:58 AM  
Anonymous said...

Professor Jensen has the upper hand, he and all his Ilk can call President Bush a lier,a hate monger,a deciever and yes even a Nazi, and the President Can not Respond,He cannot respond to why he went to war, or even the connection between Saddam Hussaine ans Binladen why you might ask ,The President can not come right out and charge Islam with being a religon of terror/but they are...and muslims must help muslims or die,ask your self what would the left say if the President said all muslims were terrorists, the murder in the street would be out of hand and chaos would insue,what would America do with all these terrorists on the streets? people see what is happening in Canada,France sweeden ,muslims are a majority of workers and the respective Countries can not afford to go against them or make them mad,that is why most countries are against us, they are afraid of what France got, and France plaquats to muslims. Ask your selves who were the people killing others calling for the heads and hands of the cartoonist, terrorists, or were they just ordinary muslims?. The government was afraid Saddam who recently brought prayer back to praying 5 times a day and claimed to be bringing Islam back to his life,he was always a muslim but ran his kingdom as semi secular,so yes there is a connection between Saddam and Osama,that connection is the Quran which commands all muslims to DESTROY the infidel. Read the Quran and Hadithes if you do not believe this.Read the Saudi slurp they feed their young people who come here to study, they warn them against the Jew and Christian, and dispariage all thoes who are not muslims. The President could not come out after 9/11 and condem Islam, we would have had a war of Religion in America,which is still at hand.

9:16 PM  
Anonymous said...

Anonymous,

How can you claim that "muslims are a majority of workers" in France, when most estimates put their percentage of the French population at around 7-10%, while unemployement in the banlieus (whose residents are mostly North African in origin and, therefore you would no doubt claim, Muslim) is upwards of 30%?

Also, to claim that all you need to do is read the Qur'an and the Sunna (you say Hadithes) to understand that Islam is a relgion of hate and violence, is to apply a Prostetant Christian model of relgion to Islam. While all the evangelical Christian may have to do in order to be a true Christian is read his New King James Version translation of the original texts, the practicing Sunni or Shiite muslim must also refer to one of the six schools of Islamic jurisprudence, who (especially for the Shiites) have the exclusive use of reasoned interpretation (ijtihad) of the revelation (the Qur'an and the Sunna). The status of ijtihad is a complicated, complex, and somewhat changing one in the MENA, but to claim that all one needs to do is to read (presumably in translation) the Qur'an to understand Islam, is to make a claim that very few Muslims would agree with--though your Saudi Wahhabis (presumably authors of the "Saudi slurp[ee]") may come closest to agreeing with you.

6:19 AM  

Post a Comment

<< Home