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Dartmouth's 'Hostile' Environment
By Joseph Rago, Wall Street Journal The
latest spectacle is an Ivy League professor threatening to sue her
students because, she claims, their "anti-intellectualism" violated her
civil rights. She is
also readying lawsuits against her superiors, who she says papered over
the harassment, as well as a confessional exposé, which she
promises will "name names." "My
students were very bully-ish, very aggressive, and very disrespectful,"
she told Tyler Brace of the Dartmouth Review. "They'd argue with your
ideas." This caused "subversiveness," a principle English professors
usually favor. She
continues: "Scientific facts do not correspond to a natural reality but
conform to a social construct." Students
told me that most of the "problems" owed to her impenetrable lectures
and various eruptions when students indicated skepticism of literary
theory. She
counters that such skepticism was "intolerant of ideas" and "questioned
my knowledge in very inappropriate ways." Ms. Venkatesan, who is of
South Asian descent, also alleges that critics were motivated by
racism, though it is unclear why. But
"these weren't thoughtful statements," Ms. Venkatesan protests. "They
were irrational." The class thought otherwise. Following what she calls
the student's "diatribe," several of his classmates applauded. Faculty
members tend to be professional. They also tend to be sane. The
main result is to make coursework pathetically easy. Like filling in a
Mad Libs, just patch something together about "interrogating
heteronormativity," or whatever, and wait for the returns to start
rolling in. A
typical passage: "Each episode is a text of inescapable complexity . .
. Our received notions of what constitutes a ride are constantly
subverted and undermined." It received an A. Why
not? It's effortless, and there are better ways to spend time than
thinking deeply about ecofeminism. Normally
they would express their boredom with the material by answering emails
on their laptops or falling asleep. But
here they staged a rebellion, a French Counter-Revolution against
Professor Defarge. Maybe, despite the professor's best efforts, there's
life in American colleges yet. Mr. Rago is an editorial page writer for the Journal.
Source: Wall Street Journal May 5, 2008 ~ ~ ~ Related
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