Interesting postmodern, feminist / post feminist perspectives.

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Open Debate: Sex with the Teacher

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E Ruth Klein

E R Klein argues that no good reason has yet been given for academic
institutions to condemn consensual sexual relationships between
students and lecturers. To reply, see details at the end of the article.

Let's just skip the obviously immoral quid pro quo case – which forces
the reader to picture a stinky old crusty lecherous male professor
extorting his lovely naïve eighteen year old female student with the
fear of the "F" – and get to the real action. Today, in college and
university campuses all over the world, smart and sexy students are
having crushes on, flirting with, and actively sexually pursuing their
professors who are at least as smart and sexy. The evidence is
overwhelming. Students and professors not only want to have sex with
each other, they are having sex with each other.

The number of anecdotal examples that have been brought to my
attention by professors and students alike are too numerous to cite.
However, here are a few published examples. Jan Breslauer told Playboy
Magazine that "she majored in political science and minored in a few
select gentlemen of the faculty." Rolling Stone recently had an entire
cover story on the "highly charged erotic life of the Wellesley girl,"
where randy co-eds, who were tired of lesbian relationships (or of
riding what they dubbed the "Fuck Truck" to Harvard to pick up men),
would "target" their male professors – men who had that "professor sex
appeal". It seems Plato was right. One begins the long epistemological
road to true knowledge via desire. Millennia later, in the midst of
all this high-energy sexuality, no one can claim that academic work is
not getting done – students get an education, new ideas are born,
technology is conceived, and scholarship flourishes. So what's the
problem?

I suggest that the problem is twofold. First, there is academia's
postmodern commitment to relativism. Absolute truths, global norms,
and the overall establishment of traditional criteria for academic
excellence, are no longer taken seriously. Traditional epistemic
concepts such as objectivity have been so demonised that one cannot
criticise anything or anyone without being silenced as a fascist
coloniser trying to impose their own political desires in the garb of
the universal. The upshot is that today's academic finds it impossible
to even conceive of the following state of affairs: That professors,
despite the context of their relationships with students – from
admiring protégé to intellectual rival; from disappointing mentee to
unbelievable lover – can be objective.

A case in point is the work of academic ethicist Steven Cahn. Cahn
argues against professors and students developing even friendships,
let alone romantic/sexual relationships, on the grounds that "every
teacher should be scrupulous in ensuring that no student receives
preferential treatment." However, it doesn't take long to realise that
when a professor gives a specific student an "A" (as opposed to an
"F") this act treats students "unfairly". The response, of course,
would be to distinguish justice from fairness, arguing that the reason
the two students in such a case are treated unequally is because one
earned the grade of "A" while the other did not. That is, within the
scope of grading, inequality of treatment is not only justified, it is
inherent to the system. Within this context, then, Cahn believes there
are objective standards of academic excellence and that the professor
is quite capable of making the appropriate adjudication. That is until
he is in a personal relationship with the student being evaluated.
Then we see the "wrath of Cahn".

Why? I'm not sure. Is it that Cahn is merely projecting his own weak
psychology, his inability to separate the two parts of his life?
Surely he would not commit this basic fallacy. Is it that Cahn is an
expert in human psychology, empirically certain that no one, no matter
how well meaning, could ever see through their emotions to the
objective truth of the student's work? On the one hand, even if he
were so trained, this claim, like that of the psychological egoist, is
either unfalsifiable or false. After all, what kind of empirical
evidence would Cahn accept as disconfirming? (If none, then his thesis
is on the same epistemic footing as astrology.) On the other hand, if
he allows the possibility of such objective persons, even one, then he
will need to do more work to show that such relationships are always
"preferential" where it counts. Surely Cahn must be aware of this
dilemma, so this too can't be his reason.

Maybe Cahn, unknowingly, has bought into the rampant relativism of the
postmodernism institution? After all, if there is no objectivity to be
had in any arena, then it follows, albeit trivially, that professors
cannot remain impartial (whether they are sleeping with their students
or not.) Since this "postmodern turn" would probably be quite
distasteful to Cahn, and since the first two reasons are simply
unreasonable, it is not clear what exactly is the wrong-making
property of student/professor relationships.

Parenthetically, Cahn aside, postmodernism is in no position to make a
case against student/professor love. Although the epistemological
nuances of this "movement" are outside the scope of this provocation,
I can't help pointing out that if there can be something like a
purpose to postmodernism it must be some kind of move toward what
Kristeva, after Lacan, calls jouissance – which has the dual meaning
of "playfulness" and "orgasm". As such, what more needs to be said.
Acts of love, even "forbidden" love, can't possibly be forbidden.
Ironically, however, it is the sex(ed)-slave of postmodernism,
feminism, that has done more than any other theorists to perpetuate
the myth that such relationships are, without argument, simply wrong.

Feminist theory, consistently and misguidedly, presupposes that, at
some level or other, all power relationships involving men are evil.
The argument runs something like this. Men have all the power, men are
evil, so all power relationships with men are evil. The second premise
is, of course, ridiculous. The first is nearly as problematic. With
respect to the scope of this topic, I challenge the feminist "fact"
that in any kind of romantic or sexual relationship between a male
professor and a female student that it is the man who has all the
power. Actually I believe in such contexts he has none of it. For one
thing, in the realpolitik that is heterosexual sex, it is the young
female body that is, dare I say it, "on top". Classic stories tell of
men who fight wars and abandon kingdoms to find solace in their young
love. In the ivory tower the stories are not so epic, but often just
as dramatic. It is the men who, when things go awry, stand to lose
quite a bit, including their jobs. What do these young women really
risk? A broken heart? Isn't this a calculated risk in any
romantic/sexual relationship? When I have addressed this subject at
various and sundry academic institutions some young woman always
volunteers that she is sleeping with her professor and that it is she,
not he, who has all the power. One even claimed to have her professor,
and I quote, "by the balls". (I assumed she meant figuratively.)

There may be many reasons why a woman chooses to get into a
relationship with her male professor. For example, Lisa Zeider wrote
to Gentleman's Quarterly claiming that "from the school of hard
knocks, I got what I wanted and needed: educational sex, an
opportunity to play out my ambivalence toward controlling men and an
aversion to preening academics." Despite the mean-spiritedness of this
desire my point is simple: the relationship was clearly her choice.
Therefore, even if it is assumed that the male professor is in the
"power position" I find it hard to believe that no woman ever chooses
to be in such a relationship. The famous feminist Dr Bell Hooks
claimed, in the Utne Reader, that the power differential betwixt
herself and her professor created "a stimulating and transformative
atmosphere where my intellectual and emotional growth was enhanced by
the encounter." Women choose to have sex with all kinds of men, in all
kinds of power positions, for all kinds of reasons. Why does feminism
refuse to admit that such relationships can possibly be consensual?

Maybe because it assumes that when it comes to relationships with men,
women are incapable of consent. Catherine McKinnon, for example – the
woman who brought us the infamous "all heterosexual sex is rape" claim
– offered a feminist account of choice on NBC television in the 80s
when she espoused that: "If sex is something men do to women, then
viewing `yes' as a sign of consent is misguided." And in the context
of student/professor relationships, the evidence that young women are
unable to consent is, question-beggingly, that they choose to have sex
with their male professors. In the words of Billie Wright Dziech and
Linda Werner in The Lecherous Professor:

Occasionally there are women students who are attracted to faculty.
[...] This faculty role may be attractive to some, because it combines
intellectual attainment and power, but being attracted to an
individual's role and consenting to a relationship are vastly
different. [...] Few students are ever, in the strictest sense,
consenting adults. A student can never be a genuine equal of a
professor insofar as his professional position gives him power over
her. Access to a student occurs not because she allowed it but because
the professor ignores professional ethics and chooses to extend the
student-faculty relationship. Whether the student consents to the
involvement or whether the professor ever intends to use his power
against her is not the point. The issue is that the power or role
disparity always exists, making it virtually impossible for the
student to act freely as she would with a male peer. [...] In a
faculty-student relationship, the enormous role (and frequent age)
disparity inhibits the woman so that she herself may have trouble
understanding and predicting her feelings.

The problematic idea that women, even young women, know less about
their own desires than some feminist theorist aside; the fact that
college age students, even women, consent to much more serious
activities, for example, to kill and die for national security, aside;
the hubris of believing that a student and professor can never be
equal aside; what is really at issue is the power of men. Men's power,
under feminist theorising, is so demonic, and yet so intoxicating,
that if one is actually attracted to such power the only possible
explanation can be coercion.

Underlying this bias is the broad-based feminist apostasy that the
only women who are truly conscious are those that have adopted
"consciousness" – the desire to view the entire world through a
feminist lens. After all, once one puts on one's feminist glasses one
can easily see that men run everything, and that all men are
oppressive, therefore everything (except, interestingly, the adoption
of the feminist standpoint to begin with), is a consequence of male
oppression. As such no act can be consensual. Therefore, despite the
fact that many women often find the power of men to be emotionally
invigorating and professionally challenging, within the blinders of
feminism, men's power always violates, never enhances, a woman's life.
If one does not see the evil in men's power then, according to
feminism, one is simply unconscious – oppressed and manipulated.

This victim mentality – that women are incapable of channelling,
absorbing, or growing from male power – is nothing less than
patronising and demeaning. And with respect to young female students
such feminist attitudes are actually getting in the way of what they
want – to be, and to be viewed as, sexual beings interested in male
attention. Maybe this is why I am able to document in Undressing
Feminism that today's college-aged woman claims to need feminism "like
a hole in her head". Maybe feminism should admit that when it comes to
sex with men, even with one's male professors, sometimes a choice is
just a choice.

The above, of course, does not address all areas of debate concerning
student/professor relationships. For example, it doesn't address
same-sex relationships, or the rare relationships between male
students and their female professors-where the various power
structures so valued by feminists may outweigh each other making them
possibly the most perfectly balanced sexual relationships on earth.
Nor does it discuss the recent epidemic of "codes" of sexual behaviour
that often subsume consensual relationships under the dangerous
legally-charged language of "sexual harassment". Nonetheless I trust
that readers will see this piece in the spirit it is intended, as an
attempt to "open debate" about the presupposed immorality of
student/professor relationships.

Finally, let me suggest that there may exist even more subtle PC
beliefs underlying the overall academic distaste for such
relationships. That is, even if one goes out of their way to avoid the
"visual" I mention at the beginning, one finds it hard to fully
challenge this paradigm. So I will add the following to help with a
conceptual "shift": (1) Interestingly I have yet to see any "sex code"
that actually speaks to the students, asking them, for example, to
please not tease or (sexually) "feed" their professors. Why is this?
Are students, especially our women students, really so innocent? (2)
Isn't it possible that the seemingly bad-making property of such
relationships is actually a product of academic society presupposing
that such relationships are inherently bad? For example, why is it
that we believe it would be so damaging if other students "found out"
about such a relationship? Could it be because we fear students will
sue the school on the grounds of "unfair" treatment? But isn't this a
power that institutions actually give students by always viewing such
relationships as immoral, forcing them to be kept as "secrets" to
begin with? Concomitantly, why is it that we believe the specific
student involved is harmed by having other students know of the
relationship? Again, isn't this just a vicious circle created by the
institution's desire to view such relationships as taboo?

I conclude by saying that I advise my colleagues to avoid such
relationships, but not because I believe there are any non-political
reasons for such advice. Furthermore, I wonder if such relationships
may be so important to individual happiness that unless an institution
can argue effectively for harm, they should probably do everything
they can to avoid punishing professors on such grounds.

However, given that the reality of today's academic climate is such
that unless one believes it is better to have loved and lost (one's
job and reputation) than never to have loved at all, they should
probably keep their pants on.

How to join the debate

Send your responses to E R Klein's essay (no longer than 600 words) to
TPM Open Debate, 38 Everett Road, Manchester M20 3DZ, or email the
editor here. Please keep your response focused on only one or two
specific points. Closing date for replies is 31 March 2004..

Contributions may be edited for length and clarity. The author and
editors are unable to reply to contributions not selected for inclusion.

E Ruth Klein is a philosophy lecturer and author of Undressing
Feminism (Paragon House)




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