A Gift for the Grad: Protection from Tenured Radicals
http://www.townhall.com/columnists/MaryGrabar/2007/05/20/a_gift_for_the_grad
_protection_from_tenured_radicals
By Mary Grabar
Sunday, May 20, 2007


When I entered the master's program in English at Georgia State University
in the early 1990s I had not read Tenured Radicals by Roger Kimball and so
was taken aback by the snarling, vituperation, and the seething contempt
most professors felt for the authors I eagerly looked forward to studying.
Indeed, in a T.S. Eliot seminar, one professor literally foamed at the mouth
as he launched into the litany of charges of misogyny, classicism, elitism,
and Christianity against poor Tom. This professor saw criminality in writing
that is Eurocentric, i.e., linear, logical, and truth-seeking. He,
therefore, now specializes in animal communication, a new "cutting edge"
field of research for English professors. Indeed, most English professors,
like the debating devils in Paradise Lost snap as they attempt to outdo each
other in tearing apart the "texts" of the few remaining dead white males and
conversely go into apoplectic orgies of praise whenever discussing the
self-pitying ramblings of some Chicano, lesbian, or differently-abled
author. 

But I soon caught on as I listened to the condemnations led by the professor
and followed en suite by graduate students caught up with their own
sophistication. Already in my thirties, I had an advantage over many of the
students: I had a more fully developed b.s. detector. 

Professors unwilling to see greatness outside of their own over-inflated
egos seek to convert not only graduate students but also undergraduates and
condemn them to their little hellish classroom kingdoms, where they rule.
Some expose even freshmen to "deconstruction," a theory which says that the
author did not know what he really wanted to say and that the sophisticated
reader must read between the lines (like a sadistic Freudian
psychotherapist), uncover his neuroses, and tell the world what he really
meant. Of course, the Frenchman who thought up this lunacy, Jacques Derrida,
did not want us to apply this theory to his writing. 

Most parents sending their children off to college, while aware of a leftist
bias in the college classroom, are not aware of the extent to which most
English professors hate literature or how diligently they work to destroy
the written word. The defenders of literature remain an increasingly small
minority of professors still allowed to teach and such groups as the
American Council of Trustees and Alumni, which keeps tabs. ACTA's latest
report, "The Vanishing  <http://www.goacta.org/publications/reports.html>
Shakespeare,"  catalogues the successes of the enemies of literature. Of the
seventy institutions surveyed, over three-quarters today do not require
English majors to take a class in Shakespeare. What do the tenured radicals
offer in place of the Bard? Well, such things as "Body Studies," "Children's
Literature," and classes on Madonna, Baywatch, radical vegetarian
manifestos, and rock and roll. If Shakespeare is taught then it is likely
that he will be presented in the manner of a class at American University
titled "Shakesqueer" which asks "how might Shakespeare anticipate our
current sexual regimes? How might he undermine them?" 

The freshman arriving on campus may find himself studying rap music,
discussing penises, and watching pornographic films, under the direction of
a feminist Marxist who believes that limiting the "texts" in an English
class to the written word promotes Western thought and who accordingly
encourages other kinds of "literacy," such as "visual literacy." 

The freshman, therefore, should be armed with Elizabeth Kantor's The
Politically Incorrect Guide to English and American
<http://www.amazon.com/Politically-Incorrect-English-American-Literature/dp/
1596980117/ref=pd_bbs_sr_3/102-1589567-0960105?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=117932379
5&sr=8-3> Literature.  In this guide, Kantor, who holds a Ph.D. in English,
provides a good list of the classic works that the student should read-not
vegetarian manifestos. And she also lays bare the vacuity of the theories
that have sprouted up as weapons of obfuscation in the assault on letters.
So when the graduate teaching assistant invokes the name of Foucault, the
student will have Kantor's exposition of the political agendas of this now
discredited pretender-theorist. Here is an example of her straightforward
prose: "It's fatal to any totalitarian project for people to believe that
there is an authority that they can appeal to over the heads of the
political power. That's why totalitarian governments cannot tolerate
religion. The postmodernist pretense that all authority is just a mask for
raw power and that all reasoning is only rationalization is no defense at
all against oppression-in fact, it can be a justification for it.
Christianity, in contrast, is a guarantor of individual human freedom, not a
threat to it." Dr. Kantor's book also contains sidebars with such headings
as "A Book You're Not Supposed to Read" (The Allegory of Love by C.S. Lewis)
and "What They Don't Want You to Learn from Jane Austen." A few weeks ago, I
wanted swoop in to an office down the hall from me as I overheard a student
conference and the words "Foucault" and "gender" bandied by the
up-and-coming twerp of a professor. The student was confused, as she should
be when sorting out the words of a madman. Other conversations that wafted
over to my own office revealed that ridiculous assignments on race and
sexuality had been imposed on students. I was witnessing student abuse and
could nothing about it. 

Administrators and faculty often see students as consumers and imagine that
they also enjoy such trashing of great literature and that they'd rather
watch horror movies than read great works that give insight into human
nature. But they would be proven wrong if they gave students half a chance
to enjoy the best of Western culture. 

So play their game. Be subversive. Give the graduating high school senior a
copy of Professor Kantor's book. But cover it with brown paper. The tenured
radicals would not want to know that an adult out there is exposing their
foolishness. 


 



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