http://gcadvocate.org/index.php/view/00442/Foul-play-at-bard.htm
Foul Play at Bard?
Controversy Ensues After College Terminates Kovel
As contingent workers in the CUNY system, many members of the Graduate
Center community have become inured to the constant threat of losing
their teaching positions at short notice. Following Governor Patterson’s
budget cuts last summer, many long-serving adjuncts found themselves out
of a job as department chairs balanced budgets on their backs. So it may
not be surprising to hear that Bard College, a private liberal-arts
school in Dutchess County, New York, recently terminated the teaching
appointment of one of its untenured faculty members.
Unless that faculty member is Joel Kovel, a long-time professor of
social studies, internationally renowned lecturer, and erstwhile holder
of the presidentially appointed Alger Hiss chair at Bard College.
According to the Graduate Center’s own Stanley Aronowitz, distinguished
professor of sociology, "Joel Kovel is one of America’s major social,
ecological and psychological theorists. His White Racism remains a
classic in the analysis of the psychology of racism; Enemy of Nature is
one of the major contributions to radical ecology." An author of ten
books and numerous peer-reviewed articles, Kovel is a familiar name
across a wide array of academic departments, including psychology,
anthropology, philosophy, sociology, and environmental studies. Joel
Kovel is also a public intellectual in the truest sense of the word. Not
content to merely write op-eds for newspapers, serve as president of a
professional association, or lend his name to petitions and causes,
Kovel consistently grounded his intellectual agenda in political and
moral concerns. Following decades of antiapartheid and ecological
activism, one of his chief engagements in recent years has been with the
question of Israel/Palestine. What he has had to say on the issue is
controversial–so controversial that it cost him his job at Bard earlier
this year, he claims.
He is not alone. The American Association of University Professors
(AAUP) and the Middle East Studies Association (MESA) have taken Kovel’s
allegations of academic oppression seriously, along with dozens of blogs
and academic email discussion lists that have posted his statement. A
Facebook group of the radical professor’s supporters has grown to over
670 members.
The story as Kovel tells it is fairly straightforward. It portrays his
recent termination as the result of a series of escalating responses to
his anti-Zionist activism. These punitive responses were made possible
by quietism and a lack of principle that has come to pervade Bard’s
campus community and now renders open discussion of Zionism impossible.
At the center of the allegations is long-time Bard College president
Leon Botstein, who also serves as the musical director of the Jerusalem
Symphony Orchestra of the Israel Broadcasting Company. He rejects
Kovel’s allegations as "patently ludicrous."
First, the allegations: In the fall of 2002, Kovel published an article
in Tikkun Magazine, the progressive publication edited by Rabbi Michael
Lerner, arguing as a morally concerned Jew for the need to acknowledge
the nefarious underbelly of "Jewish exceptionalism." In the piece, Kovel
pinpointed Zionism as the source of the moral failures manifest in
Israel/Palestine. Within a few weeks President Botstein summoned him to
his office and informed him that his presidential appointment as Alger
Hiss professor would be terminated in 2004. Following another Tikkun
article a few months later, a college dean, Michele Dominy, suggested at
executive vice president Dimitri Papadimitrou’s behest that Kovel, then
sixty-six years old, should consider retirement. Kovel refused.
Subsequently the administration decided to keep him on faculty on a
five-year, halftime contract as "distinguished professor," cutting his
pay and teaching load by 50 percent while continuing to grant him full
benefits. This is the contract the university is refusing to renew when
it expires later this year.
Over the course of the next three years, Kovel worked on the manuscript
of his most recent book, Overcoming Zionism, which argues in favor of a
single democratic state in Israel/Palestine. It extends his earlier line
of argument, namely, that Jewish exceptionalism is at the root of the
violence and unrest in the region and has to be overcome as a
precondition for lasting peace and justice in the Middle East. During
campus talks this argument was construed by some of his detractors as a
call for "the destruction of Israel." When the book was published by
British publishing house Pluto Press in 2007, the Michigan chapter of a
Zionist group founded by neocon Daniel Pipes successfully pressured
University of Michigan Press to halt its distribution of the title in
the United States for several weeks. Eventually 650 letters of support
persuaded Michigan to resume sales, but Kovel was disturbed to find that
none of his tenured Bard colleagues joined in protesting the press’s
self-censorship. The only support from Bard came from two
non-tenure-track faculty. Kovel cites this as one among numerous
occasions that forced him to recognize the degree to which critical
debate on campus was stifled despite Bard’s image as the college that
puts the "liberal" into liberal arts. (After all, they have a chair in
honor of Alger Hiss, the McCarthy-era State Department bureaucrat
accused of being a Soviet spy that anticommunists love to hate.) As a
scholar who asks uncomfortable questions he was marginalized on campus.
Kovel argues that the 2008 evaluation of his work, which cited declining
quantitative and qualitative indicators of student satisfaction with
Kovel’s teaching, must be seen in this context and that the decision not
to rehire him in the fall was not simply based on practical, pedagogical
or financial considerations. The evaluation was produced by a committee
that included Bruce Chilton, a New Testament scholar characterized by
Kovel as a Christian Zionist activist. His involvement in "Zionist
circles" places Chilton "on the other side of the divide from myself,"
Kovel writes in his statement. The fact that Chilton served on the
evaluation committee is "highly dubious" and made it impossible for the
committee to produce fair, good-faith results. In light of this, Kovel
argues, his termination should be considered invalid.
So much for the allegations. In an interview, Botstein stated that
Kovel’s claims were "trumped up" and lacking a credible evidentiary
base. In response to the implication that Botstein decided to remove
Kovel from the Hiss chair after he went public with his anti-Zionist
views, he cited the donors’ intent that the chair should be a revolving
chair in the humanities. They decided it should be passed on to somebody
else. In an email, Tony Hiss, Alger’s son, confirms this. To fulfill the
aim of exposing students to a wide variety of ideas and insights, "it
was arranged from the start that it would be a ‘rotating’ chair, one
that would be handed on periodically from one discipline to another, in
order to celebrate all the humanities." This is also the reason why the
chair is outside the tenure system. "We all admired Joel Kovel, but felt
that after his fifteen years in the chair, the purposes of the endowment
suggested that it might be time for other voices and disciplines to have
a chance to step forward." While Botstein had no direct say in deciding
that the chair should be given to someone else, he did make a proposal
for a successor that the donors accepted. The new Alger Hiss professor
is Jonathan Brent, a scholar of literature and history, ardent
anticommunist and editor of Yale University Press’s Annals of Communism
series who comes just short of being an apologist for McCarthyism.
Needless to say, he believes Alger Hiss actually was guilty of
espionage. "Why he would have been offered such a position–or accepted
it–is beyond me," Kovel told the Advocate.
Regarding Kovel’s allegation that he was pressured to retire after
losing the Hiss chair, Dean Dominy told a student forum in March: "I’ve
never said to Professor Kovel that it’s time to retire. He was never
asked by his colleagues to retire." Providing a somewhat different
perspective, Botstein said he "had the clear indication that [Kovel] was
going into semi-retirement" when they sealed the deal of keeping him on
as halftime distinguished professor: "The five-year contract was
understood as a closing contract." He claims Kovel requested part-time
status to make time for traveling and writing, and that the
administration explicitly said "it was discretionary whether we would
renew him or not" at the end of the five years, though they offered the
prospect of yearly extensions of the contract after its expiration.
Kovel refutes this characterization. The part-time agreement was not
reached in the understanding of being "transitional to retirement." The
letter of appointment to the half-time position states that, aside from
going to half-time, "[t]he other conditions of your current contract
will remain in place."
According to Botstein the decision not to renew Kovel’s contract was
based on two main considerations: financial constraints and increasingly
negative student evaluations. Like many colleges around the country,
Bard College has seen a drop of philanthropic income, making it
difficult to cover the 20 percent of the college budget covered by
nontuition sources. Botstein, an oft-quoted expert in the art of
fundraising, called the approximately three million dollars recently
lost in board member Ezra Merkin’s Ponzi scheme "trivial" compared to
the budget shortfall caused by decreased philanthropy. The only way to
close the gap was to cut personnel cost. Ten administrators were
dismissed and all senior administrators, Botstein included, have taken a
10 percent pay cut. On the faculty side, the goal was to cut "at the
margins of the faculty." This means that "re-arranging" has concentrated
on adjuncts teaching less than half time and who do not advise
students–an integral part of the Bard curriculum, according to the
college president. He mentioned, however, that Kovel, though teaching
half-time, did some advising as well. Botstein specified that most of
part-time positions were eliminated–and at times replaced by
full-timers–in the dance, general education, and language departments.
In Kovel’s division, international relations and politics were most
effected, but that reflects a reduction in the number of visitors the
college hosts in these disciplines. The nonrenewal of Kovel’s contract
thus does not fit the college-wide pattern of dismissals.
Matthew Deady, professor of physics at Bard and president of the local
AAUP chapter, followed up on Kovel’s charges that the evaluation process
was riddled with irregularities. In an email excerpting key passages
from the report on the inquiry into his allegations, Deady writes: "This
investigation found no procedural or contractual improprieties which
contributed to the decision to not renew Prof. Kovel’s contract." The
report adds that all representatives of Kovel’s division were properly
consulted, and concludes, "no evidence was found to support a claim that
any member of the Bard community acted out of a political disagreement
with Prof. Kovel, nor was any evidence found that his political
positions weighed into his [College Evaluation Committee] evaluation or
the non-renewal decision." Kovel responded to the report in an email to
the faculty list which so far has gone uncontested. In it, Kovel pointed
out five flaws in Deady’s report that call into question its
conclusions, among which a failure to "consider strong evidence from
students that their own evaluations of [Kovel’s] teaching had been
manipulated" stands out.
This leaves the final contention raised in the ousted professor’s
statement: that Bard grants Israel impunity, stifles meaningful debate,
and exhibits a lack of principle. Botstein rejected this assertion
forcefully: "Joel Kovel is a liar. It’s completely a delusional,
narcissistic form of lying which has no credibility." He enumerated
several reasons. Kovel himself was allowed to teach a course on
"expounding his views on the question of Israel and Zionism." In March,
Noam Chomsky spoke on his views on Israel at Bard. "The discussion of
Israel has been an open and constant debate on this campus." Bard also
has hosted the Palestinian intellectual Mustafa Abu Sway, an outspoken
critic of the state of Israel, as visiting professor of Islamic studies.
The college recently announced its partnership with Abu Sway’s employer,
Al Quds University, a Palestinian institution located in Jerusalem and
the West Bank. The George Soros-funded venture will enable Palestinian
students to attain joint degrees with Bard College and is the first of
its kind to be initiated by an American university.
Kovel is doubtful these examples suffice to establish that critical
discourse has a place on the Bard campus. In an email, he wrote that
"what constitutes critical discourse is not to be measured like the
blood level of hemoglobin. Its determination is subtle and qualitative;
nor is it a function of who shows up to teach or lecture, but rather of
the circumstances and power relations according to which things happen."
That a faculty member of two decades would be permitted to teach a
course on Zionism is not surprising, though he adds that approval was
granted grudgingly and with the proviso that he not admit naïve
freshmen. Chomsky was invited by students and naturally the
administration could not intervene without causing an uproar. Abu Sway
acted as a liaison for Bard’s Palestinian partner institution, so
naturally he was allowed to teach as well. Regarding Bard’s engagement
in Palestine, Botstein told a New York Times reporter in February, "It
is clear that being a Zionist and favoring the security and healthy
future for the State of Israel is absolutely compatible with creating a
Palestinian state. That’s why we’re very proud of what we’re doing."
Given this attitude, it is debatable to what extent Zionism is really
being put into question. Writes Kovel: "Critical discourse is to cast a
cold eye on the program and not to just assume it is an unqualified
good, like food shipments to a famine. A critical eye would see the
various factions within Palestinian society and reflect on the fact that
Israel would have a special interest in strengthening those factions
that favored accommodation with the Zionist state, thereby weakening
Palestinian resistance."
Botstein explained the lack of an official response to University of
Michigan Press’s self-censorship as follows: "We were completely out of
the loop of the publication of his book. We did nothing to advance or
suppress it." Had Kovel informed the college administration of his
difficulties, "we would have been in favor of the book being published."
Then, Botstein blustered about "Joel Kovel’s so-called controversial
views," claiming that nothing he writes on the subject of Zionism is
truly controversial. If that was the case, Kovel responded, would
Overcoming Zionism have been banned in the United States after being
decried as "hate speech"? Would University of Michigan Press have
terminated its lucrative distribution contract with Pluto Press over
Kovel’s book if there was nothing controversial about it? Asked about
his other critical works and their reception by the Bard community,
Kovel mentioned that his book on ecosocialism, The Enemy of Nature,
while widely debated, never got any attention from his own college’s
environmental studies department. "This may have something to do with
the fact that its thesis is that global capitalism must be brought down
if civilization is to survive," the author wrote. While President
Botstein attempts to explain away the controversy and attribute it to a
paranoiac "delusion" on the part of the ejected professor, there are
enough indications of a conflict.
Deady, the AAUP chapter president, pointed out that Bard at present has
"a system that has too much potential for terminations that leave no one
satisfied." The fact that Botstein can have academics like Kovel serve
at his convenience reflects what many have called his grandiose
leadership style, but also the erosion of the tenure system in the
United States and academia more widely. While the last word on the Bard
controversy is yet to be spoken, discrimination cannot be ruled out due
to a lack of transparency or paper trail in the hiring and firing process.
Chronology
* 1988: Joel Kovel is appointed Alger Hiss professor of social
studies at Bard College by President Botstein with a five-year contract.
He replaces the inaugural holder of the chair, the anthropologist
Stanley Diamond. This endowed chair is outside the tenure system.
* 1994: Kovel is reappointed.
* 1999: Kovel is reappointed.
* 2004: After fifteen years, the Alger Hiss chair goes to Jonathan
Brent, a scholar of literature and history. Kovel is moved to a
five-year, halftime distinguished professor contract.
* 2009: Kovel is told his contract as distinguished professor will
not be renewed and he will be moved to emeritus status at the end of the
academic year. Subsequently, he publishes a statement that alleges the
noncontinuation of his contract was politically motivated and invalid
due to procedural irregularities.
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