Published on Saturday, March 24, 2001

Horowitz and the Myth of the Radical University

by Robert Jensen  

Thanks to conservative author David Horowitz's recent lecture at the 
University of Texas, I have new hope for radical political organizing 
on campus.

Many of us on the faculty with left/progressive values have felt 
rather isolated on what we all thought was a conservative campus. But 
it turns out that all this time we've been working in a nest of 
left-wing radicals who have over-run the place, leaving conservatives 
cowering in silence.

At least that's Horowitz's analysis. University faculties around the 
country, including UT, are "skewed far to the left" as a result of 
conservative professors being "systematically purged," according to 
Horowitz, a one-time leftist turned right-winger.

My colleagues and I are hoping Horowitz will help us find where all 
these radicals are hiding; more company would be nice.

In the decade I've been at UT, a handful of faculty members have been 
willing to get involved in left/progressive causes. Events and 
actions that address racism, sexism, militarism or corporate 
domination usually involve the same small group of committed folks.

If the "left-wingers run the universities" claim were coming only 
from Horowitz, it wouldn't be cause for much concern. The political 
analysis that comes out of his "Center for the Study of Popular 
Culture" is so consistently loopy that he's hard to take seriously.

But this assertion about left-wing dominance of universities is 
repeated so often throughout the culture that it has become widely 
accepted. The fact, however, is that the typical American university 
is dominated by centrist to moderately conservative faculty members 
and administrators, with steady movement to the right in the past two 
decades.

At UT, for example, there are some professors -- mostly scattered 
throughout the liberal arts and social sciences -- who might 
reasonably be called left or progressive, a few even radical. But in 
my experience the majority of faculty members run from liberal 
Democrats to conservative Republicans.

In some places on campus -- the well-funded McCombs School for 
Business comes to mind -- it would be silly to argue that the 
ideology of professors is skewed even mildly to the left; they are 
bastions of conservatism where no critique of the basic nature of 
corporate capitalism is voiced.

More and more, universities are influenced by the wealthy donors and 
corporations that exercise increasing power as public funding for 
higher education shrinks. Professors, no matter what the nature of 
their research, are being told that attracting outside funding is 
increasingly a requirement for tenure and promotion.

That means that people doing work that critiques the fundamental 
assumptions of powerful institutions in this culture (one reasonable 
definition of a "leftist") are becoming even more marginalized. Not 
"systematically purged," as happened during the McCarthy era, but 
squeezed out by a system that values conformity and subordination to 
power more than deep critique.

I am not so naïve as to expect institutions to go out of their way to 
foster dissent; institutions tend to reproduce the relationships of 
power in the wider society, and universities are no different.

But we should put away the fantasy that radicals are running the show 
and begin to ask seriously whether our society cares about 
maintaining universities as a place for independent critical inquiry.

This is not a plea for sympathy for poor lonely radicals on campus. 
As a tenured professor, I enjoy a freedom to pursue my intellectual 
interests that is available virtually nowhere else in the culture, 
and I'm grateful for that freedom. But I worry that graduate students 
and younger colleagues coming up through the ranks won't enjoy that 
same freedom.

That should be of concern not just to aspiring academics but to a 
society that wants to call itself democratic. If higher education is 
not a place for critical self-reflection on the powerful, we're all 
in trouble.

Robert Jensen is a professor in the Department of Journalism at the 
University of Texas at Austin. He can be reached at 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] Other writings are available online at 
http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~rjensen/freelance/freelance.htm.
_______________________________________________________


CB: 

When Jensen says: 
That should be of concern not just to aspiring academics but to a 
society that wants to call itself democratic. If higher education is 
not a place for critical self-reflection on the powerful, we're all 
in trouble.

It is perhaps better said "critical thought about the powerful , who are other than 
us. We radicals are not powerful. "

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