A return to the academy | ישראל היום

A return to the academy

I just attended a two-day academic conference at the University of Pennsylvania, in part out of ‎interest in the topic ("American & Muslim Worlds ca. 1500-1900"), in part to get a first-hand ‎sense of discourse in the humanities at the contemporary university. As the founder of Campus ‎Watch, I wondered if it is as bad as our reports suggest, or whether we focus on outliers.‎

My first impression was one of intellectual coziness. A broad consensus on a common base of ‎liberal assumptions crowds out dissenting opinions. A series of hierarchies exists:‎

• Modern bests old
• Non-American bests American
• Female bests male
• Dark skin bests white skin
• Muslim bests non-Muslim

The word "Islamophobia" is used as though a normal English-language word rather than a ‎propagandistic tool to shut down criticism. A prominent 19th-century missionary, Henry ‎Jessup, was anachronistically called a "pre-eminent Muslim-basher."‎

A Canadian professor living in Costa Rica resented that the people of the United States ‎‎"commandeered" the word American to apply to themselves only. One speaker praised the ‎conference for having "problematized the centrality of the United States." A moderator worried ‎so much about "America-centrism" that he asked, "Should we not be doing this topic at all? Is ‎there an inherent arrogance" in Americans studying Muslims? A frisson rippled through the ‎audience at mention of "Trump"; in contrast, invoking Edward Said won the predictable ‎approval.‎

My second impression concerns jargon. No person outside academe uses words like ‎‎"problematize," "racialize," and "relativize," much less would he "historicize the notion of ‎imagination." (What's with all this turning nouns into verbs with -ize-) Use of the word "and" in ‎the conference title spawned considerable debate (does it imply America and the Muslim world ‎are completely different or does it allow for overlap-) to the point that this came to be known as ‎‎"the and problem."‎

The third and strongest impression concerns triviality, the historians' tendency to avoid big, ‎meaningful analyses in favor of trifling micro-topics. They answer questions no one asks. This ‎propensity blazed brightly at the UPenn conference. Papers titled "Byron's Houris in America: ‎Visual Depictions of Muslim Heroines in the Gallery of Byron Beauties" or "'Strangers in the ‎Stranger Lands': The 'Rebs and Yanks' in the Khedival Citadel" turned the worthy topic of early ‎U.S.-Muslim connections into a series of obscurities. The prize for oddity, however, goes to ‎‎"Bombo's America: An Energy-Humanities View of the Early American Oriental Tale."‎

In contrast, compelling and useful issues barely surfaced: The role of literate Muslims among ‎African slaves. The impact of the Moro rebellion in the Philippines on U.S. opinion. The legacy of ‎Protestant missionaries to the Middle East. The percentage of Muslims in early Middle Eastern ‎immigration. The way peddlers became dry-goods store owners and then, disproportionately, ‎liquor store owners. The legacy of the Shriners, officially known as the Ancient Arabic Order of ‎the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, with its mock Mecca Temples and other Islamic motifs.‎

The conference was advertised as "free and open to the public but registration is required," so I ‎signed up, thereby signaling the organizers and speakers of my presence. I can't be sure, but I ‎suspect that Kambiz GhaneaBassiri's gratuitous mention of my 1990 article title, "The Muslims ‎are Coming! The Muslims are Coming!" was intended for my benefit. Likewise, the repeated ‎order that the conference not be recorded on audio or video seemed directed squarely at me. It's ‎an odd demand from an academic institution, which by its nature wants to reach a wider public, ‎but understandable given how often Campus Watch has exposed Middle East studies excesses ‎by recording events. I doubt that prohibition is legally enforceable.‎

I grew up around a university (my father Richard is a professor emeritus) and went on to earn a doctorate in medieval history, so I initially expected the campus ever to be central in my life. Then, ‎because it radicalized and I did not, my connection to the academy withered. Now, on ‎occasional returns visits to it, I invariably feel alienated by the left-wingery, the jargon, and the ‎arrogant irrelevance. While glad I escaped its clutches, I worry about the future of American ‎‎(that word again) higher education. So, yes, Campus Watch has it right.‎

The Fox News Channel revealed that half of Americans are ready for an alternative media. When ‎will educators figure out the same logic applies to universities-‎

Daniel Pipes (DanielPipes.org, @DanielPipes) is president of the Middle East Forum.

טעינו? נתקן! אם מצאתם טעות בכתבה, נשמח שתשתפו אותנו