CONSPIRACY THEORIES
101
Stanley Fish
Kevin Barrett, a lecturer at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, has now taken his place alongside Ward
Churchill of
the University of Colorado as a college teacher whose views on 9/11
have led politicians and
ordinary citizens to demand that he be fired.
Mr. Barrett, who has a one-semester contract to teach a course titled
"Islam: Religion and Culture," acknowledged on a radio talk show that
he has shared with students his strong conviction that the destruction
of the
World Trade Center was an inside job perpetrated by the American
government.
The predictable uproar ensued, and the equally predictable battle lines
were
drawn between those who disagree about what the doctrine of academic
freedom
does and does not allow.
Mr.
Barrett's critics argue that academic freedom has limits and should not
be
invoked to justify the dissemination of lies and fantasies. Mr.
Barrett's
supporters (most of whom are not partisans of his conspiracy theory)
insist
that it is the very point of an academic institution to entertain all
points of
view, however unpopular. (This was the position taken by the
university's
provost, Patrick Farrell, when he ruled on July 10 that Mr. Barrett
would be
retained: "We cannot allow political pressure from critics of unpopular
ideas to inhibit the free exchange of ideas.")
Both sides get it wrong. The problem is that each assumes that academic
freedom
is about protecting the content of a professor's speech; one side
thinks that
no content should be ruled out in advance; while the other would draw
the line
at propositions (like the denial of the Holocaust or the flatness of
the world)
considered by almost everyone to be crazy or dangerous.
But in fact, academic freedom has nothing to do with content. It is not
a
subset of the general freedom of Americans to say anything they like
(so long
as it is not an incitement to violence or is treasonous or libelous).
Rather,
academic freedom is the freedom of academics to study anything they
like; the
freedom, that is, to subject any body of material, however unpromising
it might
seem, to academic interrogation and analysis.
Academic
freedom means that if I think that there
may
be
an intellectual payoff to be had by turning an academic lens on
material others
consider trivial - golf tees, gourmet coffee, lingerie ads, convenience
stores,
street names, whatever - I should get a chance to try. If I manage to
demonstrate to my peers and students that studying this material yields
insights into matters of general intellectual interest, there is a new
topic
under the academic sun and a new subject for classroom discussion.
In short, whether something is an appropriate object of academic study
is a
matter not of its content - a crackpot theory may have had a history of
influence that well rewards scholarly scrutiny - but of its
availability to
serious analysis. This point was missed by the author of a comment
posted to
the blog of a University of Wisconsin law professor, Ann Althouse: "When is the University of Wisconsin hiring a professor of astrology?" The
question is obviously
sarcastic; its intention is to equate the 9/11-inside-job theory with
believing
in the predictive power of astrology, and to imply that since the
university
wouldn't think of hiring someone to teach the one, it should have known
better
than to hire someone to teach the other.
But the truth is that it would not be at all outlandish for a
university to
hire someone to teach astrology - not to profess astrology and
recommend it as
the basis of decision-making (shades of Nancy Reagan), but to teach the
history
of its very long career. There is, after all, a good argument for
saying that
Shakespeare, Chaucer and Dante, among others, cannot be fully
understood unless
one understands astrology.
The distinction I am making - between studying astrology and
proselytizing for
it - is crucial and can be generalized; it shows us where the line
between the
responsible and irresponsible practice of academic freedom should
always be
drawn. Any idea can be brought into the classroom if the point is to
inquire
into its structure, history, influence and so forth. But no idea
belongs in the
classroom if the point of introducing it is to recruit your students
for the
political agenda it may be thought to imply.
And this is where we come back to Mr. Barrett, who, in addition to
being a
college lecturer, is a member of a group calling itself Scholars for
9/11
Truth, an organization with the decidedly political agenda of
persuading
Americans that the Bush administration "not only permitted 9/11 to
happen
but may even have orchestrated these events."
Is the fact of this group's growing presence on the Internet a reason
for
studying it in a course on 9/11? Sure. Is the instructor who discusses
the
group's arguments thereby endorsing them? Not at all. It is perfectly
possible
to teach a viewpoint without embracing it and urging it. But the moment
a
professor does embrace and urge it, academic study has ceased and been
replaced
by partisan advocacy. And that is a moment no college administration
should
allow to occur.
Provost Farrell doesn't quite see it that way, because he is too hung
up on
questions of content and balance. He thinks that the important thing is
to
assure a diversity of views in the classroom, and so he is reassured
when Mr.
Barrett promises to surround his "unconventional" ideas and
"personal opinions" with readings "representing a variety of
viewpoints."
But the number of viewpoints Mr. Barrett presents to his students is
not the
measure of his responsibility.
There
is, in fact, no academic requirement to include more than one view of
an
academic issue, although it is usually pedagogically useful to do so.
The true
requirement is that no matter how many (or few) views are presented to
the
students, they should be offered as objects of analysis rather than as
candidates for allegiance.
There is a world of difference, for example, between surveying the pro
and con
arguments about the Iraq war, a perfectly appropriate academic
assignment, and
pressing students to come down on your side. Of course the instructor
who
presides over such a survey is likely to be a partisan of one position
or the
other - after all, who doesn't have an opinion on the Iraq war? - but it is part of a teacher's job to
set
personal conviction aside for the hour or two when a class is in
session and
allow the techniques and protocols of academic research full sway.
This restraint should not be too difficult to exercise. After all, we
require
and expect it of judges, referees and reporters. And while its exercise
may not
always be total, it is both important and possible to make the effort.
Thus the question Provost Farrell should put to Mr. Barrett is not "Do
you
hold these views?" (he can hold any views he likes) or "Do you
proclaim them in public?" (he has
that right no less that the rest of us) or even
"Do you surround them with the views of others?"
Rather, the question should be: "Do you separate yourself from your
partisan identity when you are in the employ of the citizens of Wisconsin and teach subject matter - whatever it is -
rather
than urge political action?" If the answer is yes, allowing Mr. Barrett
to
remain in the classroom is warranted. If the answer is no, (or if a yes
answer
is followed by classroom behavior that contradicts it) he should be
shown the
door. Not because he would be teaching the "wrong" things, but
because he would have abandoned teaching for indoctrination.
The advantage of this way of thinking about the issue is that it
outflanks the
sloganeering and posturing both sides indulge in: on the one hand,
faculty
members who shout "academic freedom" and mean by it an instructor's
right to say or advocate anything at all with impunity; on the other
hand,
state legislators who shout "not on our dime" and mean by it that
they can tell academics what ideas they can and cannot bring into the
classroom.
All you have to do is remember that academic freedom is just that: the
freedom
to do an academic job without external interference. It is not the
freedom to
do other jobs, jobs you are neither trained for nor paid to perform.
While
there should be no restrictions on what can be taught - no list of
interdicted
ideas or topics - there should be an absolute restriction on
appropriating the
scene of teaching for partisan political ideals. Teachers who use the
classroom
to indoctrinate make the enterprise of higher education vulnerable to
its
critics and shortchange students in the guise of showing them the true
way.
Stanley Fish is a
law professor at Florida International University.
Op-Ed, New York Times, July 23, 2006
.