On the corruption of the secular ideals of the academy by religious orthodoxy. ADVERTISEMENT [The Review Logo]( You can also [read this newsletter on the web](. Or, if you no longer want to receive this newsletter, [unsubscribe](. When Mark Berkson, a professor of religion at Hamline University, attended Hamlineâs â[Academic Freedom and Cultural Perspectives]( forum on September 12, he was not expecting Fayneese Miller, the universityâs president, to offer an uncompromising defense of her administrationâs actions last year. After all, the American Association of University Professorsâ investigation into the university had [determined]( that Hamlineâs failure to renew the art historian Erica López Praterâs contract after a student complained about seeing a 14th-century image of the Prophet Muhammad in a âWorld Artâ class was a clear violation of academic freedom. The AAUP also formally faulted Hamline for its âfailure to defend the free-speech and academic-freedom rights of Professor Berkson,â who, they said, became âa target of official disapprovalâ for his attempts to defend López Praterâs pedagogy. And even before the AAUP report, Hamlineâs faculty [voted]( no confidence in Miller, who said she would retire as president in 2024. But in her opening remarks, Miller did not express contrition or indicate that she had any second thoughts about her administrationâs handling of the López Prater incident. On the contrary, as Berkson [describes]( in a recent essay in our pages, Miller offered âa full-throated defense of the administrationâs actions against López Prater.â Later in September, a second event on issues of free speech took place at Hamline, this one co-sponsored by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and Georgetown University and livestreamed by Hamline. Although the conference was not devoted to academic freedom per se, one panel, on âImmigrants, Refugees, Religious and Ethnic Minorities, and the First Amendment,â turned to that topic when Amna Khalid, a panelist and associate professor of history at Carleton College who has [written]( in our pages about the Hamline incident, raised it forcefully: âIn Minnesota, I would argue that the threat [to free speech] is not coming from legislators. Rather, perhaps inadvertently, from within college campuses. Thatâs something that does bear mentioning. There was an incident here at Hamline which made national and international news.â When another panelist, the St. Paul City Council member Jane L. Prince, defended Hamlineâs actions (âthe fallout may have been difficult, but the intention of protecting a student who was hurt is something we also want to think aboutâ), Khalid amplified her critique: âWhen we talk about harm and minorities, I think itâs absolutely essential that we give them the same respect that is due to majorities, which is that we contain multitudes. We have many voices, we do not speak with a single voice, and when an institution decides to take a position where it labels something âIslamophobic,â then it silences other students or Muslim members in the community who think differently.â When Khalid had finished talking, President Miller, who was in the audience, took up the subject. âThe story of what happened at Hamline University is not known to the public. You only got one version of the story. There is another version to this story that we were unable to tell. I will say this: The federal court just ruled in Hamlineâs favor in regard to this incident.â Miller was referring to Erica López Praterâs suit against Hamline for defamation, retaliation, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and religious discrimination. Itâs not quite accurate to say the court ruled in Hamlineâs favor; in fact, it [allowed]( López Praterâs suit to proceed, but only on the grounds of religious discrimination. Miller went on to insist that the common understanding of the Hamline controversy was entirely mistaken, though she wouldnât say how. âThe community outside Hamline, and the community inside Hamline, has no idea what actually happened.â And she denied specifically that the university had ever characterized the incident as Islamophobic; that charge had merely been made by âa member of the community.â Despite the moderatorâs efforts to move the conversation away from the Hamline incident (perfectly reasonable, since the panel was not primarily about Hamline or academic freedom), Hamline faculty members, provoked by Millerâs denial of administrative wrongdoing, wouldnât let it die. During the Q. and A., Mark Berkson spoke first: âIn response to President Millerâs statement, I want to first of all say that we do have knowledge about what happened extensively. The AAUP came in and did an investigation.â (The resulting [report]( Berkson pointed out, âconcludes that the administration of Hamline University violated the academic freedom of Professor Erika López Prater.â) And he went on to dispute the idea that David Everett, who originated the âIslamophobiaâ charge, was merely a âmember of the community.â He was, in fact, Hamlineâs associate vice president for inclusive excellence. âIf the administration had wanted to immediately retract it and distance themselves from it they could have done so,â Berkson said, âbut they did not.â The moderator, wiltingly: âI do just want to ask if anyone has any other questions related to anything else.â To her relief, someone did. But it wasnât very long before the elephant wandered back into the room. Binnur Ozkececi-Taner, a professor of political science at Hamline, took the mike. âI am a Muslim myself,â she said, and expressed her âappreciation for President Miller for what she did for that particular student.â What sounded at first like a defense of Miller turned out to be the diplomatic prelude to a critique: The school of thought that I belong to was very different from the school of thought that the majority of our [Muslim] students here at Hamline belong to. And to me, that diversity or diverse perspective needed to be included in the decision-making process. Again, Iâm not really putting the blame on anyone. I think that everyone had the best of intentions for our students ... but the way that the discussion happened or the debate happened or did not happen had a chilling effect on me personally, as an academic who teaches courses related to the Middle East, courses related to womenâs rights in Islam. That may not have been the intention of our administration, which I really appreciate ... but it happened. Now as Iâm thinking about the classes that Iâm going to be teaching next semester, I have to ask myself: Do I really want to talk about this? Miller responded without responding: Instead of addressing the complexities of intra-Islamic disagreement, she alluded again to the substance, still unrevealed, of her conversation with the complaining student. âPeople donât know what happened in my office. People donât know what was said to the student â at all.â (I asked Millerâs office whether she could elaborate on what passed between her and the student, but she declined, citing the studentâs privacy.) Whatever was said, Millerâs chief motive, she said, was one of kindness and ministration, of âtrying to make sure that a student leaves your office feeling as though you care about them, feeling as though they belong.â But then she acknowledged another motive: revenue. âAt the end of the day, the students are our recruiters, who go back into their community and talk about their experience as students. So it is a complex situation.â NEWSLETTER [Sign Up for the Teaching Newsletter]( Find insights to improve teaching and learning across your campus. Delivered on Thursdays. To read this newsletter as soon as it sends, [sign up]( to receive it in your email inbox. However complex it might be from the point of view of recruitment, the Hamline incident was, from the point of view of academic freedom, pretty straightforward, as the AAUPâs incident report makes clear. Nor, despite its filtration through the contemporary lens of diversity, equity, and inclusion, is there anything novel about challenges to academic freedom in the name of religious orthodoxy. In 1940, for instance, as Matthew W. Finkin and Robert C. Post recount in For the Common Good: Principles of American Academic Freedom (2009), a liberal Christian professor named Philip Mankin was dismissed by the State Teachers College of Murfreesboro, Tenn., for admitting that, as he said, he âpersonally did not believe in a âburning hell.ââ In 1934, a professor named Ralph E. Turner, of the University of Pittsburgh, was dismissed because his students considered his attitude toward religion to be âflippant and sneering.â One student called Turner a âmenace.â âToday,â Finkin and Post write, this student âwould have charged Turner with creating a âhostile environment.ââ Such a charge, they write, âconfuses respect for persons with respect for ideas,â and is therefore âfundamentally inconsistent with freedom of teaching.â In 2006, the Columbia University religious-studies scholar Mark C. Taylor, at the time teaching at Williams College, [wrote]( in The New York Times about what he saw as the growing problem of âreligiously correctâ students refusing, on the grounds of religious sensitivity, to do the reading. Or worse: âDistinguished scholars at several major universities in the United States have been condemned, even subjected to death threats. ... In the most egregious cases, defenders of the faith insist that only true believers are qualified to teach their religious tradition.â This sort of identitarian reduction is relatively common now. Kate Blanchard, a professor emerita of religious studies at Alma College, [exemplified it]( when, in Religious Dispatches, she criticized López Prater this way: âItâs really not for non-Muslims to say what Muslim students should or shouldnât consider disrespectful.â This troubling logic might be extended indefinitely: Does the same stricture apply to Muslim scholars studying other religions? Why should a liberal Christian like Mankin, for instance, have been permitted to entertain ideas that were noxious to his more orthodox students? And what about Jews? Are they to be permitted to have ideas about Christianity and its cultures? Some people have thought not; there is a name for them. Attitudes like Blanchardâs are rare among faculty members but, it seems, increasingly common among students. This does not bode well for academic freedom. The notion that particular human communities have proprietary relationships to particular areas of study is incompatible with the secular ideals of the academy. More practically, it would render an enormous quantity of scholarship and teaching impossible. To the extent that that idea becomes normative, no number of AAUP incident reports will be able to preserve the study of human cultures and societies from chauvinism, parochialism â and orthodoxy. ADVERTISEMENT Upcoming Workshop [The Chronicle's Strategic Leadership Program for Department Chairs] [Join us this October]( for a virtual professional development program on overcoming the challenges and seizing the opportunities of the department chair role while creating a strategic vision for your department. [Reserve your spot today!]( The Latest THE REVIEW | ESSAY [The âNew Science of Historyâ Is Bunk]( By Jacob Mikanowski [STORY IMAGE]( Two new books model radically different ways of studying the past. ADVERTISEMENT THE REVIEW | OPINION [Gutting Language Departments Would Be a Disaster]( By Rebecca L. Walkowitz [STORY IMAGE]( Once a program is gone, it is very difficult and expensive to bring it back. THE REVIEW | ESSAY [In Defense of the Beleaguered Academic Book Review]( By Carolyn Eastman [STORY IMAGE]( The genre is uncompensated and unrewarded. That should change. THE REVIEW | ESSAY [Hamline President Goes on the Offensive]( By Mark Berkson [STORY IMAGE]( Despite the AAUPâs concerns about academic freedom, Fayneese Miller is doubling down. Recommended - âIâm not so sure we really know how we know what we know.â For Critical Inquiryâs blog, Lorraine Daston [asks why]( thereâs no epistemology of the humanities.
- âThe cave, which contained a dense concentration of swiftlet nests, is a sacred site for the Punan, who consider it the source of all things.â In The New York Times, Brendan Borrellâs [extraordinary account]( of Borneoâs Punan Batu, who, as the anthropologist Stephen Lansing and the geneticist Pradiptajati Kusuma have recently helped confirm, âappear to have been isolated for more than 20 generations.â
- âIn both economic and political respects, universities have suffered the effects of what Brown calls ânihilistic boundary breakdownâ, whereby different spheres of society invade one another for no good reason.â In the London Review of Books, William Davies takes Wendy Brownâs recent book Nihilistic Times as an [occasion to think about]( the threats to higher education in Britain and the U.S. And check out Brownâs recent [essay]( in our pages on âethical pedagogy for a nihilistic age.â Write to me at len.gutkin@chronicle.com. Yours, Len Gutkin FROM THE CHRONICLE STORE [Surviving as a Small College - The Chronicle Store]( [Surviving as a Small College]( The past decade has been especially hard on small colleges. There’s stiffer competition for traditional-age students and many students are harder to win over. [Order your copy]( to examine the challenges facing small colleges, insights on how they might surmount them, and the benefits distinct to these unique institutions. NEWSLETTER FEEDBACK [Please let us know what you thought of today's newsletter in this three-question survey](. This newsletter was sent to {EMAIL}. [Read this newsletter on the web](. [Manage]( your newsletter preferences, [stop receiving]( this email, or [view]( our privacy policy. © 2023 [The Chronicle of Higher Education](
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