Canon fodder.
Bauerlein, Mark
Michael Berube What's Liberal About the Liberal Arts?:
Classroom Politics & "Bias" in Higher Education. W. W.
Norton, 344 pages, $26.95
For many years, Michael Berube has been an outspoken and topical
voice in the humanities professoriate. His books cover critical theory,
academic employment, and the canon, and he weighs in on current events,
academic and political, on a personal blog that has a steady and
interactive readership. He's an MLA insider but also a popular
writer, contributing to The Nation, The Village Voice, and Dissent. He
leapt into the Culture Wars in the early 1990s, and, with regular
sallies into campus controversies, his career sets a different example
of professorial labor. His writings don't evince months and years
spent poring over archives and assembling primary documents, and the
focus on contemporary matters gives them a dated feel a few years after
their publication. But, then, Berube's practice exempts him from
many of the vices that have bedeviled humanities professors for three
decades.
For one thing, he writes well. Berube disdains the mushy, cutesy abstractions of critical theory as much as do traditionalists, and his
paragraphs move with clarity and dispatch. His interest in public
affairs contrasts well with the haughtiness of his colleagues, whose
snide stance toward the man in the street corresponds to their degree of
felt powerlessness in off-campus matters. Added to that, his experience
in large universities sharpens him to the social and economic conditions
of faculty life, for instance, the fact that campus egalitarianism
coexists with acute status-consciousness.
For these reasons, What's Liberal About the Liberal Arts? is a
smooth and swift read. The opening sections cover the chorus of
"conservative complaints" about liberal bias on campus,
ranging from the national campaign of David Horowitz to the remarks of
John, a "large white student" who interrupts Berube's
class discussions with obstreperous outbursts against identity politics.
The center of the book details Berube's teaching, with readings of
novels (My Antonia, etc.) interspersed with classroom scenes. Finally,
Berube outlines the principles of a liberal classroom, explaining how a
Rorty-derived "solidarity" shields education from the hubris of believing that our beliefs stem from anything except human interests
and inventions.
Along the way, Berube makes several admissions that please critics
of academia. "It is a skewed notion of dissent to think that
one's classroom should be deployed as the counterweight to
conservatism in the rest of the culture," he asserts, dismissing
one of the customary apologies for the leftist tilt of the professorate.
He calls some versions of "diversity training" exercises in
"hamhandedness," and prefers not to know about the
"hooking up" habits of undergrads. He notes how many of his
liberal colleagues "have no trouble exploiting their teaching
assistants," and, in the interest of lively debate, he says,
"I often wish I had more conservative colleagues in literary
study."
The chapters contain lively characterizations of students, careful
expositions of American fiction, and, in contrast to the regret cited
above, blithe vilifications of conservatives. Yes, conservatives are, to
Berube, a more or less deranged and ignoble crew. Some thoughtful
"arts-and-humanities" conservatives are out there, he
observes, but their kind is fading. In their stead, we have angry,
hypocritical figures unhinged by the presence of liberals in classrooms.
Their criticisms have reached a "fever pitch," and are
"hysterically overblown." Their "mind-bending
charge[s]" strike the profs as "surreal."
But these insults appear mainly in the opening chapters of the book
and don't advance the core issue, which is how the tenets of
liberalism enhance education. For that, Berube relies on lengthy
demonstrations of his classroom practice. He counsels students to read
closely, gather evidence, consider counter-evidence, address claims that
dispute their deepest beliefs, and treat opponents with respect. Open
your minds, face verbal challenges, keep complacency at bay, and play
fair, he presses. These are the protocols of John Stuart Mill, and one
has no difficulty believing that Berube runs a stimulating, reasonable
classroom.
The strengths of the presentation, however, point to a weakness in
Berube's argument and to contemporary liberalism in general (in
educational contexts). The procedures he details ate evenhanded and
rousing, but the ensuing liberal tenets of liberal education are just
that: all procedural. They lay out how to argue and how to disagree, how
to relate to one's own beliefs and how to relate to others'.
True to Berube's neopragmatist outlook, classroom liberalism bears
upon attitude and conduct. It does not endorse a curriculum. The
inculcation of tradition is barely hinted at. A student's
educational path may amble promiscuously through a smorgasbord of course
offerings.
This is today's fallback position for liberalism in higher
education. It used to push curricular innovations such as "opening
the canon," but those enthusiasms faded years ago. Now, shying away
from content, it emphasizes forensic ideals and content-less habits such
as critical thinking. In doing so, it never really engages conservative
educational thought, whose operative concepts (tradition, core
curriculum, common culture, high art, etc.) are mostly about content. In
truth, open-minded conservative teachers would agree to all of
Berube's procedural norms. Berube contrasts constructivists like
himself, who know that history, social circumstance, and conversation
are the primary ingredients of knowledge, to various fundamentalists who
insist that knowledge comes from extra-human sources such as the Word of
God, and who grade students accordingly. But these tyrants are a false
comparison, a rarity in classrooms. The real debate lies not over
debating tactics, but over course content. Disagreement arises over the
texts assigned, the topics emphasized, and the angles of interpretation
taken. Berube barely touches upon these, leaving What's Liberal
About the Liberal Arts? with a hole at the center.
At one of those moments, Berube cites a case of falsely imputed "liberal bias," and it indicates something else, precisely the
curricular dispute that should be, but isn't, elaborated. It
concerns an assigned essay topic that was claimed by a conservative
student to be anti-American, a claim rightly judged by Berube a silly
exaggeration. Still, the tendentiousness of the question is plain. Here
is the final sentence:
Analyze the U.S. constitution (original document),
and show how its formulation excluded
[the] majority of the people living in
America at that time, and how it was
dominated by America's elite interest.
And here is Berube's comment:
If students of American political science are
not introduced to the contradictions underlying
the foundation of a revolutionary democratic
nation that practiced slavery and
restricted the vote to landowning men, they
are being miseducated.
What Berube considers good history registers with conservatives
quite differently. They note the emphasis on exploitation and hypocrisy,
along with no chance to argue otherwise. The Founding's positive
side is glossed over as if it were false ornament. And as for
miseducation, the historical significance of the Constitution isn't
primarily that it legalized "exclusion" and "class
domination," but rather that a group of men acculturated to
exclusion and domination should have conceived a system of government
and a set of rights from which free and oppressed people have drawn
inspiration for two centuries. The assignment, then, asks undergraduates
to take a partial and politically loaded viewpoint on the Founding. If
we want full historical context, by all means bring in the inequalities
and injustices of the time, but let's not obscure the extraordinary
moral and political breakthrough represented by the document.
That Berube accepts such assignments as straightforward history
goes a long way toward explaining why conservative criticisms appear
unbalanced or cynical. The liberal outlook, especially regarding race
and gender, has seeped into and saturated the curriculum so much that
questioning it looks not like a new venture into the marketplace of
ideas but like a violation of civility. This makes it almost impossible
for conservative reformers in higher education to question, much less
alter, the curriculum. It's a frustrating impasse. Liberal
approaches to the curriculum are so embedded that conservative attacks
look suspect on procedural grounds. Say that multiculturalism as
commonly practiced is incompatible with the training of erudite students
and you offend the other parties. Describe "diversity" as a
coercive and illusory term that will be remembered as nothing but a
curious example of the mores of the early twenty-first century and you
become an unprofessional crank. The substance of your criticism is
waylaid by its impropriety.
When substantive points are recast as lapses in decency, outsiders
have no chance of gaining a seat at the table. Someone as professionally
aware as Professor Berube should recognize that, and he has at other
times done so. But here, he overlooks the situation, because, I think,
the aggressive actions of David Horowitz and others have raised the
threat level. What's Liberal About the Liberal Arts?, the major
statement on the issue by a major academic voice, never outlines the
most important aspect of any educational program, its curriculum. On the
evidence of its arguments, we may safely assume that in spite of all the
publicized assaults from the outside (such as the Academic Bill of
Rights) and all the humiliating episodes on the inside (such as Ward
Churchill), the humanities remain tied to a liberal outlook--not to
liberal personnel, but more deeply to liberal values and pedagogies.