Our Black Jeremiah.
Bauerlein, Mark
Cornel West Democracy Matters: Winning the Fight against
Imperialism. Penguin, 229 pages, $24.95
Cornel West is known as a fiery professor intellectual who brings
bookish learning and argumentative rigor to political and social issues.
Few academics slide so smoothly from the classroom to the rally or from
the library to the talk show. While teaching at Harvard and Princeton,
West worked for the 2000 campaign of Bill Bradley, traveled with Al
Sharpton to Africa, appeared in The Matrix 2 and on TV with Bill Maher.
The profile seems a perfect mix of inquiry and activism. Set him on a
panel on racism and he'll jump from welfare to the Republic to rap
to Protestantism.
To sustain a public "professor" persona, though, one must
not only play the media and mingle with political figures, but also
compose works of intellectual heft. Ever since West became a public
figure in the early 1990s, this has been a problem for him. A notorious
review in The New Republic by Leon Wieseltier in 1995 judged West's
books "almost completely worthless ... sectarian, humorless,
pedantic, self-endeared." And three years ago, President Summers of
Harvard started a tempest by raising questions about West's recent
efforts. Defenders retorted that Summers misunderstands the nature of
public intellectual activism, but the best scholarly evidence they could
marshal was The American Evasion of Philosophy, a middling survey of
pragmatist thought that West had composed over a decade earlier.
This latest book doesn't advance the dispute. Democracy
Matters purports to sketch the degraded state of democracy today, and to
find inspiration in traditions of Socratic questioning and Jewish
prophecy, as well as in youth culture. The thesis comes in fast and
furious indictments. An "unholy alliance of plutocratic elites and
the Christian Right" has hijacked the state for greedy and
parochial ends. Free-market ideology has led the government to abandon
the poor, the uninsured, the unschooled. Foreign policy is
"[f]ashioned out of the cowboy mythology of the American frontier
fantasy." Republican Party leaders are "drunk with power and
driven by grand delusions of American domination of the world."
Legal discrimination is over, but "Jim Crow Jr. is alive and
well."
The charges pile up, but they never coalesce into an argument. West
doesn't reason his way to conclusions, nor does he fortify his
complaints with empirical evidence or illustrative cases. He simply
tells us The Way Things Are. West is, Henry Louis Gates declares on the
dust jacket, "Our Black Jeremiah," reciting the sins of what
he believes are a fallen people and a corrupt leadership.
The solutions West proposes are just as hyperbolic as his
complaints. To face the wrongs, he counsels, we need a mode of Socratic
questioning that will "expose and extricate the antidemocratic
impulses within our democracy." To act upon the ensuing insights,
we must "draw on the prophetic," like the Jewish prophets who,
invoking divine justice, stood up to tyrants and overcame the predations
of might and wealth. Finally, to temper the Judaic law "we must
draw on the tragicomic," that vision of jaded but living hope (best
represented in blues and hip-hop) that keeps fatalism at bay and
lightens the spirit in a world of pain.
One might rebut every paragraph in this book, but they are
stubbornly resistant to discussion. West's language is overheated;
his descriptions are tendentious; his moral judgments are held up as
gospel from page one. West doesn't back his charges, so why bother?
It is better to interpret Democracy Matters as a case study in academic
celebrity. It shows what happens when a scholar is thrown into the media
arena, hailed as an "eloquent prophet with attitude"
(Newsweek), courted by rival universities, and invited, interviewed, and
idolized without end. The process is fatal to the scholarly
intelligence. If the public sphere draws an academic too far from his
domain, he loses touch with that which keeps him judicious and
deliberative: peer criticism. Without colleagues who thrive on punching
holes in each other's work, one's conceptions are untested.
Performance ends up counting for more than rigor does. In the strategic
realms of media and politics, academics don't reason or inquire.
They opine.
There is nothing wrong with opinion, of course, except when one
writes a book of lazy pontification and pretends that it is something
more. Democracy Matters professes to be unflinchingly critical and
prophetically intellectual, but in truth the content and rhetoric remind
one of a Charlie Rose hour. While talking-head criticism makes for
quality television, it comes off in print as a symptomatic utterance,
the words of a man freed from accountability and enamored of his own
voice. Examine it closely and one sees that the characteristics of this
celebrity-scholar writing are wholly opposite to the adventuresome,
incisive persona displayed by the author.
West's ideas unfold with predictability and ease. The claim
that Republicans engage in "myopic mendacity" comes as no
surprise. That the "vicious legacy of white supremacy" need
only be asserted, not explained, is a sign of West's complacency.
As in a talk show appearance, the important thing for West is to
articulate his message, to give it urgency.
West's language has no anchor in particulars. Bloated phrases
and flamboyant epithets do the work properly done by concrete
description. Sometimes, the language acquires a momentum of its own, as
in West's versions of life after 9/11. Early on, 9/11 marks
"the full-scale gangsterization of America." Before readers
can digest that, a variant pops up: "9/11 plunged the whole country
into the blues." The next page provides a climactic alternative:
"Since 9/11 we have experienced the niggerization of America."
West's professions of liberality are belied by vilifications
of his opposition. He insists upon the value of "respectful and
candid dialogue," but every reference to conservatives drips with
accusation. His roll call of "towering social critics" is
packed with demonizers--Noam Chomsky, Susan Sontag, Angela Davis,
Barbara Ehrenreich.
Finally, against progressivist principle, the personal prevails
over the political. The only sustained episode in Democracy Matters
concerns West's battle with Summers, recounted in a fifteen-page
narrative aimed at shoring up his credibility. West's testimony has
the air of truth, and Summers may have acted as a clod, but his response
bears the pique of one unaccustomed to challenges on his home turf.
Additionally, there is something sad about a distinguished professor
proving his seriousness by citing his rap CD and his weekly chats on the
Tavis Smiley Show. As for West's faith in the genius of hip-hop:
What does it say of his judgment that he considers the following lines
"powerful poetry and insightful social critique"?
What you trying to pull eatin' us like cannibals
Whatever happened to that forty acres and
that animal
Now you tryin' to use integration just to
fool us
Like Malcolm said we been hoodwinked and
bamboozled.
It is fitting that celebrity academics should promote youth
culture. West may invoke Emerson, Plato, and James Baldwin, but he saves
his passion for the hip-hop performers DA Smart and Outkast. The average
black student graduates from high school four years behind his white
classmates. Close to 70 percent of black children are born without a
father in the home. Literary reading rates for blacks fell eight points
from 1992 to 2002. But the media prefers to highlight the juvenile
rebelliousness and hokey cynicism of the hip-hop artist. Why should the
talking head professor do any different?