A
Recipe For Academic Stardom
by
Thomas J. DiLorenzo
Harvard
University president Lawrence Summers recently got himself in Very
Big Trouble by mistakenly believing that he could try to hold all
Harvard faculty to the same academic standards regardless of race,
creed, color, or national origin. He met with several faculty members
who, in his opinion, had not in recent years produced the quality
and quantity of academic research and publication that is expected
of Harvard faculty. One of these faculty was the Afro-American Studies
Professor Cornell West, who Summers reportedly accused of spending
too much time on such things as advising Al Sharpton’s "presidential
campaign" and cutting rap music videos when he should have
been in his office writing.
West
screamed "racism" after leaving the meeting. Jesse Jackson,
Al Sharpton, and the usual cast of characters began criticizing
Summers until he announced over and over again his everlasting devotion
to affirmative action. West threatened to move to Princeton, whose
president issued him an open invitation to join the faculty there.
The
media piled on Summers as well, defendng West as "eminent,"
an "academic superstar," and, in the words of the Washington
Post, an "academic rock star." That got my attention.
Being an academic I thought it might be useful to find out what
it takes these days to become an academic superstar. I wouldn’t
mind an open invitation to teach at Princeton or Harvard myself,
so I retrieved from the library a copy of The
Cornell West Reader, which is part autobiography and part
a collection of essays. Here’s the recipe for academic superstardom
that I discovered in the Reader:
First,
one must completely ignore the worldwide collapse of socialism,
for all the world’s misery is the fault of capitalism. Along with
this, one must swear one’s everlasting devotion to Marxism and spend
one’s academic career debating and discussing with other Marxists
the "dilemma" that Marxism faces in light of the worldwide
implosion of socialism and the complete discrediting of Marxist
theory.
It’s
useful to tell academic "war stories" such as: "We
read voraciously and talked incessantly about . . . the crisis of
Marxism." A real home run would be able to brag, as West does,
of having discussed with the late Michael Harrington "the necessity
of rethinking and reinterpreting the insights of the Marxist tradition
in light of the new circumstances." Harrington was a socialist
"god" to the academic Left. (West also considers himself
"part of a great legacy, of Norman Thomas," who ran for
president on the Socialist Party ticket several times).
It
is OK to "adopt an anti-Stalinist stance"; one’s colleagues
will tolerate that. Stalin, after all, was not a very pleasant fellow.
But then just to be safe, one must boast about one’s Marxist bonafides
with statements like, "I learned much from readings of Trotskyist
intellectuals like Leon Trotsky himself."
It
also apparently pays to write books that most ordinary people would
think were one of those joke books with a crazy-sounding title on
the cover and a hundred blank pages inside. Like West’s first book,
"Ethical Dimensions of Marxist Thought." The more outrageous
and obviously false are the statements one makes about socialism,
the bigger one’s reputation becomes, apparently. Like, "Marxist
thought is an indispensable tradition for freedom fighters."
One’s
devotion to Marxism can be further demonstrated with statements
like, "It is necessary to discredit the fashionable trashing
to Marxist thought in the liberal academy." Or, "When
I arrived as Assistant Professor of Philosophy of Religion at Union
Theological Seminary . . . one of my concerns was . . . defending
Marxist theory . . . in the struggle for individuality and democracy."
Just ignore the fact that no government on earth that ever embraced
Marxist philosophy tolerated either individualism or democracy.
One
must stake out one’s practical policy positions as well, defining
them broadly as "a kind of democratic socialism." Or,
the key to "solving" the problems related to civil rights
and abortion is "the defense of the relevance of Marxist thought."
Now
that Marx’s theory of class struggle is pretty much discredited,
the appropriate response is not to admit that you were wrong but
to redefine Marx’s theory for him. For example, just announce that
"race, gender, sexual orientation, age . . . have assumed the
place of the proletariat in Marxist theory." That is, assume
that all women are conditioned to think alike by their environment,
as are all men, all people of the separate races, sexual orientations,
etc. If one happens to run across, say, a black conservative who
contradicts the theory, try to destroy his reputation and assert
that holding such political views disqualifies him as a genuine
black man. Remember, Marxist theory must be defended at all costs
if one is to become an academic superstar.
One
of the favorite buzzwords of the academic Left is "commoditization,"
which is sort of a catch-all condemnation of capitalism in their
eyes. So, whenever any kind of social problem is apparent, one is
best off blaming it all on commoditization (i.e., peaceful, free-market
exchange).
It
doesn’t matter if one sounds stupid; virtually everyone else outside
the university’s economics department does, too, when it comes to
economics, so what does it matter? For example, West ignores the
fact that the government’s war on drugs makes drug markets illegal,
which is why there is so much crime attached to the drug trade,
just as there was with alcohol during Prohibition. That way, all
the problems caused by the government’s war on drugs can be blamed
on commoditization, or "because it [the drug trade] is a matter
of buying and selling." Just do away with buying and selling,
and "individuality and democracy" will thrive.
Cornell
West seems to have all of his economics backwards. But hey, you
can’t argue with success, can you? For example, as Hans-Hermann
Hoppe points out in Democracy:
The God that Failed, democracy tends to raise peoples’ rate
of time preference so that they want more consumption now, and government
does its best to try to supply all those demands for handouts at
someone else’s expenses. As usual, West gets this backwards by announcing,
"market values encourage a preoccupation with the now, with
the immediate."
Even
though one may be every bit as much a communist as Stalin, Lenin,
Mao, or Castro, in today’s world it is important to give oneself
a label that will hide this fact from ordinary Americans. "Progressive
socialist," non-Marxist socialist," or "a black Christian
deeply indebted to the Marxist tradition" seem to have worked
well for West.
Finally,
it seems imperative to speak in gibberish so that ordinary people
(and your students) will think that you are really, really smart.
Say things like, "Marx wisely shuns any epistemic skepticism
(as promoted by the deconstructive critics of our day) and explanatory
agnosticism or nihilism (as intimated by those descriptivist anthropologists
and historians bitten by the bug of epistemic skepticism.) Instead,
Marx refuses to conflate epistemic and methodological issues, philosophic
and social theoretical ones, matters of justification for the certain
or absolute grounds for knowledge claims and matters of explanation
that provide persuasive yet provisional (or revisable) accounts
of social and historical phenomena."
How
could Larry Summers have been so blind?
January
12, 2002
Thomas
J. DiLorenzo [send him mail]
is professor of economics at Loyola College in Maryland. His latest
book is The
Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an
Unnecessary War (Forum/Random House, Feb. 2002).
Copyright
2002 LewRockwell.com
Thomas
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