Sunday, May 22, 2011

"Well, but so what? A bunch of spoiled kids are having trouble finding jobs—so is everybody else. Here’s so what. First of all, they’re not spoiled. They’re doing exactly what we always complain our brightest students don’t do: eschewing the easy bucks of Wall Street, consulting or corporate law to pursue their ideals and be of service to society. Academia may once have been a cushy gig, but now we’re talking about highly talented young people who are willing to spend their 20s living on subsistence wages when they could be getting rich (and their friends are getting rich), simply because they believe in knowledge, ideas, inquiry; in teaching, in following their passion. To leave more than half of them holding the bag at the end of it all, over 30 and having to scrounge for a new career, is a human tragedy."

- William Deresiewicz in Faulty Towers: The Crisis in Higher Education

May 4, 2011, The Nation

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

CUNY in the spotlight - the Tony Kushner controversy

Tony Kushner and the corporatisation of CUNY

My parallel experience of being smeared by Jeffrey Wiesenfeld has convinced me of the very real threat to academic freedom


On Monday evening, 9 May 2011, CUNY reversed its earlier decision to withhold an honorary degree from Tony Kushner after trustee Jeffrey Wiesenfeld had argued the playwright was too critical of Israel. Despite the controversy, Kushner has reportedly said he will accept the award. Photograph: Jeff Chiu/AP

The taboo surrounding critical discussion of Israel in the United States never ceases to amaze me. But when the Board of Trustees of the City University of New York (CUNY) recently decided not to grant an honorary degree to Pulitzer-Prize winning playwright Tony Kushner because of his views on Israel, it felt personal.

Three months ago, I found myself at the center of a similar controversy over my appointment to teach a course in Middle East Politics at Brooklyn College, a CUNY school. Lacking any evidence to support the charge, a local politician described me as "pro-suicide bomber" and pressed for my dismissal. Within 48 hours and before I had held a single session of the course, the college administration intervened to cancel my appointment. My case set off a groundswell of support from academics and activists around the world and Brooklyn College eventually reinstated me just in time for classes to begin.

Jeffrey Wiesenfeld, the board member behind the Kushner controversy, characterised Kushner's views on Israel as "extremist" and therefore unworthy of CUNY's recognition. Never mind that Tony Kushner is widely considered one of the greatest living American playwrights, his take on Israel was offensive to our man Wiesenfeld. When asked by the New York Times to elaborate on his objections, Wiesenfeld offered this piece of wisdom: "People who worship death for their children are not human … [The Palestinians] have developed a culture which is unprecedented in human history."

This kind of behaviour is nothing new for Jeffrey Wiesenfeld. He was involved with the smear campaign against me earlier this year, charging CUNY professors with running a "cabal that suppresses the very academic freedom they claim to uphold". One can only wonder if his failure to keep me out of the classroom earlier this semester influenced his determination to block Kushner's award. In any case, Wiesenfeld seems to fancy himself an ideological enforcer on Israel.

Though bizarre, Wiesenfeld's antics are only symptomatic of a deeper malaise. Both my and Kushner's cases point to one of the more threatening crises facing CUNY and American universities generally: corporatisation and the adoption of a boardroom mentality in university administrations. As CUNY relies ever more on private funding and student tuition – already the majority of its budget – this once-great public institution gradually concerns itself primarily with cultivating and protecting a brand image. It seems CUNY no longer has much time for those with views likely to upset the largesse of its donors. This is quite simply poisonous for an institution grounded on the free exchange of ideas.

Fortunately, there is still hope. In both instances, a small but diverse and dedicated group of people helped mobilise responses and direct media attention. This is a lingering but powerful residue of academic democracy, for which CUNY was once famous, and it seems to be growing.

I draw one immediate conclusion from the cases in question: the board of trustees is an unnecessary body that should be disbanded. It comprises 17 political appointees who generally lack experience as educators and who – nearly all coming from business backgrounds – have little claim to represent the university's intellectual diversity. At a minimum, Jeffrey Wiesenfeld should submit his resignation, if only to spare CUNY any further embarrassment.

Although the board, on Monday night, cancelled its earlier decision and voted unanimously to grant Tony Kushner his honorary degree, the award itself was never the primary issue. The academic community needs to use this opportunity to launch a debate about the galloping corporatisation of American universities and the undue amount of power given to petty individuals like Wiesenfeld. The whole sordid affair would never have occurred were the university democratically controlled by those who actually use it.

CUNY in the spotlight - the Tony Kushner controversy

Transcript of Jeffrey Weisenfeld's statement:

BOARD OF TRUSTEES
OF
THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK

BOARD OF TRUSTEES MEETING

JEFFREY S. WIESENFELD SPEECH

Monday
May 2, 2011

BENNO SCHMIDT, Chairman

MR. WIESENFELD: Again, Mr. Chairman, forgive the indulgence. I want to raise an issue that’s larger the candidate about which I want to speak, but I want to explain why. There is a lot of disingenuous and non intellectual activity directed against the State of Israel on campuses throughout the country, the west generally and often times the United States as well. And the reason I choose to address this is there have been a couple of instances and I don’t in any way God forbid denigrate this university because we are far and away better in this regard than most others and certainly not the college in question, but I want to address in context the question of the granting of the degree to Tony Kushner.

Now, about a year or so ago, if I am not mistaken John Jay College also issued a John Jay Justice Award to Mary Robinson and there was an article in The Wall Street Journal, and I will just give a brief quote to set the stage, “Criticism of Mr. Obama’s award to Mary Robinson to be official bestowed has centered on Mrs. Robinson’s central organizing role as secretary general of the 2001 World Conference against Racism in Durbin, South Africa. Instead of concentrating on its purported objectives, Durbin was vehemently anti-Semitic, anti-Israel and at least implicitly anti-American. So vile was the conference’s draft declaration that Secretary of State Colin Powell correctly called it a throwback to the days of Zionism equals racism, referring to the infamous 1975 U.N. General Assembly Resolution to that effect. President George Bush, whose father led the 1991 campaign that repealed the U.N. Zionism as a form of racism resolution, unhesitatingly agreed when Mr. Powell recommended the U.S. delegation leave the Durbin conference rather than legitimize the outcome.

Mrs. Robinson did not see it that way then and she has shown no remorse since. In late 2002 she described Durbin’s outcome as “remarkably good including on issues of the Middle East.”

Now to Mr. Kushner. I chose with Mr. Kushner not to look at pro Israel Web sites that would give insight into his feelings of Israel, rather I went to the Web site of one Norman Finkelstein, another discredited individual that mercifully we rid ourselves of at this university, and he pridefully displays key quotes of Mr. Kushner on his Web site which are accurately reflected elsewhere and by Mr. Kushner’s record itself and I quote Mr. Kushner.

First, why Mr. Finkelstein praises the candidate. Kushner also deplores the brutal and illegal tactics of the I.D.F., which I might add is the only force of its kind in the world that has the high code of ethics that the Israel Defense Forces has and the deliberate destruction of Palestinian culture in a systematic attempt to destroy the identity of the Palestinian people. He is also on the board of an organization which opposes the security fence, a unified Jerusalem or military aid to Israel recommends Norman Finkelstein’s notorious books and supports boycotting and divesting from the State of Israel.

Now to Mr. Kushner’s quotes, “Israel was founded in a program that if you really wasn’t to be blunt about it was ethnic cleansing and that today is behaving abominably towards the Palestinian people. I have never been a Zionist, I have a problem with the idea of a Jewish state, it would be better if it never had happened.”

Kushner said establishing a state means [expletive] people over. However, I think that people in the late 20th and 21st century, having seen the Holocaust, having seen the 20th century and all of its horrors cannot be complacent in the face of that. The Israeli reporter questioning Mr. Kushner says, but you are saying then that the very creation of the State of Israel as a Jewish state was not a good idea. And Mr. Kushner answered it was a mistake.

I think you get the idea. I don’t wasn’t to bore you all with the details. Let me just say that when people identify themselves politically in principle or principally by these types of viewpoints, yes it could be said by other trustees or by members of faculty that it has a chilling effect when a trustee brings up these types of matters, but I think it is up to all of us to look at fairness and to consider these things, especially when the State of Israel, which is our sole democratic ally in the area sits in the neighborhood which is almost universally dominated by administrations which are misogynist, anti-gay, anti-Christian and societies that are doing today to the Christians what they did to the 500,000 Jews who lived in the Arab world in 1948 at the time of the creation of the State of Israel, dispossessing them, murdering them, deporting them.

And so I have to say that even if I am the lone dissenter, that it is time that it would be much worse for the reputation of the university not to mention this, especially after the appointment of an individual at Brooklyn College, Mr. Oberton, who has some equally specious scholarship.

Thank you, Mr. Chairman.