Israeli Academic Extremism
Prof. Ziva Shamir Exposes
the Eradication of Free Speech and Academic Freedom by the Extreme
Radical Left in the Social Sciences
Explains the processes in which Departments
like BGU's Political Science Dept are allowed to form. Laments the
loss of Academic Standards that Leftist 'discourse' has brought
about.
She says, "Very few will dare admit openly that
several departments in Israel's largest universities, like many
places around the world, are now on the most radical fringe of the
political map, and quite a few fields of study long ago gave up
solid research for fashionable 'discourse.'" In certain departments,
says Shamir, it is impossible to express all opinions freely because
the "defenders of free speech" will set up an immediate outcry and
boycott any 'non-standard' speech without delay. They will condemn
the speaker vociferously and delegitimize him publicly.
"Nobody will even admit that in quite a few
departments, many of the lecturers can no longer be trusted, since
they are tainted by extreme radical thinking. They use the objects
of their research and the subjects they teach as nothing but a
platform on which to proclaim their extreme political axioms,"
Shamir says.
...
There are lecturers who commit political harassment. Sometimes it's
hard to tell the difference when it comes to the fine points of what
is allowed and what is not, but it's important to know that
political harassment is like sexual harassment. Lecturers in classes
have authority over their students. Add to that the fact that
low-ranking staff members are dependent on their superiors for
years.
"This leads to phenomena that are similar to
cloning. A department head collects people around him who think as
he does. Sometimes, the staff member behaves at first like one of
the anusim [the Jews of Spain who were forced to convert to
Catholicism during the time of the Inquisition, also called Marranos].
Later, they end up 'converting' because they have no choice. When a
language teacher gives the class a sentence for analysis such as 'IDF
soldiers at checkpoints act like neo-Nazis,' what is there to talk
about? Israeli academicians call abroad for the boycotting of Israel
and its educational institutions and then they're astonished when
the rug is pulled out from under them."
http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=6220
Ziva Shamir's culture war
Professor Ziva Shamir, a high-ranking researcher of literature
in Israel and abroad, recently published a sharply worded essay
against "the political anarchy in academia" • She says that
university faculties have become breeding grounds for lecturers with
radical world views, and that they "harass students politically" •
"The greats of Hebrew literature - Bialik and Alterman - have become
a platform that staff members use to present their radical
opinions," says Shamir, "Hebrew literature was the dove that
heralded Zionism. It must not become the raven that heralds its
destruction."
Dror Eydar
Sunday October 28, 2012
I first met Professor Ziva Shamir about 20 years
ago through her seminal book, "The Vagrant Bard: Avant-Garde and
Alterman's Poetic Style," a look at Nathan Alterman's poetry through
the lens of modernism. Since then, I have recommended that excellent
book as an introduction for people who want to learn about the work
of one of Israel's greatest poets.
Shamir, who took her first steps into the world
of literature research in the late 1960s, has written many books,
mostly about Hayim Nahman Bialik and Alterman. Now she has published
her latest work, "The Child Is the Father of the Man," about
Bialik's long narrative poems for children. For 40 years, she taught
in the Hebrew literature department at Tel Aviv University. After
her retirement, she continued to teach at Kibbutzim College and the
Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya. She offers an uncommon
perspective about the intellectual world in Israel.
Last June, Shamir published a sharply critical
essay about the state of humanities in Israeli academia. Her essay
caused an uproar not only in academia, but also the media. Shamir, a
former chairwoman of the Education Ministry's literature committee,
stuck to her own subject as a researcher and interpreter of
literature, but drew conclusions about the humanities in general.
"Few intellectuals of our time are worthy of the
name," Shamir wrote in her essay. "This age of postmodernism,
despite its enlightened appearance and its supposed dedication to
humanism and humanitarianism, is becoming an age of fundamentalism
that does not encourage independent thinking, research or
questioning. Today, many of the academics, writers and media
professionals are keeping mum. Willingly or not, deliberately or
not, they are sweeping the truth that they keep secret in their
hearts under the rug."
Shamir warned, "A situation is developing in
which all questions have answers that are known and prepared in
advance. This is not only happening in ultra-Orthodox society, but
mainly in the group that calls itself 'liberal.' Secular groups have
invented various sorts of dogmatic new 'religions' for themselves
(such as gender studies, queer studies, postcolonialism, ecology and
so on), whose basic premises are sacrosanct and may never be
questioned."
Shamir makes it clear that these fields are
worthy of study, but "on condition that they are not turned into
sacred dogmas and those who question their axioms take their lives
in their hands." She says that most studies in feminism, for
example, are not descriptive, posing questions and attempting to
answer them. Rather, they are "prescriptive, tendentious
pseudo-research that dictate action, and the facts and statistics
that they present will not change the results, which are known in
advance." From experience, she says, "Anyone who tries to probe the
validity of the axioms of these new 'religions' that have been made
part of the humanities, social science, political science and even
law, will be quickly shunned and pilloried."
She says, "Very few will dare admit openly that
several departments in Israel's largest universities, like many
places around the world, are now on the most radical fringe of the
political map, and quite a few fields of study long ago gave up
solid research for fashionable 'discourse.'" In certain departments,
says Shamir, it is impossible to express all opinions freely because
the "defenders of free speech" will set up an immediate outcry and
boycott any 'non-standard' speech without delay. They will condemn
the speaker vociferously and delegitimize him publicly.
"Nobody will even admit that in quite a few
departments, many of the lecturers can no longer be trusted, since
they are tainted by extreme radical thinking. They use the objects
of their research and the subjects they teach as nothing but a
platform on which to proclaim their extreme political axioms,"
Shamir says.
Q. Professor Shamir, your essay is an
extraordinary indictment. Would you share the essence of your
complaint with our readers?
"We are experiencing rapid changes in the 21st
century, and these changes are not skipping over the study of
literature. Once upon a time, the literature department was the most
popular one in the humanities. A.B. Yehoshua and Amos Oz recall that
in their time, there were hundreds of literature majors in their
graduating class, and today, only a few students sign up."
How do you explain that?
"There are local explanations and global ones.
Here, the matter is of critical importance because Hebrew literature
was the dove that heralded Zionism, the rebirth and the
re-establishment of the State of Israel. We must not allow it to
become the raven that heralds its destruction, God forbid. Without
Hebrew literature as a glue that binds us together, we have nothing
to look for here. In the past, we had the prayer book, and if the
public should lose Hebrew literature as a glue that binds us
together, what will be left for us? The music on Israeli TV shows?
Madonna's songs? What will be left as culture?"
What is the role of the universities in this?
"Their role is to train future generations, to
develop the field of study so that the teachers at the universities
will publish studies too. It's also to train students who will be
literature teachers in the school system, who will pass the torch to
their own students. The university is an agent of culture, and it is
losing this role because 'discourse,' which looks for the coin at
the foot of the lamppost, will take the place of research."
How did this process occur?
"It happened in the outside world during the
revolutions of 1848, and in Israel during the rebirth of Zionism,
the first waves of immigration and the fight for independence. The
status of literature was high at that time, and this status was
reflected in literary criticism and research. During the first years
that the Bialik Prize existed, it was awarded almost exclusively to
literary researchers. [Prime Minister David] Ben-Gurion wrote to
Alterman about the latter's work, 'The Seventh Column': 'No column
in our military ranks surpasses the fighting strength of your
column.'
"During the Cold War, apolitical methods were
developed in literary research — the New Criticism in the West, and
formalism in the East.
"This was also the heyday of the universities.
During that time, highly motivated, sincere people studied
literature. Today, some of the researchers are nothing more than
political hacks who get grants from the European Community and
similar places, and vie with each other to portray Israel as ugly."
Why did it succeed at the time? What did the
hundreds of students who majored in literature see in it?
"During the 1960s, it was harder to get into the
English department than it was to be accepted to law school. Back
then, people were attracted to literature departments because the
teachers there based their statements on serious research supported
by facts and statistics, not on guesses pulled from mid-air. Also,
literature still had a special aura. Later, people complained, maybe
with some justification, that the New Criticism was mistaken in that
it took the work out of its context. Then people started talking
about context. Eventually, they forget the text. They neglect it
completely.
"Today, people beat around the bush. They've
forgotten that the purpose of all the tools of literary theory and
all the disciplines, including history, psychology and philosophy,
is to improve our understanding of literary works, because what are
we studying literature for — to learn the author's life story? And
since we have 'psychologists' and 'sociologists' who never took a
single course in these subjects, the disciplines have been lost
because of too much interdisciplinarianism."
Shamir, who was born in 1946 in Israel and
received her doctorate in 1980 for her work on Bialik's early
poetry, says, "Disastrous things have happened in our postmodern
world. The worst of them is political bias. In many studies being
published today, the greatest people of Hebrew literature — Bialik,
Alterman, Uri Zvi Greenberg, Shai Agnon and others — are merely a
platform for presenting a radical opinion held by an instructor.
These literary greats never belonged to the political fringe. They
climbed a high mountain and looked in all directions. They were the
observers of the house of Israel. They would not recognize their own
images as some of the contemporary research portrays them."
Shamir talks about how the transformation of
research into "discourse" pulled the level of the humanities and the
social sciences down. "The field of literary research has become a
farce in many cases," she says firmly.
"Students are not attracted to these departments
today, and it's not just because there's no chance of making a
living. They know that the lecturers' statements are worthless
because they can't be trusted. There are quite a few instructors who
don't let the facts confuse them. They have formed their opinions in
advance.
"Postmodernism emphasizes that there is no truth.
Everyone has his or her own truth. But people forget that there is a
hierarchy among the various truths. So when they create this kind of
relativistic situation, it's no wonder that these departments have
lost their value. At one time, it was obvious that the school system
and the universities must never be politicized. But since then, the
door has been broken down and the mezuzah has been desecrated. All
the ghosts and demons have gotten inside, everything is wide open
and fair game, and the dance of death is going on in the
universities."
When you were on the appointments committee,
did you ever see complaints from students about political harassment
by lecturers?
"Yes. There are lecturers who commit political
harassment. Sometimes it's hard to tell the difference when it comes
to the fine points of what is allowed and what is not, but it's
important to know that political harassment is like sexual
harassment. Lecturers in classes have authority over their students.
Add to that the fact that low-ranking staff members are dependent on
their superiors for years.
"This leads to phenomena that are similar to
cloning. A department head collects people around him who think as
he does. Sometimes, the staff member behaves at first like one of
the anusim [the Jews of Spain who were forced to convert to
Catholicism during the time of the Inquisition, also called Marranos].
Later, they end up 'converting' because they have no choice. When a
language teacher gives the class a sentence for analysis such as 'IDF
soldiers at checkpoints act like neo-Nazis,' what is there to talk
about? Israeli academicians call abroad for the boycotting of Israel
and its educational institutions — and then they're astonished when
the rug is pulled out from under them."
Shamir finds the phenomenon of "copying" in
academia, which has gone beyond all bounds in this age of the
Internet, particularly disturbing.
"There is no longer any difference between source
and imitation, and the Internet gives legitimacy to that," she says.
"In a world where people call the most artificial and fake thing
'reality,' maybe one shouldn't expect more.
"Today, you find academics who cut and paste —
and for that they receive honors and awards. An absurd situation has
been created. If you copy a photograph on Google without permission,
you have to pay a heavy fine.
"But your entire life's research can be copied
and you can't go to any ethics committee at the university about it.
True, people have always copied. But it's gotten worse because of
the Internet and also because university heads don't care."
This critique can be expanded to include the
judging of essays and promotion at universities.
"People can commit just about any despicable act
under the aegis of academic privilege. What is there to stop a
person from lying to a university committee? The whole idea of
promotion in this manner is out of date. The universities were
supposed to be temples of knowledge. Certainly they can find a
better way to learn of a staff member's accomplishments than the
duplicated letters they receive as forced recommendations from
professors."
What do you think about the war over Hebrew?
Why must essays about Hebrew literature be published in English? How
can one write about Alterman in English?
"That's another absurdity, certainly when it
comes to a field like Hebrew literature. If you receive a letter of
recommendation from a researcher abroad, it is worth more than a
recommendation from a researcher in Israel because it supposedly
provides international recognition. Obviously, that's utter
nonsense. When it comes to Hebrew literature, the important people
live right here, and their colleagues throughout the world should
jump for joy if they get letters of recommendation from researchers
who live in Israel.
"In the places where I traveled, I saw lecturers
in Hebrew literature who had red carpets rolled out for them here in
Israel, but over there they taught at a much lower level. It may
sound prestigious to teach Hebrew literature at the Sorbonne,
Columbia, Yale or Princeton, but that's a sham. Hebrew literature is
frequently taught there in translation, but reading 'A Simple Story'
by Agnon without Agnon's Hebrew is like reading a dime novel."
What do you think should be done to correct
the situation?
"I have two suggestions. Every year, the
Education and Culture Ministry should give generous scholarships to
outstanding students — 30 to 50 students, the sort who are on fire
about their subject, so that the field won't fade away and they will
be able to pass the torch to the next generations. In addition, all
students who major in practical fields 'where they can make a
living' should be required to audit a few courses in Hebrew
literature, Jewish history, Bible and so on. Also, we should wait
until this awful state of affairs blows over."
Law students should also study literature. As
a jurist, you have to analyze texts, and literary science has the
most sophisticated tools for textual analysis.
"I have a friend, a literary researcher who
published essays on Agnon back in the day. One day, she saw that a
program was being launched at Yale or at Princeton for
capital-market analysts, and only graduates in literature were being
accepted. It turned out that people who know how to analyze text
properly have the talent to be capital-market analysts.
"She retrained, and today she's one of the most
important analysts in the United States. That goes to show that
serious textual analysis is a discipline. All the rest are just
auxiliary tools that help people understand the text better."
When all is said and done, is there hope?
"Literature and literary research are connected
vessels. Each nourishes the other. Literature also needs an
interpreter who can shed light on it. The Enlightenment-era poet,
Judah Leib Gordon, once lamented, 'For whose sake do I labor?' He
thought he would be the last Hebrew poet.
"Fortunately for us, he was wrong. All is not
lost. Always, when it seems that everything is being destroyed, new
things are created at the same time. Since the teachers' colleges
still teach the discipline without political leanings, there's a
chance that the field of literature won't become extinct."
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