Free Speech and Creepy Liberalism

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i keep wanting to start a thread about the collapse of academia. i think even if these students' specific demands are unreasonable or seem silly they are being made within institutions that are deeply + catastrophically flawed. i'm not sure exactly how to connect seemingly disparate phenomena like the abuse + poverty of adjuncts + TA's, the reams of superficial jargon-laden worthless critical theory from celebrity academics, students making bizarre demands, the rise of activism academia as a replacement for scholarship, the funding crises and exploitation of students through student loans and obscene tuition spikes... but they all seem to be a part of a similar thing - an institution that has become completely dysfunctional.

Mordy, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:18 (seven years ago) link

Also stop charging ppl to learn hobbies and opinions

Daithi Bowsie (darraghmac), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:25 (seven years ago) link

it's hard to figure out what a normative ideal of higher education would even be at this point unless you want to go back to teaching the classics to the well-to-do. (which, maybe we do?)

i think what a lot of us value or valued about academia (critical thinking, a roadmap of the canon, exposure to new ideas) is at this point not really "institutionalizable" anymore, at least in way that's not gonna perform some massive exclusions.

ryan, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:31 (seven years ago) link

i keep wanting to start a thread about the collapse of academia. i think even if these students' specific demands are unreasonable or seem silly they are being made within institutions that are deeply + catastrophically flawed. i'm not sure exactly how to connect seemingly disparate phenomena like the abuse + poverty of adjuncts + TA's, the reams of superficial jargon-laden worthless critical theory from celebrity academics, students making bizarre demands, the rise of activism academia as a replacement for scholarship, the funding crises and exploitation of students through student loans and obscene tuition spikes... but they all seem to be a part of a similar thing - an institution that has become completely dysfunctional.

this seems too broad, esp. when you're talking about oberlin, which i doubt relies on adjuncts much.

wizzz! (amateurist), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:36 (seven years ago) link

is academia really that bad? if anything, campuses seem like they're better at recognizing and accommodating the needs of students now than when I was a student. there are a lot of institutional problems related to the money churn (the adjunct instructors/TAs taking over more of the teaching load, tuition going through the roof) that are a result of dried-up funding and increasing student populations but again, that's about recognizing schools aren't being allocated funds commensurate with their current needs

there might be huge battles about how academically rigorous programs should be, but every person I've talked to in the engineering and sciences who is either in grad school or recently left undergrad doesn't report an experience that's greatly different from what mine was fifteen years ago

μpright mammal (mh), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:37 (seven years ago) link

xpost

i mean, yes, those are all problems, but i think it'd be too tidy to wrap them up in one package labeled "collapse" (though some of my friends would label that bag "neoliberalism," which also seems too neat)

wizzz! (amateurist), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:38 (seven years ago) link

Academia has its problems but it basically rules when compared with any other institution or workplace

Guayaquil (eephus!), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:39 (seven years ago) link

there's a bit in the new yorker article about how some of the students, particularly less privileged ones, have begun to see higher education as a false bill of goods. left unsaid, i think, is what they expected from it.

ryan, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:39 (seven years ago) link

im not economist but the current student-debt bubble and deracination of the humanities suggests that the current status quo is teetering. many people i've talked to in academia seem convinced that the future will essentially involve technical and trade schools with a handful of elite schools still providing a "liberal" education.

ryan, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:41 (seven years ago) link

I mean:
the reams of superficial jargon-laden worthless critical theory from celebrity academics
not an issue in most majors?

students making bizarre demands, the rise of activism academia as a replacement for scholarship,

students and a subset of faculty have always pushed demands on to institutions, more so in times of greater social change. mistakes are made in the handling of these situations, but it's an open dialog? no idea what "activism academia" means outside of the grading curve, but I have friends who went to schools with non-traditional curricula (Evergreen and its lack of grade system, other schools with block scheduling instead of the traditional credit-hour system) and I don't see that becoming much more widespread

μpright mammal (mh), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:41 (seven years ago) link

some of the problems morbs mentions have to do primarily with public/state schools which are losing financial support, and yes, many of those schools are in crisis. and that's a huge issue for higher education as a democratic institution.

i'm not as convinced that the bulk of private schools are in crisis.

wizzz! (amateurist), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:42 (seven years ago) link

i think mordy is reading too many think pieces on this stuff.

wizzz! (amateurist), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:43 (seven years ago) link

sorry, i typed "morbs" above when i meant "mordy." they are not to be confused. :)

wizzz! (amateurist), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:43 (seven years ago) link

this is good on how horrific the adjunct situation is (probably worse than you know): http://gawker.com/dont-stay-in-school-kids-1778187475

i can speak from personal experience that the college debt experience is terrible as well.

Mordy, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:43 (seven years ago) link

it's true, though, that people have been decrying the collapse of academia for some decades now...

ryan, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:44 (seven years ago) link

the idea that a college education guaranteed you a spot in the workforce seemed to be on the rise when I was in school -- the offices for career placement and churn of job fairs seemed to get more larger and numerous every year, with this expectation that even in fields without traditional internships that you needed one in order to succeed

μpright mammal (mh), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:44 (seven years ago) link

it's a bit chicken little of me, but i think the next big economic crisis will do a number on the humanities (as the last one did). part of my decision to try to get out of academia is to get a head start on that.

ryan, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:45 (seven years ago) link

I think that when combined with the greater debt load, it's resulted in more people feeling cheated. Graduating with an expensive degree followed by an uncertainty about the ability to find a job, let alone have a career path, is nerve-wracking

μpright mammal (mh), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:45 (seven years ago) link

im not economist but the current student-debt bubble and deracination of the humanities suggests that the current status quo is teetering. many people i've talked to in academia seem convinced that the future will essentially involve technical and trade schools with a handful of elite schools still providing a "liberal" education.

i think this is probably otm and honestly the role of humanities or a "liberal" education at this pt should probably take place in the context of autodidacticism or maybe some pre-modern monastery format bc it's irresponsible imo to charge students a hundred thousand dollars for a degree that qualifies them for nothing (and again, this is speaking entirely from personal experience - should i have been bright enough to know that my humanities degrees would be worthless? yes. did any responsible adults tell me that at the time, though? no.)

Mordy, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:46 (seven years ago) link

oh, i know all about the adjuncting problem.

it's a combination of:

- declining state support for public higher education
- swelling of administrative class
- overproduction of PhDs in most fields

wizzz! (amateurist), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:46 (seven years ago) link

the interesting thing is the article sort of does highlight how the strange-looking demands of the students are an aspect of them actually taking the promises of the campuses seriously. on their own they're strange demands. as responses to precisely the claims of campuses they make sense, and point to this gap between the rhetoric of the campuses and what they actually do, and it would be great if more coverage picked up on that.

― are you ellie (s.clover), Wednesday, May 25, 2016 10:08 AM (37 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I should have just said "s. clover otm"

μpright mammal (mh), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:47 (seven years ago) link

and i'm one of the lucky ppl who had a family business to fall back into that pays me enough that i can actually afford to pay my $1,000 a month college debt obligations. i do not imagine that the vast majority of graduates are as lucky.

Mordy, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:47 (seven years ago) link

Mordy some of those things are connected (adjuncts + funding); the others may be connected to each other but they're part of an academic world I don't experience or recognize. & certainly just an american academic world, because those issues, to the extent that there's anything there save hype, don't register outside the usa (maybe canada).

by contrast my department this semester worked out a scheme by which we could accommodate students who've been participating in social movements against the new work law; students who didn't turn in enough work to get a passing grade got the opportunity to turn in a supplementary assignment (obv we didn't ask if they'd "really" been at Nuit Debout etc). & the university has been giving students space to organize. some of them have taken over lecture halls over night & so we've had buildings closed for a couple of days here & there. the activist energy is pretty strong but it's focused on pretty practical issues, like changing the government / government's mind. of course we don't really do identity politics here, except for gender, for better or for worse.

biiiiig xp

droit au butt (Euler), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:48 (seven years ago) link

of course the whole thing is a question of finance, since programs produce PhDs essentially because

1) w/o enough graduate students they can't fund programs
2) w/o graduate students they lose an entire stratum of undergraduate teaching

schools need to deincentivize (sp?) programs from producing PhDs. what we need is a larger stratum of good full-time jobs teaching low-level undergraduate courses, jobs that currently go to grad students (at r1s, etc.) or adjuncts. maybe those jobs aren't the traditional tenure-track professor jobs.

wizzz! (amateurist), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:49 (seven years ago) link

Adjuncting is the worst. I've been lucky enough to do it steadily so I always have a berth but if I didn't have another full time job w/benefits it'd be hellish.

The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:49 (seven years ago) link

that gawker piece, i had second thoughts about emailing it to a friend who is finishing a ph.d in creative writing and was just cut out of her assistantship (:X). academia is a plague.

map, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:52 (seven years ago) link

that was what was clear when I was leaving school, and even more so after speaking to people who have worked as adjuncts -- undergraduate classes are just too large to expect the majority of them to be taught by professors also doing research and publication, but there's no allowance for hiring people outside of contract positions. having a large percentage of your staff be contractors who have no incentive to stay in the community and little say in departmental affairs is not sustainable

μpright mammal (mh), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:53 (seven years ago) link

it is true that academia functions on a neoliberal model insofar as it assumes perpetual growth

programs produce phds that become professors who train phds who become professors...

you've got geometric growth built into the system

and while the increasing emphasis on "non-academic employment" for phds comes from, i guess, a sincere place, it's a big joke since you're not spending 5–10 years being trained for "non-academic employment". the entire model of graduate education would have to shift radically if they really think they are training you for something other than becoming a version of your advisor.

wizzz! (amateurist), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:54 (seven years ago) link

sorry for furious xposts

wizzz! (amateurist), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:54 (seven years ago) link

i should have added, to clarify, that while geometric growth is built into the system, obv the real world can't accommodate that growth

wizzz! (amateurist), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:56 (seven years ago) link

i can actually afford to pay my $1,000 a month college debt obligations. i do not imagine that the vast majority of graduates are as lucky.

Unless I'm completely confused, vast majority of graduates are much luckier than you, in that they have nowhere near $1000/month in college debt obligations. I mean, it sucks really hard to be in that position and I'm sorry that you are, just saying it is not the norm? This paper says median monthly payment for households that owe higher ed debt is $160/month

http://www.brookings.edu/research/papers/2014/06/19-typical-student-loan-debt-akers

and that fits with what I've generally been hearing

Guayaquil (eephus!), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 15:59 (seven years ago) link

academia is basically the most sociopathic and checked-out industry in america outside health care.

map, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 16:00 (seven years ago) link

"the entire model of graduate education would have to shift radically"

in the usa. there are other models. for instance, in order to teach high school in France (or even middle school) you need to pass a national exam (the "aggregation") in the subject you want to teach. normally you train for this during your masters or doctorate. the pass rates are around 20-30% in general, it's a tough system, but the idea is that secondary school teachers should be experts in what they teach. our doctoral students seek higher academic positions but many of them will take middle or high school positions for 5-10 years while they stay semi-active in research. we have something like adjunct positions but they're contractual, either 50% or 100%, and you can't pick up extra classes here or there like american adjuncts unless you have some kind of contractual position already. we also have lots of post-docs and you can add courses on top of those for a little extra dough.

we still have plenty of students who don't find jobs like the ones they'd envisioned, but it's not like the usa. obv our welfare state helps.

droit au butt (Euler), Wednesday, 25 May 2016 16:05 (seven years ago) link

xp wau 4 million new posts, this was to mordy re 'keep wanting' above

i think a materialist-historical look at the curriculum since the GI bill/boomer influx and takeover might cover a lot of that, since it's the site of pressure from above and below and characterizes what the official core structure of the university is supposed to be over time.

for instance at my alma mater there was a cultural studies department, obviously the 'theory' department, but only a remnant of a shell of a traditional humanities department at the time i was around. apparently that was the legacy of political shifts within the university around curriculum more broadly:

http://rbtapp.com/files/HumanismToday_files/htvol11tapp9.html

a lot of the major changes in curriculum, faculty composition, etc. since the 60s have been effected in similarly political terms, capture of resources or shifts in institutional clout rather than (as the ideal would have it to still be possible) just through shifts in the conversations internal to disciplines or across humanities disciplines. when you combine that with specific formations or moments within/across disciplines which can present themselves as politically active/effective, you can easily generate all kinds of incentives (for researchers to posture as 'intervening' with their articles, for students for demanding course content which pretends to political relevance to be actually relevant, etc.) with volatile consequences.

i recall reading an account of the origins of 'moral problems of society' courses, of the style that are often taught by philosophical ethicists but could in theory be open to other faculty/disciplines, in the influx of students demanding 'relevant' curriculum in the 60s. the account commented on the bias toward the contemporary public moment and its debate frames, on the political salience of the most popular choices of issues, but also on how the whole thing lent itself to 'theory/applications' construals, which is why such courses (e.g. as shows up in their textbooks) so often take the form of a vestigial summary of kant-mill-aristotle-(plus feminist critique as an afterthought) plus a series of topical pro-con articles. in philosophy a lot of the latter might come from or be heavily influenced by the rise of the journal 'philosophy and public affairs'.

j., Wednesday, 25 May 2016 16:24 (seven years ago) link

ta-da

Rolling higher education into the shitbin thread

El Tomboto, Sunday, 29 May 2016 18:45 (seven years ago) link

I enjoyed that Gilroy interview.

ryan, Monday, 30 May 2016 04:07 (seven years ago) link

^ a good read. none of it particularly novel, but the familiar bits are reasonably well assembled.

i'll let ron know

j., Tuesday, 31 May 2016 06:24 (seven years ago) link

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

heh

j., Tuesday, 31 May 2016 06:31 (seven years ago) link

does ron post here or something what is this "heh" about

Treeship, Tuesday, 31 May 2016 06:34 (seven years ago) link

we must have transparency or else the illiberal protesters have won or something

Treeship, Tuesday, 31 May 2016 06:35 (seven years ago) link

one month passes...

https://www.insidehighered.com/quicktakes/2016/07/08/legislator-threatens-u-wisconsin-budget-over-reading-gay-sex

the article the legislator is fussing about was assigned *this week*

hell of a short circuit between 'academic freedom' and the state

j., Saturday, 9 July 2016 01:06 (seven years ago) link

i wonder which student forwarded the reading list to his right-wing legislator (or dad or whatever)

wizzz! (amateurist), Saturday, 9 July 2016 03:19 (seven years ago) link

"We Are The Left" statement about identity politics

https://medium.com/@We_Are_The_Left/an-open-letter-on-identity-politics-to-and-from-the-left-b927fe66d3a4#.nzjd7tpz3

idk, agree in some parts, disagree with some characterizations of certain events

man "we've" been arguing whether marxoid class analysis or some other kind of socially-determined formation is really the thing for a while now. can't believe someone hasn't square that circle yet!!

goole, Wednesday, 13 July 2016 18:59 (seven years ago) link

one response from carl beijer: sady doyle is full of shit

http://www.carlbeijer.com/2016/07/twist-her-tits-off-origin-of-smear.html?m=1

goole, Wednesday, 13 July 2016 19:08 (seven years ago) link

manuel delanda has got you taken care of

https://edinburghuniversitypress.com/book-assemblage-theory.html

Clarifies and systematises the concepts and presuppositions behind the influential new field of assemblage theory

Manuel DeLanda provides the first detailed overview of the assemblage theory found in germ in Deleuze and Guattari’s writings. Through a series of case studies DeLanda shows how the concept can be applied to economic, linguistic and military history as well as to metaphysics, science and mathematics.

DeLanda then presents the real power of assemblage theory by advancing it beyond its original formulation – allowing for the integration of communities, institutional organisations, cities and urban regions. And he challenges Marxist orthodoxy with a Leftist politics of assemblages.

Key Features

Critically connects DeLanda with more recent theoretical turns in speculative realism
Makes sense of the fragmentary discussions of assemblage theory in the work of Deleuze and Guattari
Opens up assemblage theory to sociology, linguistics, military organisations and science so that future researchers can rigorously deploy the concept in their own fields

j., Wednesday, 13 July 2016 19:43 (seven years ago) link


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