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Jonathan Marks: partisan political scrapping won鈥檛 help universities

Conservative professor鈥檚 book argues that dialogue across political divide is far more productive than activism and pious placemats

Published on
March 21, 2021
Last updated
March 21, 2021
Source: iStock
Liberal education is about pursuing the truth together and not promoting particular views

At the beginning of Let鈥檚聽Be Reasonable, Jonathan Marks tells his readers: 鈥淕et out your camera, for here is that rare beast, the conservative professor.鈥

Now professor of politics at Ursinus College in Pennsylvania, he was long a registered Republican, although he has since become a convinced and independent. He remains committed to a form of liberal education, inspired by the ideals of the Enlightenment, that 鈥渢ries to shape people who answer to the authority of聽reason鈥. His new book, published by Princeton University Press, is subtitled 鈥渁聽conservative case for liberal education鈥.

According to the Higher Education Research Institute , noted Professor Marks, only 11.7聽per cent of US faculty identified as conservative (and 0.4聽per cent as far right). Meanwhile, just over 80聽per cent agreed or strongly agreed that one of their roles was to 鈥渆ncourage students to become agents of social change鈥.

There was also some reason to believe, said Professor Marks, that 鈥渟tudent-facing college administrators are actually more liberal than faculty鈥. A striking instance of this was the Holiday Placemat for Social Justice, presented to Harvard students at the end of 2015, which 鈥渃onsisted of pointers on how to talk to your unwoke relations鈥 on issues such as Islamophobia and 鈥渂lack murders in the street鈥. These had been produced 鈥渘ot by enterprising student activists but a staid office for diversity and inclusion鈥.

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Up to a point, therefore, Professor Marks accepts conservative critiques of today鈥檚 academy. A聽strong political tendency was likely to have 鈥渁n聽impact on what鈥檚 felt valuable to teach and research鈥 and to introduce 鈥渁聽selective rigour in assessing journal articles鈥ou might just think the truth has a liberal bias and not get much pushback if you are surrounded by people with similar views.鈥

Another issue for Professor Marks was the way that political convictions can shut down questions in advance: 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 say on Tuesday: 鈥榃e are going to examine whether the active or the contemplative life is best鈥; and then on Wednesday say: 鈥楯ust kidding! I鈥檓 trying to turn you into an agent of social change.鈥欌

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Furthermore, once certain political values are adopted by administrators and so become part of 鈥渢he public face of the university鈥, Professor Marks pointed out, it was difficult to claim that: 鈥溾榃e need our academic freedom in order to maintain an atmosphere for enquiry.鈥 If we鈥檙e teaching a particular politics, why shouldn鈥檛 state legislators say: 鈥業f it鈥檚 politics which is being taught here, it should be my politics instead of your politics?鈥欌

As an example of what he is opposed to, Professor Marks cited the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement, arguing that 鈥渋ts purpose is to win a battle of ideas, and that sometimes means hiding your intentions鈥ou just have to convince people by hook or by crook. And that is utterly antithetical to the task of shaping people through reason.鈥

Despite his firm conservative views, however, Professor Marks was utterly unconvinced by heated claims that 鈥渃onservatives are being exorcised from campuses, which are left-wing, totalitarian mini-states鈥ighting with bare knuckles to destroy universities is unlikely to be a way of getting at the real problems conservatives identify.

鈥淲hat is going to survive after the flood if you shut down universities and get legislators to defund them? Very well-resourced elitist institutions, which are at the centre of the things conservatives are complaining about. It doesn鈥檛 look to me like a strategy; it鈥檚 more a howl of despair.鈥

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Even more deplorable were the actions of some conservative groups described in Let鈥檚 Be Reasonable that 鈥減ut the names and sometimes the faces of students on posters proclaiming them terror supporters or Jew-haters because they鈥檙e involved in pro-BDS organisations鈥.

So can the ideals of liberal education be applied to very controversial topics?

One example of how this can work, replied Professor Marks, came when he teamed up with a colleague of very different views to teach classes on the forthcoming Israeli elections and then on Zionism.

鈥淭he rule we made for ourselves,鈥 he recalled, 鈥渨as that we would not include anything on the syllabus that the other didn鈥檛 agree to鈥n a classroom, you can create an atmosphere of reasonability. We have the evidence in front of us, let鈥檚 try to set aside, at least temporarily, party, interest and fashion and let鈥檚 see what valid conclusions we can draw 鈥 or work out what else we need to find out.

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鈥淓ven ardent partisans are compelled to make their case in that atmosphere. It can lead to a kind of pride in following arguments where they lead, accompanied by a kind of revulsion about propaganda 鈭 either propagandising or falling for聽it.鈥

matthew.reisz@timeshighereducation.com

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