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Zinn on "disinterested scholarship"

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Zinn on "disinterested scholarship"
se7en
09/11/03 at 05:36:00
as salaamu alaykum,

an excerpt from a work by Howard Zinn I was forwarded.. awesome stuff masha'Allah.


[i]As-salaamu'alaykum!

This is a "keeper" for all of us who are in the universities as
students, faculty, Doctors, PhDs, etc.  I would suggest reading this and
re-reading it if you cannot benefit from it.  What the whole essay points
out is that the people of knowledge (professors in this case) have a
responsibility to use their knowledge to compel the good of the society by
pointing out the contradictions and inconsistencies, not waste their
scholarship in trivial academic research or use it as tool for those in
power who subjugate and oppress humanity (To maintain the status quo of
and unjust society).

was-salaam

Ma'ruf[/i]

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We were sad to hear of the death
in 1996 of Mario Savio, leader in the Sixties of the "Free Speech
Movement" at the University of California in Berkeley. It reminded us that
the movements of that decade provoked a re-examination of the role of
the university and the position of the scholar in a world needing radical
change. The following essay appeared in the Saturday Review of October
18, 1969, under the title "The Case for Radical Change." It appeared
also as the opening chapter in my book The Politics of History,
"Knowledge As A Form Of Power."

It is time that we scholars began to earn our keep in this world.
Thanks to a gullible public, we have been honored, flattered, even paid, for
producing the largest number of inconsequential studies in the history
of civilization: tens of thousands of articles, books, monographs,
millions of term papers; enough lectures to deafen the gods. Like
politicians we have thrived on public innocence, with this difference: the
politicians are paid for caring, when they really don't; we are paid for not caring, when we really do.

Occasionally, we emerge from the library stacks to sign a petition or
deliver a speech, then return to produce even more of inconsequence. We
are accustomed to keeping our social commitment extracurricular and our
scholarly work safely neutral. We were the first to learn that awe and
honor greet those who have flown off into space while people suffer on
earth.

If this accusation seems harsh, read the titles of doctoral
dissertations published in the past twenty years, and the pages of the leading
scholarly journals for the same period, alongside the lists of war dead,
the figures on per capita income in Latin America, the autobiography of
Malcolm X. We publish while others perish.

The gap between the products of scholarly activity and the needs of a
troubled world could be borne with some equanimity as long as the nation
seemed to be solving its problems. And for most of our history, this
seemed to be the case. We had a race question, but we "solved', it: by a
war to end slavery, and by papering over the continued degradation of
the black population with laws and rhetoric. Wealth was not distributed
equitably, but the New Deal, and then war orders, kept that problem
under control--or at least, out of sight. There was turmoil in the world,
but we were always at the periphery; the European imperial powers did
the nasty work, while we nibbled at the edges of their empires (except
in Latin America where our firm control was disguised by a fatherly
sounding Monroe Doctrine, and the pose of a Good Neighbor).

None of those solutions is working anymore. The Black Power revolt, the
festering of cities beyond our control, the rebellion of students
against the Vietnam war and the draft--all indicate that the United States
has run out of time, space, and rhetoric. The liberal artifacts that
represented our farthest reaches toward reform--the Fourteenth Amendment,
New Deal welfare legislation, the U.N. Charter--are not enough.
Revolutionary changes are required in social policy.

The trouble is, we don't know how to make such a revolution. There is
no precedent for it in an advanced industrial society where power and
wealth are highly concentrated in government, corporations, and the
military, while the rest of us have pieces of that fragmented power
political scientists are pleased to call "pluralism." We have voices, and even
votes, but not the means--more crassly, the power--to turn either
domestic or foreign policy in completely new directions.

That is why the knowledge industry (the universities, colleges,
schools, representing directly $65-billion of the national spending each year)
is so important. Knowledge is a form of power. True, force is the most
direct form of power, and government has a monopoly on that (as Max
Weber once pointed out). But in modern times, when social control rests on
"the consent of the governed," force is kept in abeyance for
emergencies, and everyday control is exercised by a set of rules, a fabric of
values passed on from one generation to another by the priests and the
teachers of the society. What we call the rise of democracy in the world
means that force is replaced by deception (a blunt way of saying
"education") as the chief method for keeping society as it is.

This makes knowledge important, because although it cannot confront
force directly, it can counteract the deception that makes the
government's force legitimate. And the knowledge industry, which directly reaches
seven million young people in colleges and universities, thus becomes a
vital and sensitive locus of power. That power can be used, as it was
traditionally, to maintain the status quo, or (as is being demanded by
the student rebels) to change it.

Those who command more obvious forms of power (political control and
wealth) try also to commandeer knowledge. Industry entices some of the
most agile minds for executive posts in business. Government lures others
for more glamorous special jobs: physicists to work on H-bombs;
biologists to work on what we might call, for want of a better name, the field
of communicable disease; chemists to work on nerve gas (like that which
killed 6,000 sheep in Utah); political scientists to work on
counter-insurgency warfare; historians to sit in a room in the White House and
wait for a phone call to let them know when history is being made, so
they may record it. And sometimes one's field doesn't matter. War is
interdisciplinary.

Most knowledge is not directly bought, however. It can also serve the
purpose of social stability in another way--by being squandered on
trivia. Thus, the university becomes a playpen in which the society invites
its favored children to play--and gives them toys and prizes to keep
them out of trouble. For instance, we might note an article in a leading
journal of political science not long ago, dealing with the effects of
Hurricane Betsy on the mayoralty election in New Orleans. Or, a team of social
psychologists (armed with a fat government grant) may move right into the
ghetto (surely the scholar is getting relevant here) and discover two
important facts from its extensive, sophisticated research: that black
people in the ghetto are poor, and that they have family difficulties.

I am touching a sensitive nerve in the academy now: am I trying to
obliterate all scholarship except the immediately relevant? No, it is a
matter of proportion. The erection of new skyscraper office buildings is
not offensive in itself, but it becomes lamentable alongside the
continued existence of ghetto slums. It was not wrong for the Association of
Asian Studies at its last annual meeting to discuss some problems of the
Ming Dynasty and a battery of similarly remote topics, but no session
of the dozens at the meeting dealt with Vietnam.

Aside from trivial or esoteric inquiry, knowledge is also dissipated on
pretentious conceptualizing in the social sciences. A catch phrase can
become a stimulus for endless academic discussion, and for the
proliferation of debates that go nowhere into the real world, only round and
round in ever smaller circles of scholarly discourse. Schemes and models
and systems are invented that have the air of profundity and that
advance careers, but hardly anything else.

We should not be surprised then at the volatile demonstrations for
black studies programs, or for the creation of new student-run courses
based on radical critiques of American society. Students demanding
relevance in scholarship have been joined by professors dissenting at the
annual ceremonials called scholarly meetings: at the American Philosophical
Association, a resolution denouncing U.S. policy in Vietnam; at the
American Political Science Association, a new caucus making radical
changes in the program; at the American Historical Association, a successful
campaign removing the 1968 meeting from Chicago to protest Mayor
Daley's hooliganism; at the Modern Language Association, the election of a
young, radical English teacher as president.

Still we are troubled, because the new urgency to use our heads for
good purposes gets tangled in a cluster of beliefs so stuck, fungus-like,
to the scholar, that even the most activist of us cannot cleanly
extricate ourselves. These beliefs are roughly expressed by the phrases
"disinterested scholarship," "dispassionate learning," "objective study,"
"scientific method"--all adding up to the fear that using our
intelligence to further our moral ends is somehow improper. And so we mostly remain subservient
to the beliefs of the profession although they violate our deepest
feelings as human beings, although we suspect that the traditional
neutrality of the scholar is a disservice to the very ideals we teach about as
history, and a betrayal of the victims of an unneutral world.

It may, therefore, be worthwhile to examine the arguments for
"disinterested, neutral, scientific, objective" scholarship. If there is to be a
revolution in the uses of knowledge to correspond to the revolution in
society, it will have to begin by challenging the rules that sustain
the wasting of knowledge. Let me cite a number of them, and argue briefly
for new approaches.

Rule 1: Carry on "disinterested scholarship." (In one hour's reading
some weeks ago I came across three such exhortations, using just that
phrase: in an essay by Walter Lippmann; in the Columbia University
Commencement Address of Richard Hofstadter; in an article by Daniel Bell,
appearing, ironically in a magazine called The Public Interest.) The call
is naive, because there are powerful interests already at work in the
academy, with varying degrees of self-consciousness.

There is the Establishment of political power and corporate wealth,
whose interest is that the universities produce people who will fit into
existing niches in the social structure rather than try to change the
structure. We always knew our educational system "socialized" people, but
we never worried about this, because we assumed our social norms were
worth perpetuating. Now, and rightly, we are beginning to doubt this.
There is the interest of the educational bureaucracy in maintaining
itself: its endowment, its buildings, its positions (both honorific and
material), its steady growth along orthodox lines. These larger interests
are internalized in the motivations of the scholar: promotion, tenure,
higher salaries, prestige--all of which are best secured by innovating
in prescribed directions.

All of these interests operate, not through any conspiratorial decision
but through the mechanism of a well-oiled system, just as the
irrationality of the economic system operates not through any devilish plot but
through the mechanism of the profit motive and the market, and as the
same kinds of political decisions reproduce themselves in Congress year
after year.

No one intends exactly what happens. They just follow the normal rules
of the game. Similarly with education; hence the need to challenge these rules that quietly lead the scholar toward trivia,
pretentiousness, orotundity, and the production of objects: books, degrees,
buildings, research projects, dead knowledge. (Emerson is still right:
"Things are in the saddle, and ride mankind.")

There is no question then of a "disinterested" university, only a
question about what kinds of interests the university will serve. There are
fundamental humanistic interests--above any particular class, party,
nation, ideolology--that I believe the university should consciously
serve. I assume this is what we mean when we speak (however we act) of
fostering certain "values" in education.

The university should unashamedly declare that its interest is in
eliminating war, poverty, race and national hatred, governmental
restrictions on individual freedom, and in fostering a spirit of cooperation and
concern in the generation growing up. It should not serve the interests
of particular nations or parties or religions or political dogmas.
Ironically, the university has often served narrow governmental, military,
or business interests, and yet withheld support from larger,
transcendental values, on the ground that it needed to maintain neutrality.

Rule 2: Be objective. The myth of "objectivity" in teaching and in
scholarship is based on a common confusion. If to be objective is to be
scrupulously careful about reporting accurately what one sees, then of
course this is laudable. But accuracy is only a prerequisite. Whether a
metalsmith uses reliable measuring instruments is a prerequisite for
doing good work, but does not answer the crucial question: will he now
forge a sword or a plowshare with his instruments? That the metalsmith has
determined in advance that he prefers a plowshare does not require him
to distort his measurements. That the scholar has decided he prefers
peace to war does not require him to distort his facts.

Too many scholars abjure a starting set of values, because they fail to
make the proper distinction between an ultimate set of values and the
instruments needed to obtain them. The values may well be subjective
(derived from human needs); but the instruments must be objective
(accurate). Our values should determine the questions we ask in scholarly
inquiry, but not the answers.

Rule 3: Stick to your discipline. Specialization has become as absurdly
extreme in the educational world as in the medical world. One no longer
is a specialist in American government, but in Congress, or the Presidency, or pressure groups: a historian is a "colonialist" or an
"early national period" man. This is natural when education is divorced
from the promotion of values. To work on a real problem (such as how to
eliminate poverty in a nation producing $800-billion worth of wealth
each year), one would have to follow that problem across many
disciplinary lines without qualm, dealing with historical materials, economic
theories, political problems. Specialization insures that one cannot follow
a problem through from start to finish. It ensures the functioning in
the academy of the system's dictum: divide and rule.

Another kind of scholarly segregation serves to keep those in the
university from dealing with urgent social problems: that which divorces
fact from theory. We learn the ideas of the great philosophers and poets
in one part of our educational experience. In the other part, we prepare
to take our place in the real occupational world. In political science,
for instance, a political theorist discusses transcendental visions of
the good society; someone else presents factual descriptions of present
governments. But no one deals with both the is and the ought; if they
did, they would have to deal with how to get from here to there, from
the present reality to the poetic vision. Note how little work is done in
political science on the tactics of social change. Both student and
teacher deal with theory and reality in separate courses; the
compartmentalization safely neutralizes them.

It is time to recall Rousseau: "We have physicists, geometricians,
chemists, astronomers, poets, musicians, and painters in plenty, but we
have no longer a citizen among us."

Rule 4: To be 'Scientific" requires neutrality. This is a misconception
of how science works, both in fact and in purpose. Scientists do have
values, but they decided on these so long ago that we have forgotten
them; they aim to save human life, to extend human control over the
environment for the happiness of men and women. This is the tacit assumption
behind scientific work, and a physiologist would be astonished if
someone suggested that he starts from a neutral position as regards life or
death, health or sickness. Somehow the social scientists have not yet
got around to accepting openly that their aim is to keep people alive,
to distribute equitably the resources of the earth, to widen the areas
of human freedom, and therefore to direct their efforts toward these
ends.

The claim that social science is "different," because its instruments
are tainted with subjectivity, ignores the new discoveries in the hard
sciences: that the very fact of observation distorts the measurement of
the physicist, and what he sees depends on his position in space. The
physical sciences do not talk about certainty anymore, but rather about
"probability"; while the probabilities may be higher for them than in
the social sciences, both fields are dealing with elusive data.

Rule 5: A scholar must, in order to be "rational," avoid
"emotionalism." (I know one man in Asian studies who was told by university
administrators that the articles he wrote upon his return from Vietnam were too
emotional.") True, emotion can distort. But it can also enhance. If one
of the functions of the scholar is accurate description, then it is
impossible to describe a war both unemotionally and accurately at the same
time. And if the special competence of the mind is in enabling us to
perceive what is outside our own limited experience, that competence is
furthered, that perception sharpened, by emotion. Even a large dose of
emotionalism in the description of slavery would merely begin to convey
accurately to a white college student what slavery was like for the
black man.

Thus, exactly from the standpoint of what intellect is supposed to do
for us--to extend the boundaries of our understanding the "cool,
rational, unemotional" approach fails. For too long, white Americans were
emotionally separated from what the Negro suffered in this country by cold,
and therefore inadequate, historical description. War and violence,
divested of their brutality by the prosaic quality of the printed page,
became tolerable to the young. (True, the poem and the novel were read in
the English classes, but these were neatly separated from the history
and government classes.) Reason, to be accurate, must be supplemented by
emotion, as Reinhold Niebuhr once reminded us.

Refusing, then, to let ourselves be bound by traditional notions of
disinterestedness, objectivity, scientific procedure, rationality--what
kinds of work can scholars do, in deliberate unneutral pursuit of a more
livable world? Am I urging Orwellian control of scholarly activities?
Not at all. I am, rather suggesting that scholars, on their own,
reconsider the rules by which they have worked, and begin to turn their
intellectual energies to the urgent problems of our time.

Specifically, we might use our scholarly time and energy to sharpen the
perceptions of the complacent by exposing those facts that any society tends to hide about itself. the facts about wealth and poverty,
about tyranny in both communist and capitalist states, about lies told
by politicians, the mass media, the church, popular leaders. We need to
expose fallacious logic, spurious analogies, deceptive slogans, and
those intoxicating symbols that drive people to murder (the flag,
communism, capitalism, freedom). We need to dig beneath the abstractions so our
fellow citizens can make judgments on the particular realities beneath
political rhetoric. We need to expose inconsistencies and double
standards. In short, we need to become the critics of the culture, rather
than its apologists and perpetuators.

The university is especially gifted for such a task. Although obviously
not remote from the pressures of business and military and politicians,
it has just that margin of leeway, just that tradition of truth-telling
(however violated in practice) that can enable it to become a spokesman
for change.

This will require holding up before society forgotten visions, lost
utopias, unfulfilled dreams--badly needed in this age of cynicism. Those
outside the university who might act for change are deterred by
pessimism. A bit of historical perspective, some recapitulation of the
experience of social movements in other times, other places, while not wholly
cheering, can at least suggest possibilities.

Along with inspirational visions, we will need specific schemes for
accomplishing important purposes, which can then be laid before the groups
that can use them. Let the economists work out a plan for free food,
instead of advising the Federal Reserve Board on interest rates. Let the
political scientists work out insurgency tactics for the poor, rather
than counter-insurgency tactics for the military. Let the historians
instruct us or inspire us, from the data of the past, rather than amusing
us, boring us, or deceiving us. Let the scientists figure out and lay
before the public plans on how to make autos safe, cities beautiful, air
pure. Let all social scientists work on modes of change instead of
merely describing the world that is, so that we can make the necessary
revolutionary alterations with the least disorder.

I am not sure what a revolution in the academy will look like, any more
than I know what a revolution in the society will look like. I doubt
that it will take the form of some great cataclysmic event. More likely,
it will be a process, with periods of tumult and of quiet, in which we
will, here and there, by ones and twos and tens, create pockets of concern
inside old institutions, transforming them from within. There is no great
day of reckoning to work toward. Rather, we must begin now to liberate
those patches of ground on which we stand--to "vote" for a new world
(as Thoreau suggested) with our whole selves all the time, rather than
moments carefully selected by others.

Thus, we will be acting out the beliefs that always moved us humans but
rarely as scholars. To do that, we will need to defy the professional
mythology that has kept us on the tracks of custom, our eyes averted
(except for moments of charity) from the cruelty on all sides. We will be
taking seriously for the first time the words of the great poets and
philosophers whom we love to quote but not to emulate. We will be doing
this, not in the interest of the rich and powerful, or in behalf of our
own careers, but for those who have never had a chance to read poetry
or study philosophy, who so far have had to strive alone just to stay
warm in winter, to stay alive through the calls for war.


[pages 499-508]

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09/11/03 at 05:37:16
se7en


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