Subject: Re: The Perversion of Scholarship
Chris Hedges hits another home run with this article.
Carl Jarvis
----- Original Message -----From: Miriam VieniSent: Monday, July 30, 2012 1:30 PMSubject: The Perversion of Scholarship
Hedges writes: "Fraternities, sororities and football, along with other
outsized athletic programs, have decimated most major American
universities."
Truthdig columnist Chris Hedges. (photo: Truthdig)
The Perversion of Scholarship
By Chris Hedges, Truthdig
30 July 12
Fraternities, sororities and football, along with other outsized athletic
programs, have decimated most major American universities. Scholarship,
inquiry, self-criticism, moral autonomy and a search for artistic and
esoteric forms of expression - in short, the world of ethics, creativity and
ideas - are shouted down by the drunken chants of fans in huge stadiums, the
pathetic demands of rich alumni for national championships, and the elitism,
racism and rigid definition of gender roles of Greek organizations. These
hypermasculine systems perpetuate a culture of conformity and intolerance.
They have inverted the traditional values of scholarship to turn four years
of college into a mindless quest for collective euphoria and athletic
dominance.
There is probably no more inhospitable place to be an intellectual, or a
person of color or a member of the LGBT community, than on the campuses of
the Big Ten Conference colleges, although the poison of this bizarre
American obsession has infected innumerable schools. These environments are
distinctly corporate. To get ahead one must get along. The student is
implicitly told his or her self-worth and fulfillment are found in crowds,
in mass emotions, rather than individual transcendence. Those who do not pay
deference to the celebration of force, wealth and power become freaks. It is
a war on knowledge in the name of knowledge.
"Knowledge," as C. Wright Mills wrote in "The Power Elite," "is no longer
widely felt as an ideal; it is seen as an instrument. In a society of power
and wealth, knowledge is valued as an instrument of power and wealth, and
also, of course, as an ornament in conversation."
There are few university presidents or faculty members willing to fight
back. Most presidents are overcompensated fundraisers licking the boots of
every millionaire who arrives on campus. They are like court eunuchs. They
cater to the demands of the hedge fund managers and financial speculators on
their trustee boards, half of whom should be in jail, and most of whom revel
in this collective self-worship. And they do not cross the football coach,
who not only earns more than they do but has much more power on the campus.
One of the last great university presidents was James O. Freedman of
Dartmouth. His integrity and courage were matched by his deep and abiding
love of learning. He arrived in Hanover, N.H., determined to do battle with
Dartmouth's entrenched culture of elitism, white male entitlement,
fraternities and football. He did not have an easy tenure. The Dartmouth
Review published a cover article that depicted Freedman, who was Jewish, as
Hitler and wrote that he was orchestrating the "final solution" to
traditional conservatism at Dartmouth.
Freedman had told the college in his inaugural address:
We must strengthen our attraction for those singular students whose greatest
pleasures may come not from the camaraderie of classmates but from the
lonely acts of writing poetry or mastering the cello or solving mathematical
riddles or translating Catullus. We must make Dartmouth a hospitable
environment for students who march "to a different drummer" - for those
creative loners and daring dreamers whose commitment to the intellectual and
artistic life is so compelling that they appreciate, as Prospero reminded
Shakespeare's audiences, that for certain persons a library is "dukedom
large enough."
But Freedman's imprint, once he departed, faded. Fraternity and football
culture reasserted itself at Dartmouth. A former Dartmouth fraternity
member, Andrew Lohse, who is profiled in an April article in Rolling Stone,
was ostracized not only by the students but the university administration
for his public exposure of hazing and abuse.
"I was a member of a fraternity that asked pledges, in order to become a
brother, to: swim in a kiddie pool of vomit, urine, fecal matter, semen and
rotten food products; eat omelets made of vomit; chug cups of vinegar, which
in one case caused a pledge to vomit blood; drink beer poured down fellow
pledges' ass cracks ... among other abuses," he wrote in the magazine. He
accused Dartmouth's 17 fraternities, 11 sororities and three coed houses, to
which roughly half of the student body belongs, of perpetuating a culture of
"pervasive hazing, substance abuse and sexual assault," as well as an
"intoxicating nihilism" that dominates campus social life. "One of the
things I've learned at Dartmouth - one thing that sets a psychological
precedent for many Dartmouth men - is that good people can do awful things
to one another for absolutely no reason," he said. "Fraternity life is at
the core of the college's human and cultural dysfunctions."
Harassment and physical violence by athletic teams and Greek organizations
on American campuses is real. They use these threats to keep critics cowed
and their entitlement secure. Any attack mounted against football programs
or Greek organizations becomes an attack against the group identity that
gives followers their sense of prestige and empowerment. And all those who
question or criticize these organizations are treated as the enemy. When the
Rev. William Sloan Coffin led the fight to shut down fraternities at
Williams College, someone fired a shot through the window of his house.
Vicky Triponey, Penn State's vice president for student affairs, became a
nonperson when she attempted to discipline half a dozen football players who
had been involved in a brawl in which several students were injured and one
was beaten unconscious. Football coach Joe Paterno acidly referred to her in
a radio interview as "that lady in Old Main" (the central administration
building) who couldn't possibly know how to handle students because "she
didn't have kids." The coach angrily told Triponey that his players would
not cooperate with any investigation because they would not "rat" on each
other. Penn State President Graham Spanier asked her pointedly if she really
embraced "the Penn State way." Triponey received threatening phone calls.
She was denounced on student message boards. Her house was vandalized. A
"for sale" sign was put up in her front yard. She was no longer invited to
university events, fellow faculty and administrative staff avoided her, and
people turned their backs on her in the supermarket. Spanier successfully
pressured her to resign in 2007. Her husband found work at the University of
South Carolina's medical school in Charleston, and the couple moved.
Hazing, comradeship and complicity in sexual abuse, including rape, make up
the glue that holds campus sports teams and fraternity houses together. The
National Study of Student Hazing reports that 73 percent of U.S.
fraternities and sororities haze. Since 1970, at least one student has died
each year from hazing. Eighty-two percent of these deaths have resulted from
alcohol poisoning. Hazing weeds out those with enough self-esteem and
independence to stand up to the hierarchy. It ensures conformity and
obedience. These groups are, in essence, self-selected. Those who have the
fortitude and courage to oppose their own public humiliation and the public
humiliation perpetuated with each new cycle of recruits or pledges leave.
Those who remain conform. Athletic recruiting parties, like fraternity
parties, at schools across the country are plagued by gang rapes and sexual
assaults. And these crimes, known by all in the fraternity or on the team,
are met, in locker rooms and Greek houses, with the culture of silence,
mocking the stated missions of the schools.
Bernard Lefkowitz captured the sickness of this culture in his book "Our
Guys." Lefkowitz wrote about a group of high school athletes in Glen Ridge,
N.J., who in 1989 lured a 17-year-old developmentally disabled girl to a
basement. The boys sexually abused her with a broomstick and a baseball bat.
And when the assault became public, the town rallied, as at Penn State, not
around the victim, but "our guys." Athletic prowess was, as we saw at Penn
State, glorified above human decency, compassion, respect and the law. But
this is true at most schools. As long as athletes perform they are
untouchable.
The root of the problem is the culture of big-time athletics and Greek life.
And it will not be addressed through NCAA sanctions or the removal of Joe
Paterno's statue at Penn State. It will end only when fraternities,
sororities and football - along with other professional sports programs
masquerading as college athletics - are banished from colleges and
universities. These athletes, in the end, also are used. They are unpaid
performers, brought to the campus solely for their athletic prowess, who
make millions for their schools and their coaches. If you have a son or
daughter - especially a daughter - who wants to get an education, look for a
school that has banished these organizations.
The corporate world sees football players, fraternity brothers and sorority
sisters as prime recruits. They have been conditioned to join the team, to
surrender moral autonomy, to accept and carry out acts of personal
humiliation, to treat with contempt those who oppose them or who are
different, to define their life by an infantile narcissism centered on greed
and self-promotion and to remain silent about crimes they witness or take
part in. It is the very ethic of corporations.
The ruling elite sees in Greek organizations and football programs the
training ground for the amoral class of speculators, bankers and
corporatists who pillage the country. Henry "Hank" Paulson, who as secretary
of the treasury orchestrated a government payout of more than $12.9 billion
to save AIG and Goldman Sachs (where he had been the chairman and chief
executive officer), was a member of the fraternity Sigma Alpha Epsilon and
an offensive lineman at Dartmouth. The billionaire hedge fund manager
Stephen Mandel, who chairs Dartmouth's board of trustees, was, as Rolling
Stone points out, in Psi Upsilon. Jeffrey Immelt, the CEO of GE, was a Phi
Delt at Dartmouth, as were other trustees including Morgan Stanley senior
adviser R. Bradford Evans, billionaire oilman Trevor Rees-Jones and venture
capitalist William W. Helman IV. And that is just Dartmouth.
Hazing is also integral to the military, where suicide - including the
recent suicide of a Chinese-American soldier, Pvt. Danny Chen, in
Afghanistan - is often the result. It is almost impossible to escape your
tormentors in the military. Suicide becomes for many the only exit. Chen,
who was the sole Asian-American in his unit, endured sandbags being tied to
his arms by fellow soldiers. Rocks and water bottles were thrown at him. He
was forced to speak Chinese instead of English. And he was taunted with the
slurs "gook," "slant," "chink" and "egg roll." Eight soldiers are being
court-martialed in his death. A huge percentage of the suicides in the
military happen because of hazing. Most of these cases are never
investigated. The bodies are just shipped home.
Corporate culture, which now dominates higher education, shares the
predatory culture of the military. These cultures are about subsuming the
self into the herd. They are about the acquiring of technical, vocational
skills to serve the system. And with the increasing budget cuts, and more
craven obsequiousness to corporate donors, it will only get worse. These
forces of conformity are hostile to the humanities that teach students to
question assumptions and structures, that prod them to seek a life of
meaning and an ethical code that challenges the blind, utilitarian obedience
to power and profit that corporations and the military instill. We will, I
fear, continue to turn out the intellectually stunted and maimed, those who
know school football records but no philosophy, drama, art, music, theology,
literature or history. The goal of an education is not, in the end, to tell
students what to think but to teach them how to think.
College and university administrators defund libraries, close foreign
language and classics departments and invest staggering sums in gargantuan
sports arenas and athletic programs. And the only time the student body
protests or riots is when, as at Penn State, something unpleasant happens to
the beloved football coach. Pity the student who goes there to learn. The
faculty and administration will not help them; they are complicit or
intimidated.
William Carlos Williams, author of the poem "Asphodel, That Greeny Flower,"
knew there was more to life than careers, personal empowerment, the quest
for prestige, the roar of the crowd and networking. But many find this out
too late. And those attending schools like Penn State will probably never
find out at all. Williams wrote:
It is difficult to get the news from poems yet men die miserably every day
for lack of what is found there.
Error! Hyperlink reference not valid. Error! Hyperlink reference not valid.
Truthdig columnist Chris Hedges. (photo: Truthdig)
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/the_perversion_of_scholarship_20120730/h
ttp://www.truthdig.com/report/item/the_perversion_of_scholarship_20120730/
The Perversion of Scholarship
By Chris Hedges, Truthdig
30 July 12
raternities, sororities and football, along with other outsized athletic
programs, have decimated most major American universities. Scholarship,
inquiry, self-criticism, moral autonomy and a search for artistic and
esoteric forms of expression - in short, the world of ethics, creativity and
ideas - are shouted down by the drunken chants of fans in huge stadiums, the
pathetic demands of rich alumni for national championships, and the elitism,
racism and rigid definition of gender roles of Greek organizations. These
hypermasculine systems perpetuate a culture of conformity and intolerance.
They have inverted the traditional values of scholarship to turn four years
of college into a mindless quest for collective euphoria and athletic
dominance.
There is probably no more inhospitable place to be an intellectual, or a
person of color or a member of the LGBT community, than on the campuses of
the Big Ten Conference colleges, although the poison of this bizarre
American obsession has infected innumerable schools. These environments are
distinctly corporate. To get ahead one must get along. The student is
implicitly told his or her self-worth and fulfillment are found in crowds,
in mass emotions, rather than individual transcendence. Those who do not pay
deference to the celebration of force, wealth and power become freaks. It is
a war on knowledge in the name of knowledge.
"Knowledge," as C. Wright Mills wrote in "The Power Elite," "is no longer
widely felt as an ideal; it is seen as an instrument. In a society of power
and wealth, knowledge is valued as an instrument of power and wealth, and
also, of course, as an ornament in conversation."
There are few university presidents or faculty members willing to fight
back. Most presidents are overcompensated fundraisers licking the boots of
every millionaire who arrives on campus. They are like court eunuchs. They
cater to the demands of the hedge fund managers and financial speculators on
their trustee boards, half of whom should be in jail, and most of whom revel
in this collective self-worship. And they do not cross the football coach,
who not only earns more than they do but has much more power on the campus.
One of the last great university presidents was James O. Freedman of
Dartmouth. His integrity and courage were matched by his deep and abiding
love of learning. He arrived in Hanover, N.H., determined to do battle with
Dartmouth's entrenched culture of elitism, white male entitlement,
fraternities and football. He did not have an easy tenure. The Dartmouth
Review published a cover article that depicted Freedman, who was Jewish, as
Hitler and wrote that he was orchestrating the "final solution" to
traditional conservatism at Dartmouth.
Freedman had told the college in his inaugural address:
We must strengthen our attraction for those singular students whose greatest
pleasures may come not from the camaraderie of classmates but from the
lonely acts of writing poetry or mastering the cello or solving mathematical
riddles or translating Catullus. We must make Dartmouth a hospitable
environment for students who march "to a different drummer" - for those
creative loners and daring dreamers whose commitment to the intellectual and
artistic life is so compelling that they appreciate, as Prospero reminded
Shakespeare's audiences, that for certain persons a library is "dukedom
large enough."
But Freedman's imprint, once he departed, faded. Fraternity and football
culture reasserted itself at Dartmouth. A former Dartmouth fraternity
member, Andrew Lohse, who is profiled in an April article in Rolling Stone,
was ostracized not only by the students but the university administration
for his public exposure of hazing and abuse.
"I was a member of a fraternity that asked pledges, in order to become a
brother, to: swim in a kiddie pool of vomit, urine, fecal matter, semen and
rotten food products; eat omelets made of vomit; chug cups of vinegar, which
in one case caused a pledge to vomit blood; drink beer poured down fellow
pledges' ass cracks ... among other abuses," he wrote in the magazine. He
accused Dartmouth's 17 fraternities, 11 sororities and three coed houses, to
which roughly half of the student body belongs, of perpetuating a culture of
"pervasive hazing, substance abuse and sexual assault," as well as an
"intoxicating nihilism" that dominates campus social life. "One of the
things I've learned at Dartmouth - one thing that sets a psychological
precedent for many Dartmouth men - is that good people can do awful things
to one another for absolutely no reason," he said. "Fraternity life is at
the core of the college's human and cultural dysfunctions."
Harassment and physical violence by athletic teams and Greek organizations
on American campuses is real. They use these threats to keep critics cowed
and their entitlement secure. Any attack mounted against football programs
or Greek organizations becomes an attack against the group identity that
gives followers their sense of prestige and empowerment. And all those who
question or criticize these organizations are treated as the enemy. When the
Rev. William Sloan Coffin led the fight to shut down fraternities at
Williams College, someone fired a shot through the window of his house.
Vicky Triponey, Penn State's vice president for student affairs, became a
nonperson when she attempted to discipline half a dozen football players who
had been involved in a brawl in which several students were injured and one
was beaten unconscious. Football coach Joe Paterno acidly referred to her in
a radio interview as "that lady in Old Main" (the central administration
building) who couldn't possibly know how to handle students because "she
didn't have kids." The coach angrily told Triponey that his players would
not cooperate with any investigation because they would not "rat" on each
other. Penn State President Graham Spanier asked her pointedly if she really
embraced "the Penn State way." Triponey received threatening phone calls.
She was denounced on student message boards. Her house was vandalized. A
"for sale" sign was put up in her front yard. She was no longer invited to
university events, fellow faculty and administrative staff avoided her, and
people turned their backs on her in the supermarket. Spanier successfully
pressured her to resign in 2007. Her husband found work at the University of
South Carolina's medical school in Charleston, and the couple moved.
Hazing, comradeship and complicity in sexual abuse, including rape, make up
the glue that holds campus sports teams and fraternity houses together. The
National Study of Student Hazing reports that 73 percent of U.S.
fraternities and sororities haze. Since 1970, at least one student has died
each year from hazing. Eighty-two percent of these deaths have resulted from
alcohol poisoning. Hazing weeds out those with enough self-esteem and
independence to stand up to the hierarchy. It ensures conformity and
obedience. These groups are, in essence, self-selected. Those who have the
fortitude and courage to oppose their own public humiliation and the public
humiliation perpetuated with each new cycle of recruits or pledges leave.
Those who remain conform. Athletic recruiting parties, like fraternity
parties, at schools across the country are plagued by gang rapes and sexual
assaults. And these crimes, known by all in the fraternity or on the team,
are met, in locker rooms and Greek houses, with the culture of silence,
mocking the stated missions of the schools.
Bernard Lefkowitz captured the sickness of this culture in his book "Our
Guys." Lefkowitz wrote about a group of high school athletes in Glen Ridge,
N.J., who in 1989 lured a 17-year-old developmentally disabled girl to a
basement. The boys sexually abused her with a broomstick and a baseball bat.
And when the assault became public, the town rallied, as at Penn State, not
around the victim, but "our guys." Athletic prowess was, as we saw at Penn
State, glorified above human decency, compassion, respect and the law. But
this is true at most schools. As long as athletes perform they are
untouchable.
The root of the problem is the culture of big-time athletics and Greek life.
And it will not be addressed through NCAA sanctions or the removal of Joe
Paterno's statue at Penn State. It will end only when fraternities,
sororities and football - along with other professional sports programs
masquerading as college athletics - are banished from colleges and
universities. These athletes, in the end, also are used. They are unpaid
performers, brought to the campus solely for their athletic prowess, who
make millions for their schools and their coaches. If you have a son or
daughter - especially a daughter - who wants to get an education, look for a
school that has banished these organizations.
The corporate world sees football players, fraternity brothers and sorority
sisters as prime recruits. They have been conditioned to join the team, to
surrender moral autonomy, to accept and carry out acts of personal
humiliation, to treat with contempt those who oppose them or who are
different, to define their life by an infantile narcissism centered on greed
and self-promotion and to remain silent about crimes they witness or take
part in. It is the very ethic of corporations.
The ruling elite sees in Greek organizations and football programs the
training ground for the amoral class of speculators, bankers and
corporatists who pillage the country. Henry "Hank" Paulson, who as secretary
of the treasury orchestrated a government payout of more than $12.9 billion
to save AIG and Goldman Sachs (where he had been the chairman and chief
executive officer), was a member of the fraternity Sigma Alpha Epsilon and
an offensive lineman at Dartmouth. The billionaire hedge fund manager
Stephen Mandel, who chairs Dartmouth's board of trustees, was, as Rolling
Stone points out, in Psi Upsilon. Jeffrey Immelt, the CEO of GE, was a Phi
Delt at Dartmouth, as were other trustees including Morgan Stanley senior
adviser R. Bradford Evans, billionaire oilman Trevor Rees-Jones and venture
capitalist William W. Helman IV. And that is just Dartmouth.
Hazing is also integral to the military, where suicide - including the
recent suicide of a Chinese-American soldier, Pvt. Danny Chen, in
Afghanistan - is often the result. It is almost impossible to escape your
tormentors in the military. Suicide becomes for many the only exit. Chen,
who was the sole Asian-American in his unit, endured sandbags being tied to
his arms by fellow soldiers. Rocks and water bottles were thrown at him. He
was forced to speak Chinese instead of English. And he was taunted with the
slurs "gook," "slant," "chink" and "egg roll." Eight soldiers are being
court-martialed in his death. A huge percentage of the suicides in the
military happen because of hazing. Most of these cases are never
investigated. The bodies are just shipped home.
Corporate culture, which now dominates higher education, shares the
predatory culture of the military. These cultures are about subsuming the
self into the herd. They are about the acquiring of technical, vocational
skills to serve the system. And with the increasing budget cuts, and more
craven obsequiousness to corporate donors, it will only get worse. These
forces of conformity are hostile to the humanities that teach students to
question assumptions and structures, that prod them to seek a life of
meaning and an ethical code that challenges the blind, utilitarian obedience
to power and profit that corporations and the military instill. We will, I
fear, continue to turn out the intellectually stunted and maimed, those who
know school football records but no philosophy, drama, art, music, theology,
literature or history. The goal of an education is not, in the end, to tell
students what to think but to teach them how to think.
College and university administrators defund libraries, close foreign
language and classics departments and invest staggering sums in gargantuan
sports arenas and athletic programs. And the only time the student body
protests or riots is when, as at Penn State, something unpleasant happens to
the beloved football coach. Pity the student who goes there to learn. The
faculty and administration will not help them; they are complicit or
intimidated.
William Carlos Williams, author of the poem "Asphodel, That Greeny Flower,"
knew there was more to life than careers, personal empowerment, the quest
for prestige, the roar of the crowd and networking. But many find this out
too late. And those attending schools like Penn State will probably never
find out at all. Williams wrote:
It is difficult to get the news from poems yet men die miserably every day
for lack of what is found there.
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