If you have
never been on an American college campus, you may be in for a shock. They tend
to be highly politicized places, where you have to be careful about what you
say or, more precisely, THE WORDS YOU USE. Terms you should know include “cultural
appropriation,” “safe spaces,” “trigger warnings,” “microaggressions,”
“no-platforming,” and “cancel culture.”
Take, for
example, the following episode: In the fall of 2015 at Yale University, Nicholas Christakis, a distinguished professor
and head of one of Yale’s residential colleges, was
verbally ambushed by a group of minority students who berated him, calling him
“disgusting,” and demanding that he step down. What had this
scholar-administrator done to invite such abuse from students considered to be
among the brightest in the land? Well, it turns out that his wife, also on the
Yale faculty, had a few days before sent off an email to a small group of Yale
students, encouraging them to dress how they wished for Halloween, even at the
risk of offending people.
The offending
email was composed in response to one distributed by the University’s Intercultural Affairs Committee to the entire Yale
student body, asking students to avoid wearing “culturally unaware and
insensitive” costumes that could offend minority students. The missive
specifically advised students to steer clear of outfits that included elements
like feathered headdresses, turbans or blackface – what is referred to in
politically-correct vernacular as “cultural appropriation.”
The video of
the incident described above, which can be found on YouTube, strains credulity
in the hysterical response to an innocuous suggestion regarding Halloween
costumes. In it the students demand that
Professor Christakis apologize for the beliefs expressed by him and his wife,
claiming that the two had created a space “unsafe” for students in that
particular residential college. When Christakis tries to reason with the
harassers, one student responds, between expletives, “It is not about
creating an intellectual space! It is not! Do you understand that? It is about
creating a home here!” [NB: safe spaces are physical locations on campus
where students can retreat from ideas and perspectives at odds with their own.]
On
college campuses around the country, students, particularly those of color, are forcing white students and
administrators to confront the pernicious effects of racial bias. The question facing campuses, then, is how to weigh those
issues of sensitivity and mental health against sometimes-competing values of
free speech and academic freedom. As a result, dispensing Halloween
costume advice has become an annual rite for college administrators.
One
representative (and highly regarded) college demanded students pose the
following questions to themselves lest their Halloween costume transgress the
college’s accepted boundaries: Does your costume mock cultural or religious
symbols? Does your costume attempt to represent an entire culture or ethnicity?
Does your costume trivialize human suffering, oppression, or marginalization?
Does your costume perpetuate negative stereotypes? Yes, respect
for diversity is the stated goal of virtually every college in America. Yet,
curiously, these schools appear to mandate that everyone appear and think in a more
or less homogeneous fashion.
One highly sought-after college prohibits even “unintentional forms of harassment.”
That same school also grants students “the right to be protected against
actions that may be harmful to [their] emotional stability.” This is in effect
what’s called a “trigger warning,” which is demanded by so many students
in their classes. Trigger warnings are for instructors so they avoid assigning
a reading – no matter how important to the canon or how much can be learned
from it – if it may upset students in some way. Books that have been required
to bear this warning in recent years include The Great Gatsby (“A variety of scenes that reference gory,
abusive, and misogynistic violence”) and Ovid’s Metamorphoses
(“Depictions of assault”).
Closely related to the trigger warning concept are what are
termed “microaggressions”: the mostly unintended but nevertheless
offensive, hostile, or derogatory offhand comment (e.g., “You are Asian. So you
much be good at math.”). Although such comments may appear harmless (at least
to the perpetrator), on most colleges campuses today they are considered to be
a form of covert racism or discrimination.
Another
term you should be familiar with is “no-platforming.” Objections to
providing a platform to certain speakers deemed politically unacceptable
(meaning, conservative) is known as no-platforming. Speakers invited to
American college campuses in recent years, only to be forced to cancel their
appearance due to student opposition, include former Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice, IMF Director Christine Lagarde and conservative commentator
Ann Coulter.
Finally,
you will almost certainly come across the expression “cancel culture,” a close relative to no-platforming. This is common
on college campuses and refers to the predilection to simply erase from our
collective memory public or historical figures who would not be considered
“woke” (the mental state of being hyper
alert to any injustice in society, especially racism) by today’s standards. The
fact that Thomas Jefferson was a slaveholder or Napoleon an imperialist, in
this view, negates any justification for them to be memorialized in the public
space.
Does
this all sound to you like American college students don’t want to hear
anything that they disagree with? Be prepared when you begin your studies in
the U.S., for the prevailing logic on campus is “My right NOT to be offended
trumps your freedom of speech.”
Questions about this post: Email robert@designsonlearning.com