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Campus Watch ResearchMESA Looks in the Mirror
by Daniel Pipes http://www.danielpipes.org/blog/536 http://www.campus-watch.org/article/id/2307 For the most part, Middle East studies and Islamic specialists in the United States are boisterous about the bounty of students, opportunities, and money they have come into due to the prominence of their region in the American debate. (For one example, see "Harvard Celebrates Middle East Studies.") But, as reported by Scott Jaschik at the InsideHigherEd.com website, when talking among themselves, the tone sometimes gets darker. Jaschik relates a "thematic conversation" on "Publics in Crisis: Academia and Activism in Middle East Studies" that took place Nov. 20 at the Middle East Studies Association's annual meeting. Zachary Lockman, author of Contending Visions of the Middle East : The History and Politics of Orientalism and the Middle East studies establishment's would-be answer to Martin Kramer, spoke of a "disconnect" that bedevils the field: while internally it is stronger every day, its influence outside of academe is perhaps at an all-time low. Others in the session picked up the latter theme of woe:
Horrors. Worse yet:
The above may be read as a back-handed compliment to Campus Watch, indicating its effectiveness in showing the failure of Middle East studies. (Though, speaking of back-handed compliments, Lockman's is mild compared to that Miriam Cooke's: "Campus Watch is the Trojan horse whose warriors are already changing the rules of the game not only in Middle East studies but also in the US University as a whole.") At the MESA discussion, depression was quickly setting in:
To pull themselves out of this collective funk, participants took up possible remedies to enhance their influence. Jaschik reports that "Much of the discussion that followed concerned strategies for engaging the public (and eventually policy makers)." Specific ideas flowed about adopting union tactics, learning from the National Council of Arab Americans, and speaking to high schools, church groups, and others. Then, mirabile dictu, Malik Mufti of Tufts University injected a note of political realism into the discussion: While endorsing the idea of reaching out, he
Will Malik's wise counsel be heeded? receive the latest by email: subscribe to campus watch's free mailing list This text may be reposted or forwarded so long as it is presented as an integral whole with complete information provided about its author, date, place of publication, and original URL.
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