|
||||||||
|
Campus Watch in the MediaJuan Cole and the Eyes of the Canary
by Ralph Harrington http://blog.greycat.org/2007/11/28/juan-cole-and-the-eyes-of-the-canary/ http://www.campus-watch.org/article/id/4535 Thanks to Candace de Russy and Campus Watch I've found a moving cri de coeur from Juan Cole, professor of Middle East history at the University of Michigan. Cole is disturbed at the recent establishment of the Association for the Study of the Middle East and Africa (ASMEA) by academics dissatisfied with the existing Middle East Studies Association (MESA), and by the increasing signs that outside interests are trying to exert influence on the academic world for ideological reasons of their own. He sees these developments as symptomatic of the politicization of Middle East studies.
This view of the importance of scholars to society surely owes more to vanity than it does to reality. Leaving that aside, how credible is Juan Cole as an opponent of the ‘politicization of scholarship'? Well, I haven't read his latest book, Napoleon's Egypt: Invading the Middle East, but I have a very clear idea of what it's all about because the author has spelled it out:*
Nothing politicized about that, then. Of course not: the politicization that suits us is never perceived as politicization (as post-modernists are always keen to tell us). On 11 September 2001, Cole reports, he had written about half the book. ‘I had no way of knowing then', he writes, 'that a book on such a distant, scholarly subject would prove an allegory for Bush's Iraq War'. As if it had the slightest chance of ending up as anything else. As for the poor canaries, they were taken down mines because of their high sensitivity to carbon monoxide, which they ‘detected' by breathing it in. Their eyes had nothing to do with it. * For a thorough dismantling of Cole's tendentious and politicized version of history, see Martin Kramer's ‘Juan Cole loses head'. Note: Postings in "Campus Watch in the Media" do not necessarily reflect the views of Campus Watch.receive the latest by email: subscribe to campus watch's free mailing list
| |||||||
|
|
Campus Watch contact e-mail: campus-watch@meforum.org |
|||||||