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Juan Cole Strikes a Pose as Freedom's Hero, but There's More to the Storyby Winfield Myers
Juan Cole, professor of history at Michigan, former president of MESA, and erstwhile chaired professor at Yale, will take part in a "workshop" on May 3 at Brown University. Titled "The Study of the Middle East and Islam: Challenges after 9-11," the workshop will allow some of the most powerful forces in Middle East studies to don the mantle of victimhood (or better, to strut it, as it is a permanent feature of their moral cover). Cole's biography for the workshop, in addition to the usual info, sports this claim:
To which a proper rejoinder might be, "Citing his scholarship, senior professors at Yale and Duke refused to allow Cole to join them in their august institutions." The full story of Cole and Yale, "Juan Cole and Yale: The Inside Story," was written by David White for Campus Watch and published August 3, 2006. Here are three key paragraphs from White's article:
About the blog (emphasis added):
And:
Cole was also turned down for a job at Duke last year, although he hasn't argued that he was treated unfairly by external agitator types in that case. In fact, he hasn't mentioned it all on his blog, perhaps because he didn't want to draw attention to his efforts to leave Michigan, since he wrote on his blog last June that he wasn't trying to leave Ann Arbor:
Another Campus Watch article, again written by David White: "Cole Case," covers the Duke story and strikes a familiar cord on Cole's academic record:
It's one of the wonders of the modern academic enterprise that its most privileged practitioners, whose academic freedom is untrammeled and who, especially in the case of Cole, are known for vitriolic attacks on critics (see the articles cited above for examples), capture the public eye by whining about critics. As I've argued before, they grew unused to answering for their words and deeds and, as everyone who was ever a teenager remembers, it's always easier to fling insults at one's opponents than risk defeat in debate. If the leaders of Middle East studies in America behave this shamelessly in the face of public criticism, imagine their behavior if the critics fall silent.
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