It is now widely agreed that political polarisation poses major challenges for universities. 鈥淧eople grow up in聽silos and echo chambers,鈥 explained Morton Schapiro, the president of Northwestern University. 鈥淭his generation of students doesn鈥檛 know anything other than screaming at each other. Those of us on campuses have a tough job to get them to聽see beyond righteous indignation at 鈥榯he聽enemy鈥.鈥
This is relatively familiar territory. What is striking about the book Professor Schapiro has written with Gary Saul Morson 鈥 Lawrence B. Dumas professor of the arts and humanities at Northwestern 鈥 is the extent to which they see universities also as sources of simplistically divisive thinking. Indeed, Minds Wide聽Shut: How the New Fundamentalisms Divide聽Us devotes far less attention to hellfire preachers and toxic tweeters than to what has happened in some academic disciplines.
When their book Cents and Sensibility: What Economics Can Learn from the聽Humanities was published in聽2018, Professor Schapiro recalled, a prominent economist cited the fact that 鈥減eople in the allied social sciences quote a聽lot of聽economists, but economists are much less likely to quote people in other fields鈥 as 鈥減roof that the other fields don鈥檛 have much to say, not that we are insular鈥.
But while deploring the 鈥渕arket fundamentalism鈥 of much economic thinking, Minds Wide聽Shut is聽equally unimpressed by its mirror image: the humanists who refuse to 鈥渦nderstand the benefits of聽markets鈥, fall back on 鈥渁ll-purpose pejoratives鈥 such as 鈥渃apitalism鈥 and 鈥渘eoliberalism鈥, and are more interested in 鈥渕oral crusades鈥 than 鈥渨ell thought-out policies鈥, for example in relation to climate change. It describes a meeting Professor Morson once attended where a number of humanities department chairs who had 鈥渟tressed the importance of improving the pay of non-tenure eligible faculty鈥 were asked by the dean 鈥渉ow the money available for raises鈥 should be divided between such people and those who were already tenured or on the tenure track. Uncomfortable about the obvious conflict this raised between their principles and their pocketbooks, one declared: 鈥淲e聽reject the false choice based on the notion that resources are聽limited.鈥
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In studying both religious and literary texts, the professors want to steer a middle path between uncritical reverence and judging them solely by the standards of the present. Although many academics were still teaching what he considered 鈥渞eal courses in literature鈥, rooted in the idea that we might have something important to learn from Shakespeare or Tolstoy, Professor Morson was dismayed by the scholars 鈥渨ho really believe that there鈥檚 no such thing as 鈥榞reat literature鈥 and that the purpose of the discipline is what I聽would call indoctrination. I聽know this from students who come to聽me and ask, 鈥楥an I聽find a聽class where I聽can actually read literature and not just be told what I聽already know politically?鈥欌
Furthermore while supportive of opening literary canons, Minds Wide Shut administers a passing slap at 鈥渨hat is often done in the name of 鈥榩ost-colonialism鈥: assigning texts from other traditions showing the harm that Westerners do鈥here is something insufferably condescending in the implication that other cultures first had something important to say as a result of their encounter with our聽own.鈥
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These were arguments, Professor Morson admitted, which he would not have dared publish if he were based in a department of English or comparative literature.
Although Professor Schapiro didn鈥檛 accept 鈥渢he right鈥檚 critique of universities as [left-wing] 鈥榠ndoctrination mills鈥欌, he acknowledged that the two of them had been approached by 鈥渦ltra-conservative media鈥 who saw the book as 鈥渢rashing the humanities and academe, political correctness and cancel culture鈥. They turned down all such interview requests.
More generally, wasn鈥檛 Professor Schapiro worried about the dangers for a university president of speaking out in ways that could alienate faculty, funders and other supporters, or provide ammunition for those seeking to discredit universities?
鈥淭hose of us working on areas that could influence the public debate have a moral obligation to speak out,鈥 he replied. Yet he could also appreciate why far fewer university presidents were now 鈥渨ell-known public voices鈥. Those running 鈥渇lagship public-sector institutions reporting to regents often appointed by conservative governors or elected by the public鈥 were understandably wary.
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And although Northwestern was 鈥渘ot really reliant on state, local or federal government for direct funding, which can be taken away by alienating them with my next op-ed鈥, there was always a risk of 鈥渁lienating trustees and board members and donors. I聽have written around 60 op-eds since I聽became president here, many in the Wall Street Journal or other prominent places, and every time one comes out I聽get emails saying, 鈥業鈥檓 never going to give another dime to Northwestern as long as you are president.鈥欌
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: Northwestern leader campaigns to聽open minds across campuses
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