Three Passing (Liberal) Thoughts
1. In honor of the passing of Pope John Paul II, US flags are to be flown at half-staff"until sunset on the day of his interment." A number of states have followed suit. Do we regularly honor foreign leaders' at death with flag lowering? Or is it specifically because the Pope leads (spiritually, of course) American Catholics, and if so, has the US so honored other religious leaders, foreign or domestic? Is it because he said nice things about the US or because his criticism of our" culture of death" echo those of our President? [UPDATE: Kevin Drum asked a similar question and got some answers. It's President's Choice, and the flags were lowered for Martin Luther King, Jr.'s death as well]
2. With regard to the Pluss v. Churchill discussions Ralph Luker has been leading over the last few days, two distinctions.
a. Churchill is a professor of ethnic studies a discipline predicated on deconstructing American self-delusions of tolerance and homogeneity, and on explicating the official and unofficial wrongs done to non-majorities; as such his attacks on US institutions and majority populations are consistent with his disciplinary mandates; they do not call his professional competence into question. Pluss, on the other hand, is an historian, and the highly racialized"analysis" of his own institution and situation does call his historical competence into question. Given a choice, if I were on a hiring committee, between historians who belonged to the National Socialists or the Communist Party of America -- all other things being equal, which they rarely are, and assuming that the information were legitimately acquired, as on the candidates' c.v.s -- I don't know that I'd give either of them the job.As with Churchill, in the Pluss case there is the outrage, and then there is the procedure. Whether or not"five or six" unexplained absences in a semester gets most faculty fired, it is grounds for disciplinary action or dismissal. Whether or not most professors have their citations double-checked by outside and inside reviewers, plagiarism and abuse of sources is grounds for disciplinary action or dismissal.b. Churchill attacked the US, its citizens and leaders, its history and its ideology. But he never said anything bad about CU until he was attacked, nor has he been accused of failing to fulfill his teaching obligations. Pluss publicly attacked FDU students and administrators on racial and academic grounds; I grant that it's a gutsy thing to do for an adjunct professor, but that's because it's so.... dangerous.
Three Bonus Readings:
- The Gospel of Judas [via Brian Ulrich]
- A proposal in favor of unionizing adjunct faculty, which does a pretty good job detailing a situation which it doesn't take a labor historian to find appalling. The link came from Anne Zook, whose sense of justice and fair play, and whose facility with the poetics of linkage, are among the finest in the blogosphere. Looking back on my own writings on the subject, I found this comment on grad student unions:
Why not argue that a unionized graduate teaching body would be a draw for the best students, who want the camaraderie, security and respect that collective bargaining brings. Why not argue that graduate students, like tenure/tenure-track faculty with their senate (or union, for some of us), like administrators with their little boardroom meetings, like undergraduates with their student government, that graduate students deserve to choose the institutions that best represent them and their unique interests in the academy.
The same could be said of adjuncts... except that the oversupply of Ph.D.s, and the difficulty of true labor mobility in nation-wide academic fields, and the deeply-rooted sense on the part of so many adjuncts that teaching is a good thing to be doing in spite of the exploitation, all make it far too easy for institutions (and that means you, if you're a faculty member who colludes in the regular use of adjunct faculty) to exploit their own graduates (even if it's not really their own graduates, it's former students just like them). - A primer on Pontifical Election: Thanks to the late John Paul II,"it appears this will be the first conclave during which the cardinal-electors will have private bathrooms." More to the point, election is by 2/3rds majority, unless no winner emerges after four rounds (each round consisting of two 4-vote days and a day of prayer), in which case they go to runoff or simple majority.
Because I scored 7 out of 9: Can you tell the difference between foolish pranks and historical trivia? [via Is That Legal?] I did pretty well, but there was guessing involved.