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What's Your Reaction To This?

 
 
Reply Thu 21 Oct, 2010 08:19 am
Five years ago, I had every reason to believe that my job as a history professor at Barnard College was secure. I had been teaching there for four years, I had published my dissertation with a major publisher, and because I had tripled the sizes of the introductory U.S. history course and the American Studies program, colleagues told me they "would be shocked" if I were not promoted to a tenure-track position.

But that was before my colleagues knew what I was teaching.

I had always been a misfit in academia, partly because of my background, partly because of my personality, and increasingly over the years because of my ideas -- ideas that are now a book called "A Renegade History of the United States."

I was raised by pot-smoking, nudist, socialist revolutionaries as an egghead white boy in black neighborhoods in Berkeley and Oakland. I nearly flunked eighth grade and finished high school with a C average. Then I went to the anarchist, ultra-hippy Antioch College in Ohio, which accepted all their applicants, didn't give grades, and didn't have a history department.

So even though I managed to pull myself out of that background and into and through Columbia for a PhD, then onto a job at an elite college, I was highly uncomfortable moving from the world of weed to the world of tweed. I hated being "Professor." I cursed in class. I talked about sex. I used politically incorrect terms. My students said they had never heard the things I was teaching them in class. They called me "Bad Thad."

I showed them that during the American Revolution drunkards, laggards, prostitutes, and pirates pioneered many of the freedoms and pleasures we now cherish -- including non-marital sex, interracial socializing, dancing, shopping, divorce, and the weekend -- and that the Founding Fathers, in the name of democracy, opposed them. I argued not only that many white Americans envied slaves but also that they did so for good reason, since slave culture offered many liberating alternatives to the highly repressive, work-obsessed, anti-sex culture of the early United States. I demonstrated that prostitutes, not feminists, won virtually all the freedoms that were denied to women but are now taken for granted. By tracing the path of immigrants from arrival as "primitives" to assimilation as "civilized" citizens, I explained that white people lost their rhythm by becoming good Americans. I presented evidence that without organized crime, we might not have jazz, Hollywood, Las Vegas, legal alcohol, birth control, or gay rights, since only gangsters were willing to support those projects when respectable America shunned them.

This was not the standard left-liberal perspective my students had heard, and it certainly wasn't a conservative one, either. It was informed by an unlikely mix of influences, including the hippies and other cultural radicals I had encountered in my early life, black and gay cultures that showed me a way out of the self-imposed limitations of being white and straight, and libertarians who caused me to question the commitment to freedom among the left that I had been born into and which employed me as a professor.

I gave my students a history that was structured around the oldest issue in political philosophy but which professional historians often neglect - the conflict between the individual and community, or what Freud called the eternal struggle between civilization and its discontents. College students are normally taught a history that is the story of struggles between capitalists and workers, whites and blacks, men and women. But history is also driven by clashes between those interested in preserving social order and those more interested in pursuing their own desires -- the "respectable" versus the "degenerate," the moral versus the immoral, "good citizens" versus the "bad." I wanted to show that the more that "bad" people existed, resisted, and won, the greater was what I called "the margin of freedom" for all of us.

My students were most troubled by the evidence that the "good" enemies of "bad" freedoms were not just traditional icons like presidents and business leaders, but that many of the most revered abolitionists, progressives, and leaders of the feminist, labor, civil rights, and gay rights movements worked to suppress the cultures of working-class women, immigrants, African Americans, and the flamboyant gays who brought homosexuality out of the closet.

I had developed these ideas largely on my own, in my study and in classrooms, knowing all the while that I was engaged in an Oedipal struggle to overthrow the generation of historians who came of age during the 1960s and 1970s, controlled academic history, and had trained me. They were so eager to make the masses into heroes that they did not see that it was precisely the non-heroic and unseemly characteristics of ordinary folks that changed American culture for the better.

So I was quite anxious when I was asked to present my work to colleagues in order to get a long-term contract and be moved into line for a shot at tenure. A friend in the history department told me that given my publishing record and popularity among students the talk would be "really just a formality." But I knew it would be trouble.

Several distinguished professors from Columbia showed up, since the university has final say on all tenure decisions at its sister college, Barnard. During my talk, a Columbia professor who had been named by a national magazine as the most important public intellectual in the United States, stared at me with what I took -- rightly, it turned out -- to be disgust. Another walked out before I finished. One of my graduate school advisors asked a series of hostile questions. Other colleagues told me after the talk that I was "courageous," that I was "wonderfully, relentlessly revisionist," and that I made some famous historians "look like dinosaurs."

But emails came into the hiring committee from "important places," I was told, calling my ideas "improper," "frightening," and "dangerous." They said my ideas had no place in the academy and insisted that I be terminated. It was simply not okay for me to describe the "oppressed" in the terms used by their oppressors -- "shiftless," "sexually unrestrained," "primitive," "uncivilized" -- even though my argument transformed those epithets into tributes.

After I was told that I would be leaving Barnard, hundreds of students protested in faculty and deans' offices and the Columbia Spectator devoted an editorial to my case, but to no avail. There did indeed seem to be no place for me in the academy. And so I wrote a book.
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Type: Discussion • Score: 4 • Views: 1,436 • Replies: 12
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tsarstepan
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Oct, 2010 08:40 am
@plainoldme,
Just out of academic curiosity, what kind of primary sources were used in your latest work?

Were the academic malcontents worried that a lot of your controversial social/cultural/political statements were not proven by your given evidence? Or did they make claims that your over all thesis was too much of a jump to make from what evidence you provided?
joefromchicago
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Oct, 2010 08:41 am
@plainoldme,
I read this on the Huffington Post. I thought that the guy, Thaddeus Russell, sounded like a left-wing crank. After reading some of his stuff, I am not dissuaded from my initial impression.
Setanta
 
  2  
Reply Thu 21 Oct, 2010 08:46 am
@joefromchicago,
As Joe well knows, i don't agree with him just because it's Joe. But i agree completely with him on this one. As soon as i saw that joker claims that Americans during the period of the revolution invented non-marital sex, i knew we had a weiner . . .
joefromchicago
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Oct, 2010 09:11 am
@Setanta,
Exactly. When I read his screed, I kept thinking of Howard Zinn's A People's History of the United States, which is just a bunch of historical facts and half-facts that Zinn claimed were "suppressed" by the establishment. Actually, most of what he wrote about hadn't been suppressed at all, it just wasn't regarded as very important. Imagine my surprise, then, when I stumbled across this interview, where Thaddeus Russell said: "A Renegade History of the United States is an ambitious book. It is intended to replace Howard Zinn’s A People’s History of the United States." Yeah, I figured as much.
joefromchicago
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Oct, 2010 09:14 am
For a taste of Dr. Russell's Renegade History, click here.
0 Replies
 
Setanta
 
  2  
Reply Thu 21 Oct, 2010 09:23 am
@joefromchicago,
That's really sad. Zinn was himself a master at suppressing "inconvenient truths." Someone recommended the People's History to me more than 20 years ago, and i began reading it, but i didn't get very far. He characterizes certain people and certain events in the blackest terms, while suppressing widely-known historical facts which would serve to mitigate his claims against those persons, or the persons involved in the events. He was also very much given to the imposition of anachronistic political and social values in his narrative and analysis of historical persons and events.

Incredible as it seems, this joker is even loonier than Zinn.
0 Replies
 
plainoldme
 
  0  
Reply Thu 21 Oct, 2010 10:08 am
@tsarstepan,
Did you catch on that this isn't my work ?

I posted this rather quickly and did not read it after posting. I thought I had pasted the reference to the Huntington Post and the author's name, but, I guess I missed them when I highlighted the original.
plainoldme
 
  0  
Reply Thu 21 Oct, 2010 10:09 am
@joefromchicago,
I wouldn't say he's left-wing at all but rather that he is rebelling against all political dimensions.

What struck me most about him was his titanic ego.
0 Replies
 
tsarstepan
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Oct, 2010 10:15 am
@plainoldme,
I'm not the most observant individual ... (sigh) ... that's why I no longer pursue my area of alleged expertise that of history.

Quote:
I had always been a misfit in academia, partly because of my background, partly because of my personality, and increasingly over the years because of my ideas -- ideas that are now a book called "A Renegade History of the United States."

I assumed that this whole (uncredited copy and paste) was your words. You should at least give credit where credit is due: source and copyright information to avoid plagiarism.
0 Replies
 
sozobe
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Oct, 2010 10:38 am
@plainoldme,
Thad whatever wrote:
I argued not only that many white Americans envied slaves but also that they did so for good reason, since slave culture offered many liberating alternatives to the highly repressive, work-obsessed, anti-sex culture of the early United States.


Guh-wuh?

Whatever sympathy I was building up for him just exploded into nothingness.
Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Oct, 2010 10:48 am
Yup . . . that boy's considerably north of goofy, ain't he?
0 Replies
 
plainoldme
 
  0  
Reply Thu 21 Oct, 2010 12:06 pm
@sozobe,
I like the way you put it! I chuckled.
0 Replies
 
 

 
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