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Sunday, June 12, 2011

Caroline Glick on Yale shutting down the study of anti-Semitism

In an earlier post, I discussed a student perspective on the closure of Yale's center for the study of anti-Semitism, the Yale Initiative for the Inter-Disciplinary Study of Anti-Semitism (YIISA). Caroline Glick offers a faculty/academia perspective, which if anything is even more disturbing.
Deputy Provost and Political Science Professor Frances Rosenbluth served on the faculty committee that reviewed YIISA’s performance and concluded that the university should close the center. In recent years Rosenbluth appointed Judge Richard Goldstone and Iran-regime apologists Flynt and Hillary Mann Leverett to serve as senior fellows at Yale’s Jackson Institute for Global Affairs. Last September the Leveretts brought their students to New York to hold a seminar for them with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Unlike the YIISA conference, the move did not stimulate any significant controversy at the university.

Sources involved with YIISA allege a senior university official privately complained that “YIISA’s activities harm the Yale Corporation.” The clear insinuation was that due to YIISA’s activities, Yale has had difficulty raising money from Arab sources.

Politics arguably has also played a role in YIISA’s difficulty in publishing articles in top tier academic publications and even in attracting students to its courses. Today the discourse on anti- Semitism has been corrupted by politics. In the current atmosphere, publishing scholarship on topics like Islamic Jew hatred, or anti-Semitism and progressive politics is widely viewed as a career ender. Scholars who are interested in these subjects are therefore likely to opt out of publishing articles or books on them.

By the same token, the toxic nature of the intellectual environment related to anti-Semitism, anti- Zionism and contemporary forms of both arguably renders top tier journals averse to publishing articles on them. So too, in light of the politically correct echo chamber that governs university politics and appointments, it is eminently reasonable to assume that an article about these subjects would be harshly treated in peer-reviews.

In this context it is worth recalling the history of cowardice at Yale in the face of Islamic criticism. In 2009, Yale University Press was slated to publish a book about the 2005 Muhammad cartoon controversy. When the decision was met with furious responses from various Islamic quarters, Yale caved. It decided to censor the cartoons that were the subject of the book from the book itself.

In short, the discriminatory atmosphere that dominates academic discourse on anti-Semitism generally and Islamic anti-Semitism in particular makes it difficult to use the generally objective assessment tool of the number of publications in top-tier journals to judge the academic value of YIISA.
Read the whole thing. Caroline's conclusion is most interesting:
YIISA’s closure indicates that a new strategy of concentrating Jewish philanthropic resources is required. Supporting a handful of carefully selected universities will probably have a greater longterm impact on the general discourse on issues like contemporary anti-Semitism than spreading smaller amounts of funding across a larger number of institutions.
I wonder if there is a sufficient bloc of Jewish donors who are little fish at Ivy League schools who would be interested in becoming big fish to found an academic institution (more on the model of a think tank than a university although granting higher level degrees is a possibility) to produce politically incorrect studies of anti-Semitism. That sounds like something that might be of interest to - for example - the Shalem Center here in Jerusalem, or Yeshiva University and/or Touro College in New York.

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2 Comments:

At 11:05 AM, Blogger ais cotten19 said...

CiJ, your idea about Jews collectively standing up in America is honorable, but it would be a lot less work just to move to Israel and build an anti-Semite free environment there. Let America F*&* itself.

 
At 4:40 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

The Ivy leagues had quotas restricting Jewish participation up to WWII. That left-wing pseudo-intellectual orthodoxy is deep-sixing legitimate Jewish academic inquiry should come as no surprise. What is a little disconcerting would be the posts here on the intellectual anti-Zionist rot in supposedly Jewish-family academic institutions such as Brandeis. Not to mention the suicidal post-Zionist BSD miasmas in Israeli academics.

 

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