Academics have been asking what can and can’t be said in the classroom or lecture hall ever since the classroom or lecture hall came into being.
The extent to which politics can enter a learning environment to invigorate curious minds is still a hot topic more than 100 years after the first debates.
With that in mind, University of Massachusetts’ Amherst history Professor Daniel Gordon offers a guide through the recent history of academic freedom.
His latest book, titled What Is Academic Freedom? A Century of Debate, 1915-Present, revisits the history of the debate from 1915 to the present. It covers the meaning of academic freedom — particularly around political activism on campus.
Interested in the history of debates about academic freedom on college campuses? Check out @UMassAmherst professor Daniel Gordon’s new & freely available book “What Is Academic Freedom? A Century of Debate, 1915-Present” from @routledgebooks.https://t.co/25QdicciGo@UMassHFA pic.twitter.com/NFuD5hKjFC
— UMass Amherst Department of History (@UMassHistory) July 27, 2022
Gordon’s previous books include one on French thought in the 120-year run-up to the French Revolution and another on Alexis de Tocqueville, a liberal political philosopher.
The definition of academic freedom has evolved over the course of the past century, but one key question remains unanswered: who exactly is homo academicus?
What sets academic pursuits apart from other endeavours? How can we differentiate between academic research and political activism? What distinguishes academic freedom from freedom of expression?
On this, Gordon explores the perspectives of intellectuals and thinkers, including Arthur Lovejoy, Angela Davis, Alexander Meiklejohn, and Edward Said.
Fired for their beliefs
This is an area fraught with nuance. What is the relationship between freedom of speech and academic freedom? Should communists be allowed to teach? What constitutes unacceptable political ‘indoctrination’ in the classroom?
What are the implications for academic freedom of creating Black Studies and Women's Studies departments?
Do academic boycotts — such as those directed against Israel — violate the spirit of academic freedom? Gordon asks all the right questions.
The book opens in 1969 when the University of California Professor Angela Davis enjoyed legal protection for her right to freedom of expression but was still deemed unfit for the role by the University’s Board of Regents due to her statements on it.
Davis felt that academic freedom included the right to take part in political struggles on campus and that those who did not participate were not truly experiencing that freedom.