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Standing for Civilization Week in Education

Standing for Civilization Week in Education

Your weekly report on education news.

If you have not yet watched Professor Jacobson’s speech at Cornell last week, you must.

Meanwhile, this is what the other side has been up to…

Let’s check in on what’s been happening at Columbia.

Maybe things are going better at Harvard.

Higher education has a serious free speech problem.

Compare and contrast.

Why?

And he’s right.

Fantastic.

Totally normal, right?

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Comments

Civilization runs on unwritten rules that everybody knows but cannot articulate. It was once the study of Sociology, in particular Erving Goffman (not his ne’er do well daughter). In particular Asylums and then a dozen following books.

Somewhere between bipartisan eulogies for Tip O’Neil in the 90s and Gore contesting the 2000 election you noticed the rules by way of their suddenly being violated in the open.

From Asylums, at the end:

The simplest sociological view of the individual and his self is that he is to himself what his place in an organization defines him to be. When pressed, a sociologist modifies this model by granting certain complications : the self may be not yet formed or may exhibit conflicting dedications. Perhaps we should further complicate the construct by elevating these qualifications to a central place, initially defining the individual, for sociological purposes, as a stance-taking entity, a something that takes up a position somewhere between identificaiton with an organization and opposition to it, and is ready at the slightest pressure to regain its balance by shifting its involvement to either direction. It is thus _against something_ that the self can emerge. This has been appreciated by students of totalitarianism …

I have argued the same case in regard to total institutions. May this not be the situation, however, in free society, too?

Without something to belong to, we have no stable self, and yet total commitment and attachment to any social unit implies a kind of selflessness. Our sense of being a person can come from being drawn into a wider social unit ; our sense of selfhood can arise through the little ways in which we resist the pull. Our status is backed by the solid buildings of the world, while our sense of personality identity often resides in the cracks.

Erving Goffman _Asylums_ “The Underlife of a Public Institution” p.320

The enemy is within the gate.