The Perversion of Scholarship
By Chris Hedges
Fraternities, sororities and football, along with other outsized
athletic programs, have decimated most major American universities.
Scholarship, inquiry, self-criticism, moral autonomy and a search for
artistic and esoteric forms of expression—in short, the world of ethics,
creativity and ideas—are shouted down by the drunken chants of fans in
huge stadiums, the pathetic demands of rich alumni for national
championships, and the elitism, racism and rigid definition of gender
roles of Greek organizations. These hypermasculine systems perpetuate a
culture of conformity and intolerance. They have inverted the
traditional values of scholarship to turn four years of college into a
mindless quest for collective euphoria and athletic dominance.
There is probably no more inhospitable place to be an intellectual,
or a person of color or a member of the LGBT community, than on the
campuses of the Big Ten Conference colleges, although the poison of this
bizarre American obsession has infected innumerable schools. These
environments are distinctly corporate. To get ahead one must get along.
The student is implicitly told his or her self-worth and fulfillment are
found in crowds, in mass emotions, rather than individual
transcendence. Those who do not pay deference to the celebration of
force, wealth and power become freaks. It is a war on knowledge in the
name of knowledge.
Sunday, August 5, 2012
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