We’
ve heard a lot about the flurry of “snowflakes” on college campuses. But it’s more like a blizzard.
Fragile freshmen took to the streets /following the presidential
election. But at many schools, the politically-correct are upset about
more than who’s moving into the White House. They’re demanding
professors rewrite history itself to suit their feelings.
Take the University of Pennsylvania,
where NBC reports that students removed a portrait of William
Shakespeare and replaced it with a photo of Audre Lorde, a
“self-described black lesbian, mother, warrior, poet.” They did so to
affirm “their commitment to a more inclusive mission for the English
department.”
Evidently this mission doesn’t include the single most important figure in the formation of the modern English language.
But it’s not just colleges. Public schools in Accomack County,
Virginia, removed a pair of titles from its libraries and classrooms
/after one mother complained that they contained racial slurs. The
offending books? Mark Twain’s “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn,” and
Harper Lee’s “To Kill a Mockingbird.” The irony here, of course, is that
these books were written to confront and expose racism, not promote it!
But the prize for most jaw-dropping politically-correct purge has to
go to students /at London University. Apparently, enrollees in the School
of Oriental and African Studies are demanding
that figures such as Plato, Immanuel Kant, and Rene Descartes be
removed from their philosophy curriculum, since they’re white and
represent—stay with me now—“the structural and epistemological legacy of
colonialism.”
Their demand comes on the heels of a nationwide proposal
which, if approved, would place student satisfaction in Britain “at the
heart of the new ranking system.” In other words, the snowflakes would
have more power than ever over schools //that dare to challenge or offend
them.
On hearing of these politically-correct efforts to rewrite history,
Sir Anthony Seldon, the vice-chancellor of Buckingham University, said ()
there’s a “real danger political correctness is getting out of control.”
That may be the understatement of the decade.
Look, there are so many problems with this trend, I hardly know where
to begin. But [the first thing //that comes to mind] is a message for every
student /tempted to engage in snowflakery: Your emotions do not trump reality.
That sentence probably requires more than one trigger warning, but
it’s true. The facts of history don’t change /because they hurt your
feelings. And here are some irrefutable facts of history: Plato is
essential to an education in philosophy, Harper Lee was not a racist,
and if you want an English degree /without studying and learning to
appreciate Shakespeare, it will not be worth the paper on which it’s
printed.
That’s not racist, sexist, homophobic, or colonial. It’s reality.
It’s great to study figures outside the traditional Western canon.
But we don’t study philosophers, explorers, or inventors /because they
agreed with our politics. We study them /because they shaped our world,
and to understand that world, we need to understand them. That’s what
education is all about.
[The idea //that learning should never offend us, or that college should
be a “safe space” free of uncomfortable ideas]
is destroying modern
education. And [the institutions and governments //that cave to these
demands] are just as guilty as the students /making them.
As Christians,
we can lead the way /by being the first to engage opposing ideas, rather
than silencing them.
Failing that, a snow shovel may be in order.
* in order - in a state of proper readiness or preparation or arrangement;
Further Reading and Information
Political Correctness Is Killing College: Emotions or Education?
As Eric has suggested, Christians should be the first to step up to
the challenge of engaging in dialog and the discussion of competing
ideas. That's part of true educational development. For more on this
subject, check out the links below.
Resources
Penn Students Replace Shakespeare Portrait With African American Writer Audre Lorde
Associated Press | December 13, 2016
University of London students demand ‘white philosophers’ like Plato, Kant be removed from syllabus
www.rt.uk.com | January 9, 2017
Universities warned over 'snowflake' student demands
Camilla Turner | Telegraph.co.uk | January 8, 2017
Post-Truth, the Word of the Year: Feelings Have Replaced Facts
John Stonestreet | BreakPoint.org | November 22, 2016