Versions of Academic Freedom
From Professionalism to Revolution
Versions of Academic Freedom
From Professionalism to Revolution
Depending on who’s talking, academic freedom is an essential bulwark of democracy, an absurd fig leaf disguising liberal agendas, or, most often, some in-between muddle that both exaggerates its own importance and misunderstands its actual value to scholarship. Fish enters the fray with his typical clear-eyed, no-nonsense analysis. The crucial question, he says, is located in the phrase “academic freedom” itself: Do you emphasize “academic” or “freedom”? The former, he shows, suggests a limited, professional freedom, while the conception of freedom implied by the latter could expand almost infinitely. Guided by that distinction, Fish analyzes various arguments for the value of academic freedom: Is academic freedom a contribution to society’s common good? Does it authorize professors to critique the status quo, both inside and outside the university? Does it license and even require the overturning of all received ideas and policies? Is it an engine of revolution? Are academics inherently different from other professionals? Or is academia just a job, and academic freedom merely a tool for doing that job?
No reader of Fish will be surprised by the deftness with which he dismantles weak arguments, corrects misconceptions, and clarifies muddy arguments. And while his conclusion—that academic freedom is simply a tool, an essential one, for doing a job—may surprise, it is unquestionably bracing. Stripping away the mystifications that obscure academic freedom allows its beneficiaries to concentrate on what they should be doing: following their intellectual interests and furthering scholarship.
Read an excerpt.
192 pages | 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 | © 2014
The Rice University Campbell Lectures
Education: Education--Economics, Law, Politics
Law and Legal Studies: Law and Society
Philosophy: Ethics
Political Science: Judicial Politics
Reviews
Table of Contents
Preface
1. Academic Freedom Studies
The Five Schools
2. The “It’s Just a Job” School
Professionalism, Pure and Simple
3. The “For the Common Good” School
Academic Freedom, Shared Governance, and Democracy
4. Professionalism vs. Critique
The Post-Butler Debates
5. Academic Exceptionalism and Public Employee Law
6. Virtue before Professionalism
The Road to Revolution
Coda
Appendix
Academic Freedom, the First Amendment, and Holocaust Denial (a talk given by the author at Rice University, April 2012)
Works Cited
Index
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