The university is deciding, in effect, that certain citizens don’t get access to a liberal arts education.
The New York Times
By Leif Weatherby
Mr. Weatherby is an associate professor of German and the director of the Digital Theory Lab at New York University.
In proposing
last week to eliminate 169 faculty positions and cut more than 30
degree programs from its flagship university, West Virginia, the state
with the fourth-highest poverty rate in the country, is engaging in a
kind of educational gerrymandering. If you’re a West Virginian with
plans to attend West Virginia University, be prepared to find yourself
cut out of much of the best education that the school has traditionally
offered, and many of the most basic parts of the education offered by
comparable universities.
The planned
cuts include the school’s program of world languages and literatures,
along with graduate programs in mathematics and other degrees across the
arts and pre-professional programs. The university is deciding, in
effect, that certain citizens don’t get access to a liberal arts
education.
Sadly, this is not just a
local story. Politicians and state officials, often with the help of
management consultants, are making liberal arts education scarce in some
of the poorest states in the union. This trend, typically led
by Republican-controlled legislatures and often masquerading as
budgetary necessity, threatens to have dire long-term effects on our
already polarized and divided nation.
Administrators
at West Virginia University devised the plan to restructure the school
with the help of a consulting company called rpk Group, which also works
with the Universities of Missouri, Kansas and Virginia, among other
schools. The stated purpose of the proposal is to address an expected
decline in student enrollment at the school that will create a projected
$45 million budget deficit.
But
the projected deficit is the result of overly aggressive planning more
than it is a financial liability created by the humanities. E. Gordon
Gee, the president of West Virginia University, once promised that the
school would have 40,000 students by 2020, but the figure is still well
under 30,000 across three campuses and is projected to drop. Mr. Gee is
now covering up his own failures at the expense of his state’s citizens,
instead of putting his efforts toward recruiting and obtaining donor
money to fund a broad education for West Virginians.
What’s
more, cutting humanities programs — which make up a sizable minority of
the majors slated to be cut, alongside pre-professional and technical
programs — is not necessarily the best way to save money. There is
substantial evidence that humanities departments, unlike a majority of college athletics programs, often break even
(and some may even subsidize the sciences). In defense of its proposed
cuts, West Virginia University has cited declining interest in some of
its humanities programs, but the absolute number of students enrolled is
not the only measure of a department’s value.
The
finances aren’t the point, anyway. The humanities are under threat more
broadly across the nation because of the perceived left-wing ideology
of the liberal arts. Book bans, attempts to undermine diversity efforts
and remodeled school curriculums that teach that slavery was about “skill” development
are part of a larger coordinated assault on the supposed “cultural
Marxism” of the humanities. (That absurd idea rests in part on an antisemitic fantasy
in which left-leaning philosophers like Theodor Adorno and Herbert
Marcuse somehow took control of American culture after the Second World
War.) To resist this assault, we must provide broad access to a true
liberal arts education.
The campaign
to overturn the liberal arts is politically motivated, through and
through. The Democratic Party has lost the working class, while the
Republican Party has made electoral gains among the least educated.
With the help of consultants, Republicans seek to gut the (nonprofit or
public) university in the name of a “profit” it doesn’t even intend to
deliver. The point instead is to divide the electorate, and higher
education is the tool.
I grew up in
rural upstate New York. I was lucky: My parents put a liberal arts
education above all other goals. But I know what it looks like when
people are told they can’t have nice things, and it’s ugly. Taking
liberal arts education away from the least privileged — implying that
they are future laborers and nothing else — helps ensure that they
develop a resentment of “elites.” That’s an animus whose political
consequences should be uncomfortably familiar by now.
The
resentment fostered by cuts like those at West Virginia University
won’t be aimed at the true culprits. The long-term effect will be
bitterness toward those who have access to the liberal arts education
that remains on offer in many blue states and at elite universities —
what the scholar Lisa Corrigan calls a “two-tier educational system.” This outcome is likely to fortify many Republican voting strongholds.
Democratic politicians need to fight back in these culture wars, defending the humanities (rather than disparaging them)
and loudly dissenting from the view that education is just job
training. College presidents like Mr. Gee should promote and recruit
rather than cutting and running. An unholy alliance of far-right
ideology and mercenary venture capitalists has politicized the
classroom. We must reject their vision of America and insist that a
liberal arts education accessible to more than just the elite is one of
the great foundations of a democracy.
Leif Weatherby (@leifweatherby) is an associate professor of German and the director of the Digital Theory Lab at New York University.
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