http://ift.tt/1n2JkTa
Quote:
Is an academic discussion of free speech potentially traumatic? A recent panel for Smith College alumnae aimed at challenging the ideological echo chamber elicited this ominous trigger/content warning when a transcript appeared in the campus newspaper: Racism/racial slurs, ableist slurs, antisemitic language, anti-Muslim/Islamophobic language, anti-immigrant language, sexist/misogynistic slurs, references to race-based violence, references to antisemitic violence. No one on this panel, in which I participated, trafficked in slurs. So what prompted the warning? Smith President Kathleen McCartney had joked, Were just wild and crazy, arent we? In the transcript, crazy was replaced by the notation: [ableist slur]. One of my fellow panelists mentioned that the State Department had for a time banned the words jihad, Islamist and caliphate which the transcript flagged as anti-Muslim/Islamophobic language. I described the case of a Brandeis professor disciplined for saying wetback while explaining its use as a pejorative. The word was replaced in the transcript by [anti-Latin@/anti-immigrant slur]. Discussing the teaching of Huckleberry Finn, I questioned the use of euphemisms such as the n-word and, in doing so, uttered that forbidden word. I described what I thought was the obvious difference between quoting a word in the context of discussing language, literature or prejudice and hurling it as an epithet. Two of the panelists challenged me. The audience of 300 to 400 people listened to our spirited, friendly debate and didnt appear angry or shocked. But back on campus, I was quickly branded a racist, and I was charged in the Huffington Post with committing an explicit act of racial violence. McCartney subsequently apologized that some students and faculty were hurt and made to feel unsafe by my remarks. [...] |
Still [ablist slur] after all these years
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