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To the Extreme

December 9, 2009

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Last week this column offered an assessment, not exactly glowing, of Cornel West’s latest book, an autobiography of sorts. The review failed to say anything about race. That will sound like a paradox to some people but it is not meant to be. A commentary on a book by a prominent black academic is not necessarily a commentary on race in America. (Still less need it be an editorial on the state of African-American studies, which some people took my review to be.) Race matters, but it is not all that matters. The quality of the book as such also counts for something.

Nor did the column discuss West’s politics, which are more or less my own. It is not that I am uninterested in either race or politics, but they were not the focus of the piece. Rather, West’s book was. But people seem to want to discuss race and politics -- so let’s.

It is impossible to make any point so clearly that some portion of the audience will not grow wildly indignant because they think you are saying the exact opposite. You may repeat the point in various ways, hoping that the message will prevail. (Redundancy within a signal is what distinguishes it from the noise in a channel.) But there are limits to just how much good this will do. The will to misunderstand seems to be invincible, and some people enjoy indignation very much.

It would have been difficult to make any more explicit than I did that my disappointment with Brother West – and, yes, anger at West for perpetrating something comparable to the “book” that Sarah Palin “wrote” – followed from a deep admiration for his best work. It is a bad thing to see proof of someone’s talent and intellect being siphoned off by the entertainment industry. The corruption of the best is the worst. Such was the feeling my review expressed, more than once, and in more than one way.

Some readers did get the message. A few suggest that it matched their own impressions. “I read The American Evasion of Philosophy at the beginning of my graduate studies,” one person told me “and it changed my life, but now I look at the excerpt from this new book at MSNBC and it makes me feel despair.” Considering that Brother West was published by a prominent vendor of inspirational and self-help books, this seems like a bad sign on a number of levels.

But to a significant layer of the public, West is not someone whose actual work, as such, means anything at all. They celebrate it, or loathe it, but that does not mean they have ever given any part of his work five minutes of thought. For them, West is not neither an intellectual nor even an individual. He is a synecdoche. He stands for black academics in general, or hip hop, or the history of affirmative action, or the entire history of African-American writing beginning with Phyllis Wheatley. Or something.

This figure is an avatar in the video game of the culture wars. Depending on how the player has adjusted the settings, the character is (a) the relentless and noble freedom fighter whose every move on screen strikes a blow for human liberation or (b) Al Sharpton plus Cliff’s Notes.

Now, my own estimate of Cornel West shares nothing with either of those attitudes – nor do I have much time for video games, actual or metaphorical. But that did not keep lots of people from trying to enlist me in the fantasy.

One especially feverish player announced that the column was so racist that it had only just stopped short of sending West a box of fried chicken. It would be patently impossible to demonstrate this from anything the column actually said. But the statement, while lacking any correspondence to reality, could be regarded as at least coherent on its own terms, once the premises were unpacked.

The most important premise being that no white writer can say anything critical about a black writer without having vile and probably violent motives. This axiom is typically nested, in turn, within an assumption that American life is best understood as having two distinct cultural complexes. One is coded white and the other black. They are accessible via distinct (and well-guarded) entrances, and obey incommensurable zoning codes. You are supposed to stay in your proper matrix.

A system of internal colonies, between which a spirit of mutual disinterest prevails, is not my idea of a good society. As a basis for cultural criticism, “separate but equal” is not that appealing a principle. Nor do I feel deeply accountable to any “tolerance” found choking on its own stifled aggression. My sense of life owes a lot to the work of C.L.R. James, who thought that the multiracial crew of the Pequod was what made Moby Dick such a touchstone to understanding American possibilities.

We should leave racial essentialism to the stand-up comedians who finesse it best. This is a hybrid culture. That is perhaps the one good thing you can say about it. I don’t intend to give that up.

In any case, the notion that a white critic has no business assessing a black writer begs an important question. (And not just, "Does that apply vice versa too?")

One of the decisive early influences on my own writing was Anatole Broyard. For many years he was a critic at The New York Times; he died in 1990. Some time before that, I read a collection of his pieces called Aroused By Books, and looking it over again recently, it seems clear that my response was to steal everything about his style and method that wasn’t nailed down. A few years ago, the public learned that Broyard had taken considerable pains to conceal the fact that he came from an African-American family.

By the logic of old-fashioned, real-deal, no-doubt-about-it white supremacy, anybody who looks white but has a “single drop” of “black blood” is actually black. This is binary thinking gone berserk. But it creates a problem for anyone who wants to insist on criticizing the critic for wandering into someone else’s ethnic enclave.

To bring this down to the matter at hand: How do you know I am white? How, indeed, do I? This society tells me that I am. But then, this society tells me plenty of things that serve its own interests – usually in ways it wouldn’t want questioned too closely. Perhaps obsession with patrolling the perimeters of our gated communities is not a good thing. I’m just putting that out there.

In any case, I want to make clear that there is no way I would ever send Cornel West a box of fried chicken. If we’re going to indulge in identity politics, let me just mention that I come from a Southern working-class family. If I had a box of fried chicken, I would eat it myself. Cornel West earns more in a weekend of public speaking than I do from a year of writing. Let him buy his own food.

As to politics.... It is said that American universities are under the control of tenured radicals trying to continue the revolution by other means. This is constantly repeated but it is utter nonsense. A thin layer of such people do exist, but their power is limited. The prevailing culture of the institution seems far more responsive to the spirit of corporate governance than to any belief that “democracy is in the streets.”

On that score, my admiration for Cornel West remains very much alive. People criticizing him as a “typical” leftist professor could not be more mistaken. For many soi-disant radical academics, the policing of one another’s verbal behavior is as close to activism as they will ever get. By contrast, Brother West gives intriguing glimpses of his involvement with the Black Panther Party, the Social Text collective, and the Democratic Socialists of America. Although the book does not mention it, he also contributed to the socialist journal New Politics in the 1980s, when it was barely getting revived again after a long period of suspension. As a member of the current New Politics editorial board, I want to express thanks to him for that, and hope he got the copies sent as payment.

Cornel West's heart is in the right place. You can tell that it beats harder when there is a movement towards justice. He walks the walk. This cannot be taken for granted. But here, again, Brother West proves so terribly disappointing. It conveys nothing, absolutely nothing, of what it is like to work in a movement. Politics is not just exhortation. The ability to make a fiery speech is part of being an activist; that is true. But so is assessing your experience as part of a group of people trying to work together. Not a bit of that comes through in his writing.

“From each according to his abilities,” as the old spiritual says, “to each according to his needs.” The professor’s needs are being well met. It is how he is using his abilities that is in question. This is called taking someone seriously.

My review did so – but at the cost of violating certain norms of etiquette. This was explained to me, after the fact, by a tenured professor who is an admirer of West. A cardinal if unwritten rule of the academic world, it seems, is that one must never go on the record with a pointed criticism of anyone prominent or influential. This was not so much a moral principle as the wisdom required to survive in the marketplace. After all, they might retaliate.

Well, so much for speaking truth to power. You can’t please everyone. It would be pretty craven to try.

This column now approaches its fifth anniversary. At the risk of succumbing to the contagious influence of Brother West, I will say that it has had a mission. It has engaged with hundreds of books and authors with the simple intention of trying to communicate and assess their essences for as wide an audience as cares to pay attention – using a variety of formats and tones, and employing whatever degree of vigor, or earnestness, or broadness of humor, or allusive riffing, or explicit citation, or double-encrypted irony, as may seem necessary and appropriate at any given moment.

“Will it ever stop?” as the poet so memorably puts it,

Yo I don’t know.
Turn off the lights, and I’ll glow.
To the extreme, I rock the mic like a vandal,
Light up the stage and wax a chump like a candle.

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Comments on To the Extreme

  • To the Extreme
  • Posted by stephen bollinger , Director of Creative Services at Georgia Tech on December 9, 2009 at 9:00am EST
  • Your original column on the autobiography "Brother West" reminded me of a criticism I heard from an academic refering to a movie review. The academic wanted movie reviews that deconstructed the film under review and was disappointed in the way the reviewer had performed her job. Her editor, at the local newspaper, thought her job was to give the the paper's wide expanse of readership some clue as to whether they wanted to see the movie or not and had no interest in an academic view.

    You reviewed "Brother West" based on what you wanted to read and you were disappointed. You then expressed your disappointment and explained the basis of your disappointment. Many people will be thrilled with the book, assuming their expectations are quite different from yours. How anyone could read anything other than that into your column amazes me.

  • Plaudits for Scott
  • Posted by Cranky Old Prof on December 9, 2009 at 9:15am EST
  • Keep up the good work Scott! Your columns is one of hte things I enjoy most about IHE.

  • Posted by Levi Stahl on December 9, 2009 at 9:30am EST
  • You've made a strongly argued and well-written defense of a column that I already thought was clear about its premises and positions.

  • Great Column!
  • Posted by Bob on December 9, 2009 at 10:00am EST
  • Someone was writes in the public sphere, and who doesn't nowadays, risks the myriad filters of each reader. Sometimes the message is actually heard. Most times it seems to me the original message is lost in the reverberations inside the skull of the the reader.

    Most folks would not keep their axe close at hand and sharpened, if not for their own insecurities and the agendas driven by them.

    I am guilty of it as well at times, but both of your articles were about as clear as it is possible to be in my estimation. Superb, well thought out and focused. Perhaps your use of college level english leaves some folks behind, but really isn't one reason to read this kind of article in this kind of newsletter to expand ones mind and horizons?!

  • Posted by End it now on December 9, 2009 at 10:15am EST
  • "How do you know I am white? How, indeed, do I? This society tells me that I am. But then, this society tells me plenty of things that serve its own interests – usually in ways it wouldn’t want questioned too closely. Perhaps obsession with patrolling the perimeters of our gated communities is not a good thing. I’m just putting that out there."

    Welcome the fight against affirmative action Mr. McLemee!

  • Well stated
  • Posted by Charisse Montgomery , Director of Communications at U Toledo on December 9, 2009 at 10:30am EST
  • As an African American reader, I found your initial review of Brother West neither racist nor offensive. I agree that this book is not the hard-hitting intellectual masterpiece that West fans have come to expect, but rather a softer, palatable biography for people who may be less familiar with his personal affairs. In fact, I think it's an example of West broadening his appeal after Stand and other projects that have taken him closer to the non-academic public. This adds value to his public persona and will perhaps eventually broaden the discourse and knowledge about his work.

    While I don't think it's accurate or fair to assume that the use of "college level English" is the reason for some people's misunderstandings of the review, it is clear that the lens through which some people view what they see as cultural criticism can be a little cloudy. What I appreciate is that you did not decide to ignore the book because it was written by an African American man, but instead focused on the aspects that were most meaningful to you.

    Keep up the good work.

  • Under Assistant Mid West Provo Man
  • Posted by Benj on December 9, 2009 at 10:30am EST
  • Eat that chicken Scott! My favorite response to your original piece was the first one by the assistant provost. The moral (?) equivalent of "It's All Good."

  • Thanks, Scott
  • Posted by A former university president on December 9, 2009 at 1:00pm EST
  • Thanks, Scott, for such a level-headed and forthcoming commentary on Cornel West and for such an admirably candid establishment of your own position with respect to race and reviewing. If ever we are to make progress in creating an honest discussion of the complexities of intellectual life, we will have to build on contributions such as yours.

  • Ms. Montgomery
  • Posted by Bob on December 9, 2009 at 2:45pm EST
  • I did qualify my remark that only "some" unknown quantity of people might have trouble with the "college level english", but I did not stipulate that it was the only or even the major reason. Again, the whole "lens is opaque" issue. Thanks for proving it.

  • Posted by Sam Robinsta on December 9, 2009 at 2:45pm EST
  • "To bring this down to the matter at hand: How do you know I am white?
    How, indeed, do I?"

    To mangle the great Louis Armstrong, "If you have to ask... then I guess you already know."

    Meanwhile, attempting to discuss a work about race and politics by and concerning an individual at the heart of controversies regarding race and politics (not least the Harvard contretemps to which no small amount of the article was devoted, cap-poppin' and all) while steering clear of race and politics is the same old all-American colorblind con-game.

    In the meantime, heavens forfend that Cornell West and his PC mafia should get it together to oppress you, who have chosen such great power to speak such modest truth to.

    And perhaps it should concern you that those that consider themselves both to your left and your right (because you run neither hot nor cold) should have such symmetric (mis?)-readings of your article:

    http://www.firstthings.com/blogs/firstthoughts/2009/12/02/cornell-west-a-parody-of-an-academic-celebrity/

  • Palin ghostwriter?
  • Posted by David Hemmer on December 9, 2009 at 3:30pm EST
  • "comparable to the “book” that Sarah Palin “wrote”"

    This is so arrogant, do you have any evidence that she didn't write her book? Have you even read the book? Having listened to many of her speeches and now recently read the book, it is very clearly written in her own voice. Did she have good editors? Certainly. But memoirs by Obama and Hillary Clinton had at least as much ghostwriting, in Clinton's case there was an acknowledged ghostwriter on the cover.

  • Re: Palin ghostwriter?
  • Posted by Doctor Slack on December 9, 2009 at 5:45pm EST
  • David Hemmer writes: "This is so arrogant, do you have any evidence that she didn't write her book?"

    Lynn Vincent is extremely well-publicized as the ghostwriter of Going Rogue. She's credited as a "co-author," which in celebrity memoir terms typically means that the subject furnished the book's basic structure and subject matter and their "co-author" did the actual writing. It's the model used to produce the bulk of celebrity-"authored" tomes on the shelves; Miles Davis' autobiography was "co-authored" in the same way by Quincy Troupe.

    A technically skilled ghostwriter has an "ear" for the voice of their subject and can reproduce it or something close to it.

  • Posted by eastwest on December 9, 2009 at 5:45pm EST
  • Thanks, Scott, for reading and thinking and then writing. Some topics are so touchy, people can't read straight. I look forward to your columns each week.

  • Ghost writing
  • Posted by Jim Farmelant on December 9, 2009 at 10:30pm EST
  • I still don't understand why someone like Cornel West would require the services of a ghost writer. I take it that when he was writing books like The American Evasion of Philosophy or The Ethical Dimensions of Marxist Thought, he did not have a ghost assisting him. He no doubt had some good editors to help prepare those books for publication, but I take it that he did not require the assistance of a ghost who can reproduce the "voice of their subject." What gives here? And what does Princeton think of this?

  • West has been irrelevant for decades
  • Posted by dr. love on December 10, 2009 at 5:15am EST
  • West has been irrelevant for decades. See Leon Wieseltier's takedown in the New Republic back before some of these fledging anti-racists were even born. The only thing wrong with Scott's piece is that he took a sledgehammer to a gnat.

  • Posted on December 10, 2009 at 7:45am EST
  • Since you’ve highlighted your disappointment about Cornel West having slid from ‘scholarship’ to ‘entertainment’, I’m wondering what exactly disappoints you here. Even in his early ‘scholarly’ works, West was prone alliterative allusiveness, which came to be increasingly married to a personalised (self-referential, if you will) mode of address. Yes, I know at one point West promised various tomes on Royce, blah, blah, but is the world so bereft without them? And yes, he’s been an Ivy League professor all his life, but the value of a professor (especially after tenure) lies in more than simply churning out scholarly tomes on a regular basis. If he is able to transform the lives of students who might not otherwise be reached, and also communicate with still wider audiences, then hasn’t he earned his high salary? West has managed to convert his long-standing transcendentalist version of pragmatism into a media-friendly presence that provides an uplifting and intelligent message to the African-American community, and perhaps elsewhere. It is not so different in kind from what we normally admire in White liberal arts instructors. In fact, we normally settle for much less in them. In any case, Scott, please stop digging!

  • Dr. Slack
  • Posted by David Hemmer on December 10, 2009 at 9:00am EST
  • Dr. Slack why don't you buy the book. She is NOT credited as a coauthor, she's not credited at all except in the acknowledgments, along with half a dozen other people.

  • Epiphany
  • Posted by Ralph Hitchens at Computer Sciences Corp. on December 10, 2009 at 9:30am EST
  • As Nathan Regener said, "sometimes you need the clear epiphany that an ass kicking provides." So let it be with Prof. West, & I hope you succeed where Larry Summers failed.

  • attention surplus disorder
  • Posted by Carl on December 10, 2009 at 11:15am EST
  • I've now read the original review, which I think is terrific. Balanced, fair, well-informed, engagingly written, a principled personal view that makes no claim to exhaust all possible issues; and genuinely helpful about whether I want to spend time or money reading this book or not. Exemplary.

    Of course we're all familiar with the internet style of narrowminded commentary pontification that this here followup responds to, so I assumed there'd be lot of that in the comment thread back at the review. Instead, I found the comments overwhelmingly supportive. Some even contribute dialogically and substantively to the construction of a rich and nuanced understanding of Brother West's life and work. The few negative comments are clear about their partisanship and buried in a (deserved) pigpile of positivity.

    So what the hell are you on about, man? Are you really that sensitive? If so, do you not get the irony of your hair trigger about other people with a hair trigger? What am I missing?

  • What you're missing, Carl
  • Posted on December 10, 2009 at 2:45pm EST
  • Unfortunately you've assumed that McLemee here is responding to only those who commented on the original IHE piece on IHE itself. There are other threads, other audiences, elsewhere:

    http://crookedtimber.org/2009/12/02/decline-of-the-west/

  • Re: Palin ghostwriter?
  • Posted by Doctor Slack on December 10, 2009 at 8:30pm EST
  • Jim Farmelant: It is indeed bizarre that West used a ghostwriter. He shouldn't have needed it, which is why Scott took a crack at him for it. And no, I've no idea what he was thinking. (Palin, having demonstrated shall we say, not as much "linguistic facility" is more explicable.)

    David Hemmer: "Dr. Slack why don't you buy the book. She is NOT credited as a coauthor." She may not be explicitly so credited on the cover. Nevertheless Lynn Vincent's having ghostwritten/"co-authored" that book is not remotely any sort of secret whatsoever. You are wasting your time in trying to pretend there should be controversy over whether it happened.

  • (Oh, one other thing for Dave Hemmer...)
  • Posted by Doctor Slack on December 10, 2009 at 8:30pm EST
  • Many online retailers do in fact credit Lynn Vincent as coauthor of <i>Going Rogue</i>, incindentally. As see here:

    http://www.allbookstores.com/book/9780061979552/Going_Rogue_An_American_Life.html

    (Vincent's involvement with the book created something of a furore in the left blogosphere because of her apparent ties to Dominionism and white supremacism, one of the reasons Palin's book attracted the attention it has.)

  • i agree with anonymous 7:45AM
  • Posted on December 11, 2009 at 5:45am EST
  • Scott you are an excellent columnist and I enjoy reading IHE regularly. I don't think you meant to send anyone fried chicken. However, I do find 7:45AM's comments intriguing, and I wonder if you do too? Isn't it possible that West's new book (which I have not even seen yet!) serves a meaningful purpose in the trajectory of his work as a public intellectual? As an African-American public intellectual? Maybe at some point we will give up the illusion that race, gender, class, or sexuality are simply detachable categories that we can choose to include or not in our "academic" analysis of cultural texts.

  • Passive-aggressiveness
  • Posted by Doctor Slack on December 11, 2009 at 1:00pm EST
  • anonymous poster at 7:45 (who surely isn't Kathleen Lowrey, I hope...): "Since you’ve highlighted your disappointment about Cornel West having slid from ‘scholarship’ to ‘entertainment’, I’m wondering what exactly disappoints you here."

    This is a silly thing to say. Scott was exceedingly clear about what disappoints him. He isolated and expounded on several very specific examples of it in the initial review. Why respond to it with a bunch of vague glurge and (false) implications that "we" would be praising a book like Brother West if a white liberal academic had produced it?

    "Scott, please stop digging!"

    This is the progressive version of an evangelical passive-aggressive classic: "I am praying for you." In both cases, it never seems to occur to the originators that maybe they'd be better off praying for themselves, or that maybe they ought to be concerned with their own shovel, that person they're talking to aren't the ones who've dug themselves into a hole. It really, really should occur to some of them. This is such a case.

  • 7.45 am again
  • Posted by Steve Fuller , Department of Sociology at University of Warwick on December 11, 2009 at 4:15pm EST
  • I am not sure why my name hasn't been appearing in my posts. It's not deliberate on my part.

    In any case, my point is not that Scott would be defending West's book, had it been written by a White guy. My point is that Scott has a very narrow sense of what West should be up to in general, which is what comes out most strongly from the book review. The book itself is clearly some sort of apologia for the kind of life that West has more or less decided to lead. It is basically meant to provide some insight into the practice that goes along with the preaching. It is an appropriate book for him to write because he does set himself up as a kind of exemplar, and here we get a sense of what it looks like, warts and all. You may not like the example he sets, and you may not even like the fact that he's trying to set an example. All of that is worth talking about. However, it is disingenuous, if not downright obtuse, to review the book as if it were a piece of failed or deferred scholarship. That's why I focused on Scott's disappointment of West having turned from scholarship to entertainment. That to me seems the real issue: Scott has something like a moral objection to West's academic conduct, and the book under review brings out everything he finds objectionable. As I explained in my previous post, I have no problem whatsoever with West's conduct.