It is hardly surprising that the Australian National University’s National Tertiary Education Union branch president, Matthew King, has attacked the university’s decision to establish a Ramsay Centre for Western Civilisation.
According to King, as cited in the Campus Morning Mail
yesterday, the centre is guilty of promoting “a narrow, radically conservative
program” promulgating the “alleged superiority of Western culture and
civilisation”.
And King is not alone in his critique of the decision to host
the centre. Student association president Eleanor Kay argues: “Western
civilisation is often used as a rhetorical tool to continue the racist
prioritisation of Western history over other cultures.”
This is the latest salvo in the long-running culture wars where
relativism prevails and critics condemn any suggestion that the benefits of
Western civilisation should be acknowledged. Since the late 1960s, when
students from the Sorbonne took to the Parisian streets celebrating Mao
Zedong’s Cultural Revolution and calling for a proletarian uprising, academics
such as Louis Althusser, Pierre Bourdieu and Michel Foucault have argued that
the way to overthrow capitalism is to take the long march through institutions
such as universities.
According to academics committed to cultural-left theory exemplified
by postmodernism, deconstructionism, neo-Marxism and feminist, gender and
postcolonial theories, Western civilisation is Eurocentric, patriarchal,
elitist and oppressive. A university education, instead of being dedicated to
the search for wisdom and truth, is condemned as a key element of the
“ideological state apparatus” used to marginalise and oppress so-called victim
groups.
As detailed in Allan Bloom’s The
Closing of the American Mind, Roger Kimball’s Tenured Radicals and Dinesh D’Souza’s Illiberal Education, students on US campuses
argue that a liberal education grounded in Matthew Arnold’s “the best that
has been thought and said” reinforces capitalism. The result, as noted by
Christopher Lasch, is a liberal arts education based on the pursuit of
“universal, transcendent truth” is no longer defensible as it simply cloaks the
self-serving power of “white Eurocentric males”.
Australian universities and humanities subjects associated with
the Western cultural tradition have suffered a similar fate.
Merv Bendle of James Cook University says academics, instead of
being impartial, advocate “politically correct positions which are widely
shared and immune to criticism”. Detailing what he sees as the disintegration of
Western culture caused by “an ideological contagion of shame and
self-loathing”, Bendle says this “nihilistic world view is now institutionalised
throughout Western academia”.
John Carroll, an emeritus professor at La Trobe University, puts
a similar case when arguing that Australia’s universities are no longer
committed to rationality exemplified by “the Western tradition since classical
Greece”. In a Quadrant article
titled “Why I Became a Political Conservative”, Carroll writes: “Australia becomes
racist, cruel to refugees, misogynist, homophobic and increasingly riven by inequality.
The tropes endure, with Islam the current exploited and oppressed repository of
virtue.”
As detailed in Philippe Paquet’s biography of Pierre Ryckmans,
who taught at ANU and University of Sydney, such is the dominance of radical
theory that the ideal of a university associated with Cardinal Newman is no
longer tenable. Ryckmans argued “the university as Western civilisation knew it
is now virtually dead” and that “its death has hardly registered in the
consciousness of the public, and even of a majority of academics themselves”.
Not only is it entirely defensible that the ANU establish a
Ramsay Centre for Western Civilisation to address the imbalance caused by
the cultural left’s dominance, but the reality is that there are existing
centres promoting politically correct causes immune from criticism.
The University of Melbourne’s Asia Institute is committed to
providing “leadership in the study of the intellectual, legal,
politico-economic, cultural and religious traditions and transformations of
Asia and the Islamic world”.
Monash University has a Centre of Southeast Asian Studies and
Charles Sturt University the school of indigenous Australian studies where the
intention is to provide opportunities to build “social, human and economic
identity for indigenous peoples across Australia”.
In the Monty Python skit “What have the Romans done for us?”,
the Roman occupation is condemned except for the realisation that, for all its
faults, it provided sanitation, roads, irrigation, wine, education, health,
medicine, public baths and peace.
The same can be said for Western civilisation. Arthur M.
Schlesinger Jr argued: “The crimes committed by the West have produced their
own antidotes. They have produced great movements to end slavery, to raise the
status of women, to abolish torture, to combat racism, to defend freedom of
inquiry and expression, to advance personal liberty and human rights.”
The same cannot be said for those totalitarian regimes to our
north, including China, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam and North Korea, where the
freedoms and liberties grounded in Western civilisation and that we take for
granted are denied to millions.
Kevin Donnelly is a senior research
fellow at the Australian Catholic University and author of How Political
Correctness is Destroying Australia (Wilkinson Press).
1 comment:
Global government demands the dumbing down of the population to ensure leadership dominance & control, without challenge.
Having indoctrinated nearly two generations now, there is not much left too be done..
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