Another academic has their knickers in a twist. Who’s turn is it to add to the nation’s ever-expanding mountain of contorted scholarly undergarments? That would be Dean’s Chair in Communications at Massey University, Professor Mohan Dutta.
Professor Dutta last week penned a uniquely deranged opinion piece entitled “The far-right’s cancel culture and communication studies”.
In this piece, he takes aim at writer Karl du Fresne’s criticism of bias in academia, and, like plenty before him, advocates against the free and open discussion of ideas, citing the imagined emergence of a cogent network of far-right conspiratorial mis informants polluting the arena of political discourse.
Much like an old carton of goat’s milk covered in mayonnaise on a sunny porch, this argument is becoming increasingly difficult to swallow.
Dutta misleads his readers by placing at the centre of his article a piece focusing on the pitfalls of a specific discipline (Communications courses) and attempts to engineer an entirely non-existent correlation between the public debate of these concerns and a wider global rise in hate, colonial oppression, and far-right rhetoric.
Dutta begins by asserting that ‘the far right has launched attacks targeting academics and universities, both in digital and public spaces, resulting in violence on campus’ and that ‘it’s obsession with academics and journalists studying and covering misinformation and hate, have made carrying out research and sharing it publicly unsafe’.
In the same breath he references The Platform, and a piece written by me criticising Journalism academic Dr Greg Treadwell; “attend here to The Platform’s targeting of journalism academic Dr Greg Treadwell for his public writing on harmful disinformation’.
You might remember last year an article I wrote in response to Treadwell, who espoused his disturbing vision for the immediate future of journalism in a piece published to Newsroom. Mr Treadwell did not ‘carry out research’. He watched Fire and Fury once, decided journalism doesn’t need ‘balance’ anymore and then wrote a preachy, self-righteous column in which he tried to compare a three-week protest on Molesworth Street to reporting on war crimes in the Middle East. Seriously.
First off - I never ‘targeted’ anyone. Treadwell wrote an opinion piece calling for sweeping changes to the principles of journalism which he refused to defend when given the opportunity, and I wrote a piece criticizing his view and drawing attention to his hypocrisy. As far as I can tell, criticising ideas and viewpoints has been standard practice within academia since its inception.
Second – That Dutta characterises criticism of ideas as an ‘attack’ and then accuses the author of inciting violence on campus is among the more outrageous abuses of academic authority I’ve ever observed.
Despite what the voices in Professor Dutta’s head would have you believe, there is absolutely no connection between the robust contest of ideas and whatever violence he is alluding to, and the spurious construction of this correlation in the minds of his students is a significant contributor to the wider issue with modern public discourse that Karl du Fresne and others like him are attempting to highlight.
What does Dutta make of this rebuttal to his outrage? Who could say. The academic specialising in ‘communications’ has blocked most people who disagree with him on most platforms and has in the past advertised his disdain for discourse. Attend here to his article in E-tangata in which he denounces dialogue as a tool for ‘reproducing and magnifying the disinformation and hate perpetrated by white supremacists’.
What a fascinating view on public discourse for a dean’s chair in communications to hold. What a source of a great concern it should be that a man in such a position has written anything under the subheading ‘whiteness and dialogue’, let alone this; “the uncritical and celebratory view of dialogue as a human right reflects the whiteness of the mainstream approaches to dialogue, which upholds as universal the values of the dominant white culture’.
What utter word salad. This apparent uprising of opposition to freedom of speech, and clear disdain for the foundations of academic and political discourse that have given way to some of the greatest advances in human and societal thinking in history is denigrating our approach to dialogue.
The unhinged views of people like Mohan Dutta should be viewed with absolute contempt by anyone with even a modicum of respect for academic and political processes.
As for why Mohan won’t front up to publicly defend his intellectually desolate ideas – he seeks refuge in the claim that The Platform and other independent media are proponents of a vast web of conspiratorial right-wing agents of destruction with designs against impending changes to power structures, and therefore his refusal to engage is evidence of his upstanding moral fortitude and cause for a hearty pat on the back.
I would offer a counter suggestion however…
It is generally believed that the most ignorant and indefensible of ideas wilt the fastest under the light of public scrutiny, which is an adage that I very much doubt has escaped Mr Dutta’s consideration. Take from that what you will.
Ben Espiner produces the breakfast show on The Platform. He has a BA in Political Science and English Literature from Victoria University of Wellington. This article was originally published by ThePlatform.kiwi and is published here with kind permission.
Dutta misleads his readers by placing at the centre of his article a piece focusing on the pitfalls of a specific discipline (Communications courses) and attempts to engineer an entirely non-existent correlation between the public debate of these concerns and a wider global rise in hate, colonial oppression, and far-right rhetoric.
Dutta begins by asserting that ‘the far right has launched attacks targeting academics and universities, both in digital and public spaces, resulting in violence on campus’ and that ‘it’s obsession with academics and journalists studying and covering misinformation and hate, have made carrying out research and sharing it publicly unsafe’.
In the same breath he references The Platform, and a piece written by me criticising Journalism academic Dr Greg Treadwell; “attend here to The Platform’s targeting of journalism academic Dr Greg Treadwell for his public writing on harmful disinformation’.
You might remember last year an article I wrote in response to Treadwell, who espoused his disturbing vision for the immediate future of journalism in a piece published to Newsroom. Mr Treadwell did not ‘carry out research’. He watched Fire and Fury once, decided journalism doesn’t need ‘balance’ anymore and then wrote a preachy, self-righteous column in which he tried to compare a three-week protest on Molesworth Street to reporting on war crimes in the Middle East. Seriously.
First off - I never ‘targeted’ anyone. Treadwell wrote an opinion piece calling for sweeping changes to the principles of journalism which he refused to defend when given the opportunity, and I wrote a piece criticizing his view and drawing attention to his hypocrisy. As far as I can tell, criticising ideas and viewpoints has been standard practice within academia since its inception.
Second – That Dutta characterises criticism of ideas as an ‘attack’ and then accuses the author of inciting violence on campus is among the more outrageous abuses of academic authority I’ve ever observed.
Despite what the voices in Professor Dutta’s head would have you believe, there is absolutely no connection between the robust contest of ideas and whatever violence he is alluding to, and the spurious construction of this correlation in the minds of his students is a significant contributor to the wider issue with modern public discourse that Karl du Fresne and others like him are attempting to highlight.
What does Dutta make of this rebuttal to his outrage? Who could say. The academic specialising in ‘communications’ has blocked most people who disagree with him on most platforms and has in the past advertised his disdain for discourse. Attend here to his article in E-tangata in which he denounces dialogue as a tool for ‘reproducing and magnifying the disinformation and hate perpetrated by white supremacists’.
What a fascinating view on public discourse for a dean’s chair in communications to hold. What a source of a great concern it should be that a man in such a position has written anything under the subheading ‘whiteness and dialogue’, let alone this; “the uncritical and celebratory view of dialogue as a human right reflects the whiteness of the mainstream approaches to dialogue, which upholds as universal the values of the dominant white culture’.
What utter word salad. This apparent uprising of opposition to freedom of speech, and clear disdain for the foundations of academic and political discourse that have given way to some of the greatest advances in human and societal thinking in history is denigrating our approach to dialogue.
The unhinged views of people like Mohan Dutta should be viewed with absolute contempt by anyone with even a modicum of respect for academic and political processes.
As for why Mohan won’t front up to publicly defend his intellectually desolate ideas – he seeks refuge in the claim that The Platform and other independent media are proponents of a vast web of conspiratorial right-wing agents of destruction with designs against impending changes to power structures, and therefore his refusal to engage is evidence of his upstanding moral fortitude and cause for a hearty pat on the back.
I would offer a counter suggestion however…
It is generally believed that the most ignorant and indefensible of ideas wilt the fastest under the light of public scrutiny, which is an adage that I very much doubt has escaped Mr Dutta’s consideration. Take from that what you will.
Ben Espiner produces the breakfast show on The Platform. He has a BA in Political Science and English Literature from Victoria University of Wellington. This article was originally published by ThePlatform.kiwi and is published here with kind permission.
13 comments:
There was a time when those who held positions such as "Professor" were held in high regard and commanded our respect. Alas, with nutters, like Dutta and the corrupt, like Claire Charters, those days are well and truly gone and, rather than respect, they deserve our contempt for they represent the antithesis of the scholarship and honesty those roles hitherto once required.
One can only ponder the calibre of those appointing these people to such roles and also conclude why it's no wonder these institutions are now invariably in financial difficulty.
If Dutta the nutta returned to the country of his origin and heaps more academics of similar wokeness did the same maybe NZ would return to the tolerant society we once were. Most of them bring their fanatical biased ignorance with them and create hate where there was none before. Kiwialan.
Mohan Dutta is not a Professor of Communications, that's for sure. He nothing more than a poorly qualified spin doctor.
I thought immigrants had to pass a certain level of real education.
Having read Dutta's long, bitter and almost pathological diatribes and his incomprehensible twitter rantings, I do not believe it would be possible to have anything remotely like a balanced debate with him.
It is really very clear is that Dutta has got major attitude problems. His prolonged racist rants are indicative of an extreme and unbalanced mind.
Dutta, like most marxofascists, is good at doing what he accuses others of doing even when they don't. It's an old ploy and one that has become very tiresome for those of us who can see through it.
Dean’s Chair in Communications at Massey University, Professor Mohan Dutta.
So Dutta is the Massey expert on "communications"
Yeah, right !!
Here is an example of his "communications" :-
"Based on academic-activist collaborations, the culture-centered approach uses fieldwork, resistive strategies for performance and dialogue-based reflexive participation to create entry points for listening to the voices of communities at the global margins. At the core of his research agenda is the activist emphasis on provincializing Eurocentric knowledge structures, and de-centering hegemonic knowledge constructions through subaltern participation. "
This is not communication. It is gibberish.
Yeah, Doug. Absolutely!
People like Dutta use flowery language to confuse, not communicate.
It's designed to intimidate the reader by making them feel stupid because they don't understand it.
Thing is, it doesn't actually make sense and Dutta couldn't give a clear definition of all his verbose tosh if his life membership of the Disinformation Project depended on it.
He's hiding his miserable inability to do his job behind a smokescreen of verbal diarrhea. The guy's a woke joke!
Raises an issue : why would Massey university appoint Dutta to a professorship in communications despite his known background and opinions -just about every journalist you meet today has passed through the hands of Dutta or his equivalent and they all have done political science - but virtually none of todays journalists have any units in a real science - time to cutting funding to university’s that persist in loading their staff with Marxist’s and egoists like him - time to ask serious questions of university appointment process
As George Orwell said, "Some ideas are so silly that only intellectuals believe them ".
Academics are very proud of their knowledge and intellectual acumen.This is displayed by Dutta' communications which reveal his arrogance in believing he is entitled in promoting the idea,to students, of relegating those with a belief in the values and knowledge of western culture to being unsophisticated peasants. Well that's what provincialism means ! We on this site criticizing him automatically, belong in this camp.
Subaltern is a term from critical race theory derived from the determination, using any means at all,'including trickery and hiding behind the utopian concept, of speaking truth to power.The leaders project themselves as revolutionaries aiming to forcefully and strategically mythologize themselves as victims and subalterns, yet maintaining a power -laden situations. They make this possible by rewriting history. ( Piece in quote marks copied from internet 'Contesting the Subaltern Narrative').
Shame on Massey for employing such a destructive individual with ideas so alien to NZ values and culture. It is all lies and deceit.
Surely Massey have by now enough ammuniton to sack him. Presumably they receive legal advice on contracts to protect from such avid nutters.
Certainly won’t be recommending Massey University to anybody
Thanks Ben, great article and highly entertaining, your use of language is brilliant AND totally understandable. Perhaps you should be head of Communications at Massey!
People need to understand if it was your 👪 family It has bought tears too my eyes to think that such devastation can do this too little babies and the innocent.
We here in New Zealand value life in every shape and form. I of Maori and European decent could never use hate against who I am I love who I am what runs through every humans body no matter who you are your blood and your life force is the same as everyone throughout the world
This has been one of the saddest day's in my life
Remember the holocaust Like our people who served in the war we will remember them Jewish ✡ people
Nga mihi Evon Moir
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