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Marxism Thriving on American Campuses
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12337 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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1 / 1987 |
3,794 Words |
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Herbert London Herbert London is dean of the Gallatin Division of New
York University and Senior Fellow of the Hudson Institute. |
Most people don't take Marxist studies seriously - not even academics, who are disinclined to accept its methodology and prescriptions. Yet while this statement is true, it is certainly not the whole truth. The strides made by Marxism at American universities in the last two decades are breathtaking. Every discipline has been affected by its preachment, and almost every faculty now counts among its members a resident Marxist scholar.
According to the editors of The Left Academy, four Marxist inspired textbooks on American government were published between 1970 and 1982. Before then, there were none. In the same period, three of the most prestigious university publishers, Cambridge, Oxford, and Princeton, issued books on Marx and Marxism, almost all of them quite sympathetic. There are more than 400 courses offered today on American campuses in Marxist philosophy; in the 1960s only a handful were being taught.
In addition, two self-declared Marxist historians, Eugene Genovese and William A. Williams, were elected president of the Organization of American Historians in successive elections, and Louis Kampf, a radical with Marxist predilections, was elected president of the Modern Language Association.
Although none of these Marxist intellectuals would claim to be using his professional eminence to subvert American political institutions, their academic success tells much about American university life. American universities have gone from discriminating against revolutionary socialists to embracing them as professional spokesmen.
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