“It is this tradition which has very few female contributions.

“It is this tradition which has very few female contributions. More importantly, it seems to me that artificially inflating the importance of the few female authors that might have existed would falsify the historical record. After all, the whole point of the feminist critique is that female voices were suppressed. This suppression is important to talk about, but you can’t rely on the suppressed voices in order to do so.”

I…

The…

Ehhh.

Read the whole article. It does have some interesting, and difficult-to-resolve, points about academic freedom, but especially in light of the quoted statement I find it hard to avoid the conclusion that the professor just doesn’t get it.

Originally shared by Laura Gibbs

When I read articles like this, it makes me very glad that I have opted instead for building courses in which the students choose the reading, and it is my job to find a truly wide variety of readings that I can make available to them. The students then choose, and the students learn from their own choices as well as from seeing the choices made by the students with whom they are interacting through their blogs and projects, etc. This top-down approach (by professor and/or by committee) does not appeal to me at all. As for the attitude of the professor, every time I have challenged myself to improve my range of reading choices by going out and looking for more, I have often surprised myself by the great things I found by looking. It sounds to me like he is not looking very hard…

https://ino.to/9UXnLWs

0 thoughts on ““It is this tradition which has very few female contributions.

  1. Seems almost as if he’s removing all the parts of the course that women have written about so that he can say, “Well, this particular thing I’m looking at, women haven’t really written about this, so I’m not going to include them, and you can’t stop me because academic freedom.”

  2. Seems almost as if he’s removing all the parts of the course that women have written about so that he can say, “Well, this particular thing I’m looking at, women haven’t really written about this, so I’m not going to include them, and you can’t stop me because academic freedom.”

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