Posted on 10/17/2018 8:26:24 PM PDT by confederatecarpetbag
Theres nothing the American right likes better than skewering the crazy libs, and oh boy do they have some content on their hands today. As reported by the Wall Street Journal, three leftist scholars decided to prank academia by submitting satirical papers to very real academic journals in the topical vicinity of something called grievance culture. As it turns out, they were phenomenally successful. Read, if you will, the description of this paper by Helen Wilson about rape culture among dogs, and note that it was actually published in a journal called Gender, Place, and Culture:
The author admits that my own anthropocentric frame makes it difficult to judge animal consent. Still, the paper claims dog parks are petri dishes for canine rape culture and issues a call for awareness into the different ways dogs are treated on the basis of their gender and queering behaviors, and the chronic and perennial rape emergency dog parks pose to female dogs.
Thanks to the WSJs Jillian Kay Melchior, who has a working BS detector, we now know that Helen Wilson is actually three people: James Lindsay, math doctorate, Peter Boghossian, assistant professor of philosophy at Portland State, and Helen Pluckrose, English lit scholar. And perhaps prank is too glib a word for the hoax they pulled offit seems the trio of satirists are attempting to shine a light on what they consider an absurd trend in these journals. Their rationale:
The three academics call themselves left-leaning liberals. Yet theyre dismayed by what they describe as a grievance studies takeover of academia, especially its encroachment into the sciences. I think that certain aspects of knowledge production in the United States have been corrupted, Mr. Boghossian says. Anyone who questions research on identity, privilege and oppression risks accusations of bigotry.
Together, they wrote 20 papers under various pseudonyms, seven of which were accepted. To date, four have been published. And they are doozies: One of the trios hoax papers, published in April by the journal Fat Studies, claims bodybuilding is fat-exclusionary and proposes a new classification . . . termed fat bodybuilding, as a fat-inclusive politicized performance.
And: A hoax paper for the Journal of Poetry Therapy describes monthly feminist spirituality meetings, complete with a womb room, and discusses six poems, which Mr. Lindsay generated by algorithm and lightly edited.
And, in the holy hell department:
Affilia, a peer-reviewed journal of women and social work, formally accepted the trios hoax paper, Our Struggle Is My Struggle: Solidarity Feminism as an Intersectional Reply to Neoliberal and Choice Feminism. The second portion of the paper is a rewrite of a chapter from Mein Kampf.
Again, the idea behind the project is to prove that academic journals focused on identity politics are subject to what the authors call absurd and horrific scholarship.
And its a noble goal! Not to mention a painful oneBoghossian expects to get fired from his job, Lindsay doubts hell ever get a professorship, and Pluckrose knows it will make getting into a doctoral program difficult. In making their satirical point, they have potentially sacrificed quite a lot.
But, on the other hand, conservatives already love this, and are going to use it for anti-left propaganda. The National Review is all over it already with two different pieces, the Spectator has covered it, the likes of Mike Cernovich have tweeted about it, and this is surely just the beginning. The story is perfectly designed to conform to a certain right-wing stereotype about left-wingersso wrapped up in identity politics and PC culture that they fall face-first into logical absurdity. Its basically like an episode of South Park set in academia.
And in a way, fair play to themthe facts are the facts, and the idea that these papers could be accepted at actual journals really does make a mockery of certain parts of academia. I would absolutely bury my head in the ground this morning if I were an editor at any of these journals, and its hard to imagine this wont seriously erode trust in the institution of the academic article as a whole. Which is not completely terribleas someone who was PhD adjacent as a Masters student in journalism a few years ago, even I could tell that some types of serious scholarship were stuffed to the core with self-importance and ridiculous, almost frivolous content disguised in the densest possible prose. Calling them to account is a good thing.
Still, its a shame that in conservatives ongoing quest to paint the left as credulous nutjobs blinded by identity politics, a few editors and peer reviewers who should know better have given them such easy ammunition. They will make a meal of this, and theres really no defense.
You can read more about from the authors at Areo.
Ping.
prank academia
Seriously?
low hanging fruit. Folks have been doing this for ages. Some thinking theyre serious.
Another professor did something similar back in the 90s.
http://www.physics.nyu.edu/faculty/sokal/transgress_v2/transgress_v2_singlefile.html
Green meat
http://jir.com/
Somebody submitted a fake article to HuffPo a while back suggesting that white people should lose the vote for 50 years to help end “white privilege”. HuffPo published it without criticism and a lot of their readers agreed.
The Sokal Hoax: The Sham That Shook the Academy
In May 1996 physicist Alan Sokal published an essay in the fashionable academic journal Social Text. The essay quoted hip theorists...the prose was thick with the jargon of poststructuralism. And the point the essay tried to make was counterintuitive: gravity, Sokal argued, was a fiction that society had agreed upon, and science needed to be liberated from its ideological blinders.
When Sokal revealed in the pages of Lingua Franca that he had written the article as a parody, the story hit the front page of the New York Times. It set off a national debate still raging today: Are scholars in the humanities trapped in a jargon-ridden Wonderland? Are scientists deluded in thinking their work is objective? Are literature professors suffering from science envy? Was Sokal’s joke funny? Was the Enlightenment such a bad thing after all? And isn’t it a little bit true that the meaning of gravity is contingent upon your cultural perspective?
Collected here for the first time are Sokal’s original essay on “quantum gravity,” his essay revealing the hoax, the newspaper articles that broke the story, and the angry op-eds, letters, and e-mail exchanges sparked by the hoax from intellectuals across the country, including Stanley Fish, George F. Will, Michael Bérubé, and Katha Pollitt. Also included are extended essays in which a wide range of scholars ponder the long-term lessons of the hoax.
See my post #5.
I remember that one; all of the professors in my grad program were laughing their butts off about it.
OK, so they identified the problem. And the solution is . . .?
bkmrkd
Our recommendation begins by calling upon all major universities to begin a thorough review of these areas of studyTwo other wrong answers are to attack the peer-review system or academia overall. . . . The same is true for the university, which is a center of knowledge production and a gem of modern culture. Fighting the university or the peer-review system would be like killing the patient to end the disease. We expect to see these attacks, especially from political conservatives, and they are wrongheaded.
This sentence really nails it!
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