Passing on the Right
Conservative Professors in the Progressive University
Jon A Shields author Joshua M Dunn Sr author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:14th Apr '16
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Liberals represent a large majority of American university and college faculty, especially in the social sciences and humanities. This is a consistent finding challenged by no serious student. Does minority status affect the work of conservative scholars or the academy as a whole? In Passing on the Right, Dunn and Shields explore the actual experiences of conservative academics, which have long been neglected. While partisans on both sides have been preoccupied with the narrow question of whether or not conservative professors are passed over in hiring and promotion decisions, Dunn and Shields argue that the liberal dominance of the academy may affect conservatives in ways that are far more open to verification - for example, in the case of conservative professors who may censor their comments in public forums and avoid controversial questions in their research, especially prior to tenure. Conversely, minority status may also have its benefits, perhaps allowing conservatives to discover more original research questions and interpretations due to not being able to share the ideological assumptions of most of their liberal colleagues. Drawing on a collection of revealing interviews with conservative professors and graduate students, Dunn and Shields discover how these scholars negotiate their worlds, asking questions such as: How often do conservatives remain closeted? Do they discourage conservative undergraduate students from pursuing academic careers? Do they avoid mentoring conservative student groups? Do they see any professional advantages to being part of a political minority? In short, how does the liberalism of the academy shape conservative scholars and influence their sense of academic freedom? By avoiding partisanship and offering an insightful portrayal of this misunderstood political minority, this book aims to persuade liberal elites to take the minority status of conservative academics more seriously and encourage conservatives to move beyond simplistic caricatures of life in the liberal academy.
informative and well-written study * Paul Hollander, New Criterion *
"Jon Shields and Josh Dunn have produced our first reliable study of academic conservatives, who have found a more comfortable home at the university than many of us imagined. But they remain a slender minority, especially in the humanities and social sciences, which makes the academy a less educational place for all of us. I hope that this careful and eloquent book reminds my fellow liberals about the vital role that conservative professors can play in academic life, if we can open our minds to them. " -Jonathan Zimmerman, Professor of Education and History, New York University
Technological revolutions, acute financial pressures, and deep cultural shifts undermining the traditional humanistic curriculum are forcing a profound rethinking and restructuring of American higher education today, about which the professoriate at its epicenter sometimes seems the least perceptive and prepared. In the midst of this protracted upheaval, Passing on the Right raises the difficult question of political ideology and its implications for academia's mission. It will only help higher education and the society that sustains it if this book is widely read and debated." -Christian Smith, Wm. R. Kenan, Jr. Professor of Sociology, University of Notre Dame
ISBN: 9780199863051
Dimensions: 239mm x 160mm x 25mm
Weight: 499g
256 pages