======================================================================
Rule #1: YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
======================================================================


http://chronicle.com/article/Intellectual-Proletarians/125477/
November 28, 2010
Intellectual Proletarians in the 20th Century
By Heather Steffen

Academic labor has lost a lot of ground, and fast, in the last few 
decades. In 1970 roughly three-quarters of professors were on the 
tenure-track; now only 27 percent are, according to the American 
Federation of Teachers. Most critics focus on the recent 
acceleration of this distressing situation, but the precarious 
position of college teachers was felt as early as the Progressive 
Era, when the modern American University first took shape. Looking 
at the difficult conditions of academic labor then—and the efforts 
of Progressive Era reformers—gives us historical perspective and 
insight into today's labor crisis in higher education.

Between 1870 and 1920, the number of institutions of higher 
education in the United States nearly doubled, from 563 to 1,041, 
and the faculty population grew by a factor of almost nine, from 
5,553 to 48,615. In 1870 only 1.1 percent of Americans ages 18 to 
24 were enrolled in postsecondary education; by 1920, 4.7 percent 
were. The average college in 1870 had 10 faculty members and 98 
students, but by 1910, it housed 38 faculty members and 374 
students, with the largest institutions boasting enrollments of 
5,000 or more by 1915. Women and African-Americans entered newly 
founded colleges like Vassar and Spelman in the 19th century, and 
students also began to attend junior colleges and for-profit 
correspondence schools.

The academy's rapid expansion changed how universities were run, 
who was running them, and what was taught. Governing boards, 
previously composed of ministers and clergymen, were stocked with 
businessmen, lawyers, and educators. Professional, medical, and 
graduate schools were added to existing colleges, and the elective 
and course-credit systems individualized undergraduate education. 
Responding to the developing needs of industrial capital, the 
overall goal of higher education shifted from the production of 
genteel citizens to preparation for work in the emerging professions.

Historians of higher education call this period the Age of the 
University, but one could just as accurately describe it as the 
age of university critique. No part of the fledgling institution 
was immune to debate and controversy. Railing against 
businessmen-cum-trustees in his 1918 book, The Higher Learning in 
America, Thorstein Veblen modestly proposed abolishing boards on 
the grounds that "they have ceased to exercise any function other 
than a bootless meddling with academic matters which they do not 
understand." He was equally unreserved in his condemnation of 
university architecture, accusing campuses of "housing the quest 
of truth in an edifice of false pretenses."

A young Randolph S. Bourne became the subject of a New York Times 
article on how "Students Pity Workers" when he editorialized in 
the Columbia paper about a "gaunt scrubwoman" and "undersized, 
starving child" staffing the University. "College life" became a 
popular fascination, and undergraduates alternately praised and 
scorned elite fraternities like those immortalized in Owen 
Johnson's novel Stover at Yale (1912).

For faculty members, the Age of the University was a time of 
reorganization and power struggles. Most faculty members were 
untenured. Pay was considered insufficient to maintain them in the 
proper style, and some professors began their careers with debt 
accrued in graduate school. Ruled by autocratic presidents in 
thrall of plutocratic boards, administrations were derided as 
bloated and controlling. Curricular changes led teachers to 
self-deprecatingly describe themselves as department-store clerks 
hawking credits.

A first wave of Progressive Era criticism of labor conditions in 
academe focused on professors' salaries. Upton Sinclair captured 
the feeling in his book The Goose-Step: A Study of American Higher 
Education (1923). To research the book Sinclair traveled to 25 
cities and interviewed hundreds of educators and students. He 
summarized his findings: "There are few more pitiful proletarians 
in America than the underpaid, overworked, and contemptuously 
ignored rank-and-file college teacher. Everyone has more than 
he—trustees and presidents, coaches and trainers, merchants and 
tailors, architects and building contractors, sometimes even 
masons and carpenters."

Sinclair's description stands in contrast to the widespread belief 
that college teaching became professionalized at the turn of the 
century. Professors were beginning to earn doctorates, more of 
them were turning to specialized research and joining professional 
organizations, and business and government began to consult this 
emerging class of experts. But the trappings of a profession 
didn't initially include increases in salaries or status, and many 
college teachers felt that they lagged behind fellow professionals 
like doctors and lawyers. Angry articles, editorials, and studies 
appeared regularly in popular magazines, academic journals, and 
journals of education.

Skimming the flood of complaints, you get the sense of a work 
force subjected to severe austerity. But that wasn't entirely 
true. As is the case today, economic hardship was unevenly 
distributed across regions, institutions, and ranks. At the top of 
the pay scale, full professors at elite universities were paid 
$2,300 to $2,500 per year in 1908, while their counterparts at 
poorer institutions earned between $200 and $1,300. Instructors 
fared worse at all institutions, with the best-compensated earning 
$1,000 and the rest well below that. To give these numbers some 
context, in 1908 the estimated poverty line for a New York City 
worker's family was around $800, and the mean income of all 
wage-earners in manufacturing was $475. During the period when 
complaints about salaries were fiercest, most professors still 
made around twice what an auto worker would.

A second swell of Progressive Era university activism was aimed at 
defending academic freedom. The dismissal in 1900 of the Stanford 
University sociologist Edward A. Ross—who condemned the use of 
Chinese immigrant labor on the very railroads that made the 
university founder's fortune—was still fresh in the minds of most 
academics in the 1910s, a decade that witnessed many forced 
resignations and dismissals based on professors' political, 
economic, and social views.

In response, the American Association of University Professors was 
founded in 1915. The Association worked not as a union but as a 
professional organization, exposing and chastising restrictive 
universities by investigating and publicizing offenses. What the 
early AAUP couldn't address—and what remains a great threat to 
academic freedom—were quieter methods and various structural means 
of controlling professors. Throughout the Progressive Era, and 
escalating with the first Red Scare during World War I, professors 
worked in an atmosphere of suspicion. Sinclair devotes a chapter 
of The Goose-Step to what he called the "world of 'hush.'" He got 
his first inklings that the faculty might be tongue-tied when he 
received numerous refusals to talk with him and letters from 
victims of administrative harassment pleading to have their names 
removed from the manuscript. Sinclair's notes provide glimpses 
into the paranoid and disappointed affect of the era's academic 
workers: "There is a tremendous absence of freedom, but the 
victims don't realize it; they think they are merely being polite. 
... No man who thinks can tell just when he will become a victim, 
or how he will be tripped up. ... Yes, our men are free; they are 
horses that stand without hitching."

Sinclair concluded The Goose-Step with a call to form a 
professors' union. He wrote that "the formula, 'In union there is 
strength,' applies to brain workers precisely as to hand workers," 
but of the AAUP, "what spoils the usefulness of the professors' 
association is precisely that feeling of class superiority, which 
makes them as fat rabbits to the plutocracy." The professoriate's 
reluctance to align itself with the working class prevented the 
faculty from effectively organizing at the very moment unions may 
have been most influential in determining labor conditions and 
setting precedents in what was then a relatively new institution. 
Though American Federation of Labor and American Federation of 
Teachers locals appeared at a number of colleges in the early 
1920s, by 1929 all but three had disappeared.

The situation of academic labor today is surprisingly similar to 
what it was a century ago. According to the American Federation of 
Teachers, 73 percent of college teachers are nontenured and not on 
the tenure track, leaving them with little recourse if their 
academic freedom is infringed upon. Pay for adjunct instructors 
and stipends for graduate student TA's are often below the minimum 
wage. Administration is the growth sector in university hiring, 
and the relationship between universities and businesses remains a 
subject of heated debate. The expansion of online learning, global 
universities, and for-profit colleges suggests that many students 
prefer to be treated as customers and see no conflict of interest 
when a school both educates and profits from its students. In such 
a world, the curriculum risks losing all trace of its roots in 
liberal education.

The story of academic labor in the 20th century should be plotted 
on an arc rather than a simple downward slope: The decades 
immediately after the Second World War were not only the golden 
age of the university, but also the high point of job security, 
adequate compensation, and freedom for academic workers. So while 
it is accurate to speak of a decline since the 1970s, it is 
mistaken to assume that the conditions afforded by the postwar 
research university were the norm in the long history of American 
academic labor.

Along with this reminder, the struggles of the Progressive Era 
offer several lessons for today: First, the conditions academic 
workers enjoyed at mid-century did not emerge organically as the 
American university developed; they had to be fought for and won, 
and they require continuous defense. Rather than describing tenure 
as an "eroding" institution, for instance, we should see it as 
being dismantled. We need to locate and hold accountable the 
people and policies responsible for today's retrenchment.

Second, professionalism cuts both ways. While organizing as 
professionals (as did the early AAUP) can provide and protect some 
autonomy and power, it can also promote the sense that 
professionals are above the rank of ordinary workers, thereby 
discouraging participation in labor-related struggles and 
encouraging a steep hierarchy within the work force.

Third, universities in America have had sustained and dynamic 
relationships with both the state and industry, and thus 
corporatization and militarization have long histories within the 
academy. Our critiques would benefit from analysis of the causes 
and consequences of earlier contact with corporations and the 
military if the goal is to learn how most effectively to curtail 
their impact and shore up the public purpose of university 
teaching and research.

Like the Progressive Era, our present moment can be a depressing 
one for academic workers. But especially in a situation like our 
own, it's worth taking the time to reflect not only on good times 
past, but also, and more important, on how those good times came 
to be in the first place.

Heather Steffen is a doctoral candidate in literary and cultural 
studies at Carnegie Mellon University. She is working on her 
dissertation, "The Struggle for the University in the Progressive 
Era."

________________________________________________
Send list submissions to: Marxism@lists.econ.utah.edu
Set your options at: 
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/options/marxism/archive%40mail-archive.com

Reply via email to