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From: Cole, Juan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Beeman Guest Editorial: The Journalism/Think Tank Merry-Go-Round

William O. Beeman

"The Journalism/Think Tank Merry-Go-Round
And the Dilemma of the Academic Public Intellectual"

' [I want to address] the question of the sad, sad state of American
academics in policy formation in the United States today. Think tanks,
where no one ever has to go through peer review before publishing the
most questionable material, are in the ascendancy. Real scholars are
derided as the academy is openly attacked by these quasi-intellectual
bodies. No wonder! If the think-tankers' shoddy methods and
ideological biases were subject to the scrutiny they deserve, 90% of
the garbage that is self-published by their house organs and pushed by
their publicity machinery would never see the light of day.

It is so sad now that governmental bodies are no longer calling on
academic experts for public testimony in even the most crucial matters
where they have unique knowledge. On no subject is this more true than
in the Middle East area. If you are not in a think tank in Washington,
apparently your expertise matters not at all. Never mind that that the
think tank denizens were never in the region, don't know the
languages, and never did any research in their lives. If their
ideology is in line with the White House, that is good enough.

[Teri Gross interviewed a woman on "Fresh Air" last night who had done
research about the same kind of phenomenon occuring with Pentagon
technology, leading to the spending of gigabucks on fake weapons (the
Hafnium bomb).]

The media bears a great deal of responsibility in this matter. Lazy,
news-cycle driven and subject to the pressure of ideology and
publicity flackers, it is so much easier to just call the think tank
down the street, or a PR firm like Benador Associates where someone is
on call and already in suit and tie, or skirted suit to get to the
studio within the next 20 minutes, than to spend the extra half-hour
trying to locate an ISDN feed in . . . Minneapolis or Austin to get
the best possible expertise on a subject at hand. For the print media
a quote--any quote--is often good enough to anchor a story. No time to
wait for someone to call back after a seminar! If the reporter can't
get the quotable phrase on the first phone call, its on to the next,
or once again, to the on-call quotables at the think-tank around the
corner.

Even when someone with real expertise can be located, the media
vitiates the message by making a fetish of "balance"--an odd feature
of American public discourse, documented by my colleague Deborah
Tannen in her classic book, The Argument Culture. This means that
whatever the subject, a pro and con side must be represented--even if
one of the positions is absurd, or representative of an extreme fringe
opinion. This results in match-ups like Paul Krugman debating Bill
O'Reilly on economic matters and other such ludicrous pairings. This
situation has created careers for people like Anne Coulter, David Frum
and Jonah Goldberg, who otherwise know very little--but they are
reliable as "cons" (pun intended) on virtually any topic that requires
an expansion of intellect. No wonder the public doesn't know which way
is up.

Sadly, the academy has reacted badly to this state of affairs--not by
encouraging its members to shine the light on the slime and mold
generated by these propaganda machines, but by fomenting retreat into
its own dark little corner where it can be safe and "uncontroversial."
The better not to run afoul of its more vocal and ideologically driven
alumni and trustees, who believe along with Bill O'Reilly that all
knowledge is just opinion anyway, so why not just tell the
professoriate what they should be teaching, and what positions they
should be espousing? Writing for the public is not only unrewarded by
the academy, it is absolutely detrimental to academic careers. Thus
fine scholars who do decide to speak out are hit both ways--both by
the ideological hacks for whom their truths are uncomfortable, and by
their own institutions who see their public activities as
controversial and undignified.

Contrast this with the situation in Japan, France, Brazil--in fact,
anywhere else in the world--where academics are welcomed and respected
in the field of public discourse, and move readily in and out of
positions of public responsibility. Likewise, scholars of distinction,
such as the incomparable Eric Rouleau, are prized and well-compensated
members of the fourth estate.

Despite these stringencies, those of us who are tenured at
institutions of higher learning have a special responsibility--a
sacred duty--to speak out at every turn to defend free inquiry, and
solid knowledge. We are privileged to be able to have careers in
research, writing and teaching, and are in debt to society for this.
We have the obligation as patriotic citizens and seekers of truth to
use, as Juan has consistently, the fruits of our research and
knowledge to inform not just the dozen or so colleagues who share our
academic sub-specialization, but the public who is hungry for this
material, and in the current intellectual desert in America, who
desperately needs it. '


William O. Beeman
Professor, Anthropology; and Theatre, Speech and Dance
Brown University

Blog and current Op-ed pieces--Culture and International Affairs
(2004-2005 Visiting Professor, Cultural and Social Anthropology,
Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305)

Professor Beeman's latest book: The "Great Satan" vs. The "Mad
Mullahs": How the United States and Iran Demonize Each Other.
(Praeger/Greenwood). '

--
Posted by Juan to Informed Comment at 6/13/2006 06:33:00 AM  __._,_.___

--
Jim Devine / "Economics is a subject profoundly conducive to cliché,
resonant with boredom. On few topics is an American audience so
practiced in turning off its ears and minds. And none can say that the
response is ill advised." -- John Kenneth Galbraith

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