This can't be true!? I guess I need to speed up my research on countries
to move to and post them on my website, I know a few people who have
mentioned a move based on present day politics and policies.

~

----- Original Message -----
From: "Tobe" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, November 16, 2003 10:46 PM
Subject: [ChiAntiWar] Congress dictating university curricula?


Hey all-

As you can see, this has been forwarded more than a few times.  It's a
little hard to read, but if you do, you'll understand why it's been
forwarded like a MF. They've been going after professors individually,
now they appear to be going after whole academic departments.
As many people as possible need to be aware of what kind of sh*& is
being said in the highest levels of gov't about colleges and
universities that actually teach the truth! More than a letter writing
campaign (as is suggested below), we need a climate in which these
professors, their students, and the schools themselves feel like they
can stand up to this very serious attack.

Tobe

--- Arnold Douglas Jett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

---------------------------------------------------------------------

Congress moves to regulation postcolonial studies

>From Michael Bednar
Department of History
The University of Texas at Austin
Congress Moves to Regulate Postcolonial Studies

Friends,
As many of you who know me well will soon realize, I have become a
political activist for the first time in my life. I am not here to rant,
but to inform you on current legislation that is being debated in the
House of Representatives.

The legislation in question, H.R. 3077, will rewrite the Title VI
legislation that has provided FLAS money to many of us and that also
funds the various area-studies centers in our universities.

In particular, the legislation proposes the creation of an "advisory
board" that may severely impact universities by dictating the curricula
taught, course materials assigned in class, and the faculty who are
hired in institutions  that accept Title VI funding. It gets worse. The
U.S. House of Representative's Subcommittee on Select Education Hearing
on "International Programs in Higher Education and Questions about Bias"
on June 19, 2003

(http://edworkforce.house.gov/hearings/108th/sed/titlevi61903/wl61903.ht
m)
begins with an opening statement by Representative Phil Gringrey that
includes the following passage: "we are here today to learn more about a
number of programs that are authorized and funded under Title VI, which
are some of the oldest programs of support to higher education. These
programs reflect the priority placed by the federal government on
diplomacy, national security, and trade competitiveness. International
studies and education have become an increasingly important and relevant
topic of conversation and consideration in higher education...

However, with mounting global tensions, some programs under the Higher
Education Act that support foreign language and area studies centers
have recently attracted national attention and concern due to the
perception of their teachings and policies."

Testimony provided by Dr. Stanley Kurtz (available from the link above)
portrays areas studies centers as hotbeds of unpatriotic
anti-Americanism. Dr. Kurtz focuses, in particular, on post-colonial
theory and the work of Edward Said's Orientalism in which "Said equated
professors who support American foreign policy with the 19th century
European intellectuals who propped up racist colonial empires. The core
premise of post-colonial theory is that it is  immoral for a scholar to
put his knowledge of foreign languages and cultures at the service of
American power." (quoted from Kurtz's statement found at
http://edworkforce.house.gov/hearings/108th/sed/titlevi61903/kurtz.htm)

Kurtz asserts that the rampant presence of post-colonial theory in
academic circles, with its bias against America and the West, has
produced a corps of professors who refuse to instruct or support (with F
LAS grants) students interested in pursuing careers in the foreign
service and/or intelligence agencies. Kurtz comments that: "We know
that transmissions from the September 11 highjackers [sic] went
untranslated for want of Arabic speakers in our  intelligence agencies.
Given that, and given the ongoing lack of foreign language expertise in
our defense and intelligence agencies, the directors of the Title VI
African studies centers who voted unanimously, just after September 11,
to reaffirm their boycott of the NSEP [National Security Education
Program], have all acted to undermine America's national security, and
its foreign policy. And so has every other Title VI-funded scholar in
Latin American-, African-, and Middle Eastern Studies who has upheld the
long-standing boycott of the NSEP."

The answer, Kurtz proposes, is to create an oversight board that will
link Title VI funding to students training for careers in national
security, defense and intelligence agencies, and the Foreign Service.

How effective was Dr. Kurtz's presentation? The committee not only
believed everything Dr.Kurtz claimed, they even implemented most of his
suggestions, including the "advisory board."

An amended House Resolution, H.R. 3077, proposes to create an
International Education Advisory Board, with appointed members from
homeland security, the Department of Defense, and the National Security
Agency, "to increase accountability by providing advice, counsel, and
recommendations to Congress on international education issues for
higher education." (Quoted from the Sept. 19, 2003 press release of
Congressman John Boehner, committee chairman,
http://edworkforce.house.gov/press/press108/09sep/hr3077psub091703.htm)

The full resolution of H.R. 3077 can be found at
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c108
H.R. 3077 was amended in subcommittee and this amended resolution
elaborates on the composition and role of the International Education
Advisory Board (see especially pages 16-24).

The amended H.R. 3077 can be found at:
http://edworkforce.house.gov/markups/108th/sed/hr3077/917main.htm

Click on the link that says "Amendment in the Nature of a Substitute"
which will download an Adobe Acrobat pdf file. This amended H.R. 3077
has been sent to the full committee, which met on Thursday, September 25
at 11:00 AM to discuss the resolution before sending it to the House of
Representatives.

Just in case you think that I have lost my marbles or that I am
over-reacting, the Higher Education and National Affairs newsletter,
published by the American Council on Education, and available at
http://www.acenet.edu/hena/ includes the following comments on H.R. 3077
(page 1, continued on page 4): "House Republicans intend for H.R. 3077
to build on existing international and foreign language studies Title VI
programs, adding what many in the higher education community believe is
unnecessary federal oversight through a new International Education
Advisory Board."

Federal international education programs were the focus of a House
subcommittee hearing in June, during which one witness testified to a
strong "anti-American" bias in many college and university international
departments which he claimed could possibly undermine American foreign
policy. ACE presented opposing testimony (see
http://www.acenet.edu/washington/international/Hartle.Testimony.pdf).

As a subcommittee press release asserted, this advisory body would be
created in consultation with homeland security  agencies in order to
"increase accountability by providing advice, counsel, and
recommendations to Congress on international education issues for higher
education." Higher education leaders oppose this board on the grounds
that the powers it is granted are so broad that they put institutions in
danger of losing control over their own curricula, hiring practices, and
other aspects of their international programs."

In short, it seems that the House of Representatives is about to
regulate the courses and content that we, as future professors, will
teach in colleges and universities. The possibility that someone in
homeland security will instruct college professors (with Ph.D.s) on the
proper, patriotic, "American-friendly" textbooks that may be used in
class scares and outrages me. This morning, this was news to me. If this
is new to you and if you feel as qually scared and angered that the
government may censure your future academic career, then I urge you to:

 1) distribute this message to other professors and students in area
studies; and

 2) write a handwritten letter (in ink) to your local congressmen and to
John A. Boehner, Chairman of the Full Committee on Education and the
Workforce at the following address:

 John A. Boehner
 1011 Longworth H.O.B.
 Washington, DC 20515

Please refrain from emails and typewritten or computer printouts as
these are often ignored in Congress as being mass-produced by
special-interest groups. Write in ink, in legible penmanship, and let
your voice be heard.

  Best,
  Michael Bednar
  Department of History
  The University of Texas at Austin

---------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Thursday, October 30, 2003 9:47 AM -0500
From: Brenda Coughlin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: undisclosed-recipients
Subject: Congressional bill on "area" and "postcolonial" studies

Friends,

Some of you may have recently received an email of a forwarded letter
from Professor Michael Bednar, in History at UT Austin. The letter talks
about a US congressional bill on government funding of "area studies",
the use of  FLAS grants, and the "bias" in these programs. When I first
read this letter, I truly thought it was a joke, in art because the main
testimony quoted was from a "Dr. Stanley Kurtz", attacking Edward Said
and postcolonial studies. I immediately thought this was all some
elaborate satire on Conrad, etc.

So, I did some research, and in fact Bednar's letter and the hearings
and legislation proposed are all authentic. I've included the text of
Kurtz's testimony below, as well as Bednar's letter. Also the URL for
the hearing  testimony. Other witnesses besides Kurtz include Vivian
Stewart of the Asia Society. Kurtz--an anthropologist who wrote on
"Hindu psychology"--has some choice words on Ella Shohat, Arundhati Roy,
Tariq Ali, Robert Fisk, and the  Kevorkian Center home page, in addition
to Edward Said. "Africa studies" is also a target. And so forth:

http://edworkforce.house.gov/hearings/108th/sed/titlevi61903/wl61903.htm

The bill (HR 3077) is apparently making good progress through the
legislative system.

Apologies if this report is all old news to the rest of you. Cynic about
the US government that I am, even I am amazed. Clearly, some naivete
remains.

Brenda


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