By Noah Rothman
Wednesday,
January 03, 2024
By
the first week of 2024, Harvard had sustained all the damage it could absorb by
standing behind its president, Claudine Gay. On Tuesday, the embattled
academician resigned following weeks of sustained criticism of her handling of
antisemitic episodes on campus and amid mounting allegations of plagiarism. But
Gay is hardly disgraced. The university will allow her to retain her faculty
position despite violating academic standards expected of her students, and she
will still reportedly draw her nearly $900,000 salary. And yet, to hear her
defenders tell it, a grave injustice has been done to Gay and, by association,
all who share her demographic traits. In the process, her defenders are
exposing themselves.
Some
of Gay’s supporters don’t appear to understand their own definitions of what
constitutes racial discrimination — at least, not insofar as they apply to
Gay’s case. Celebrated author and Boston University lecturer Ibram X. Kendi is
among them. The many allegations of plagiarism surrounding Gay’s modest oeuvre
of published works were only a “seemingly legitimate” guise designed to justify
the actions of a “racist mob,” he
insisted. “The question is whether all these people would have
investigated, surveilled, harassed, written about, and attacked her in the same
way if the Harvard president, in this case, would have been White.”
Kendi
seeks to establish a critical standard — one that is easily met. Scholars have
found themselves in far more dire straits when a “pattern of plagiarism” is
uncovered. Academic publications have been withdrawn. Degrees have been rescinded. Careers were lost.
Kendi
is quick to dismiss the overwhelming evidence of plagiarism — evidence that
neither Harvard nor Gay denied. Indeed, the university’s initial decision to
allow their president to revisit her long-ago published works to update them
with proper citations is tantamount to an admission of guilt. But some of Gay’s
defenders insist it wasn’t the plagiarism accusations wot done it at all.
Rather, it was those who wield accusations of antisemitism like a “weapon to
attack education and diversity” who scuttled her presidency. That was Daily
Beast columnist Wajahat
Ali’s takeaway from this affair. “Congrats, America,” he snarked. “You keep
getting played.” The novelist Celeste Ng echoed the charge. “Bad-faith bigots
pretending they’re concerned about antisemitism will happily use women of color
— especially Black women — as a scapegoat and lightning rod for large systemic
issues,” she insisted. “And that people invested in maintaining those systemic
issues will comply.”
For
good or ill, Gay did not lose her post as a result of her performance before a
congressional committee investigating episodes of antisemitic harassment on American
campuses. If she had, she’d have found herself on the outs weeks ago
alongside former University of Pennsylvania president Liz Magill. Despite her
white complexion, Magill’s position became untenable after her institution’s
stakeholders withdrew their support for her presidency after a glib performance
in which she maintained that antisemitism on campus only becomes actionable
when it manifests in violence. Gay turned in the very same performance. But
unlike Penn, Harvard was willing to weather that storm. Of all the things that
says about both Gay and Harvard, we can conclude that hypersensitivity to
charges of anti-Jewish intimidation was not the foremost factor leading to
Gay’s resignation.
Far
too many of Gay’s defenders appear to see her not as an individual capable of
agency and responsible for her own actions. Rather, she has been abstracted
into a symbol around which every black woman in America is expected to rally.
“This
is an attack on every Black woman in this country who’s put a crack in the
glass ceiling,” said National Action Network president Al Sharpton in a statement. Buried in this claim is
the assumption that any other black female academic could easily find
themselves in Gay’s position, which betrays a suspiciously low estimation of
the quality of work produced by black female academics.
Sharpton
promised to dispatch his organization to protest one of Gay’s critics, the
investor Bill Ackman, to shame him for what Sharpton alleges is Ackman’s claim
that Harvard’s outgoing president was little more than a diversity hire. If
that’s an insult, it’s hard to tell given NPR correspondent Eric Deggans’s
demand that Harvard replace Gay with someone possessed of her precise
demographic profile. “The intimidation is the point,” he
wrote. “Will the next president at Harvard stand for diversity? Will that
person be female? Will that person be Black? If not, they have forced several
steps back. And everyone across the school gets the message.”
Harvard
and its defenders do not get to promote Gay’s hiring on the grounds that it represents
a victory for all those who share her accidents of birth while also
theatrically feigning offense in response to anyone who responds skeptically to
the premise. If Gay’s demographic profile is less relevant than her body of
work, as it should be, then it would not be a “step back” to replace her with a
candidate possessing more sterling academic credentials.
In
lunging for the most hyperbolic language to describe Gay’s ordeal, some of her
defenders have minimized the experience endured by black Americans in centuries
past. “The lynch mob that came for Claudine Gay will not be satisfied with her
resignation,” wrote the former editor of Foreign Affairs, David
Rothkopf. The analogy would be grotesque even if Gay was not benefiting
from special dispensation even now, but it’s in comically poor taste given the
meager consequences visited on Gay for the charge of serial plagiarism.
They
have demonstrated that they have a malleable definition of what constitutes
intellectual theft — even those who work in occupations in which that is a
prerequisite. “We should note that Claudine Gay has not been accused of
stealing anyone’s ideas in any of her writings,” CNN reporter Matt
Egan explained. “She has been accused of sort of more like copying
other people’s writings without attribution.” Given his tenuous grasp of the
concept, CNN would be well-advised to apply additional scrutiny to Egan’s
contributions.
They’ve
even gone so far as to demonstrate that what they resent is the equal
application of academic standards across the board. “If we’re going to start
scrutinizing every detail of college presidents’ past writings for technical
attribution issues, then let’s do it,” author and commentator Keith Boykin declared. “Let’s go look at everyone’s
past writings, not just Claudine Gay at Harvard. Let’s put them all under a
microscope and see how they hold up.” Yes, let’s. Indeed, why weren’t we? What
possible factors might have led academia to subordinate the standards it
maintains for students and faculty alike to other unrelated concerns?
These
dramatic displays stand in marked contrast to the banality of Gay’s condition.
The only remarkable thing about her belated decision to stop subjecting Harvard
to reputational harm was how long it took her to reach that conclusion. In
reducing Gay to a series of abstract genetic markers and insisting that
academic standards be only selectively applied, her defenders are doing
Harvard’s outgoing president no favors.
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