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Tuesday Aug 18, 2009
Inside the Middle East: Fear-mongering at Yale Posted by Martin Kramer
Comments: 17
Flash back to 2006. Professor Marcia Inhorn, a medical anthropologist and director of the Center for Middle Eastern and North African Studies at the University of Michigan, is invited to lecture in Teheran on her field of expertise, infertility and assisted reproductive technologies in Muslim countries. On her return, she seeks to dispel misconceptions about the Middle East. Because of the "American daily diet of fearsome media discourses about the Middle East, particularly Iran," she complains, "it was difficult to convince relatives, including my 80-year-old mother, that it was safe for me, a mother of two young children, to travel to that part of the world." Landing in Detroit, she finds the same bias: When the customs official at the Detroit International Airport asked me why I had been 'over there,' I told him it was for an academic conference. Then he asked, 'And they didn't behead you?,' to which I replied, 'No, they served me delicious food.' He retorted, 'But you never know what was in it (i.e., the food),' to which I responded, perhaps too flippantly, 'Probably uranium.' Fortunately, he returned my passport and let me proceed to baggage claim, where I retrieved my two gorgeous Persian carpets." Inhorn's conclusion: I would argue that such fear-mongering is very unwise. It is leading to closed minds, closed embassies, restricted visas, travel bans and demeaning airport luggage searches for those of us who overcome these travel restrictions." They're not going to cut off our heads or irradiate us - that's her message. They just want to serve us their delicious food and sell us their gorgeous carpets. Nothing to fear but fear itself. Flash forward to July 2009. Professor Inhorn has recently made a big move: she's now at Yale, where she chairs its Middle East center (known as the Council on Middle East Studies). She's seated in a cafe in Boston with Jytte Klausen, author of a forthcoming book on the Danish cartoons affair - those dozen cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad that Muslim extremists seized upon in 2005. (Also around the table: the director of Yale University Press - the book's publisher - and a vice president of Yale.) Professor Inhorn has been called in by the publisher to break some bad news to the author. Here's a summary of what transpired at that meeting (as told by Klausen to Roger Kimball):
The reason? Yale University Press, relying on Professor Inhorn and other "expert" consultants, had determined that running the cartoons "ran a serious risk of instigating violence," and that "publishing other illustrations of the Prophet Muhammad in the context of this book about the Danish cartoon controversy raised similar risk." A statement by Yale University Press justifying its decision directly quoted Inhorn: "If Yale publishes this book with any of the proposed illustrations, it is likely to provoke a violent outcry." Wait a minute... The last time we encountered Professor Inhorn, she was telling us to ignore the fear-mongering, not to let the media dupe us into expecting the worst. Now, behind the scenes, she's telling an expert author, who knows a lot more about the topic than she does, that Yale's press absolutely must expect the worst. The author's book must be censored. So let me try to reconcile Professor Inhorn's view of how it works "over there." Sure, they'll feed you delicious food and sell you gorgeous carpets, but they can suddenly be "instigated" to violence by the mere reproduction, in a scholarly book, not only of old cartoons that anyone can access in a flash on the internet, but canonical works of Western art that have been in the public domain for decades (and even representations of the Prophet Muhammad in Islamic art). How easily they come unhinged! Why, show them the wrong image, and they could... well, behead you, just like that. And Professor Inhorn fancies herself above the "fearsome media discourses about the Middle East".... Now I don't know if publishing these images in an academic book at this time would run a "serious risk of instigating violence." Everything I do know tells me that it wouldn't. Extremists are always looking for something to exploit, but it has to be a new, unprecedented (perceived) offense against Islam. Dante's Inferno, Rushdie's The Satanic Verses, the Danish cartoons - these are all old perceived offenses, too familiar to fire up a sense of indignation. No doubt there will be another round at some point - and no doubt, its ostensible "cause" will surprise us all. (That's because it won't really be the cause, but a pretextlike the Danish cartoons.) But that's neither here nor there. The reason we have "restricted visas, travel bans and demeaning airport luggage searches" (and other disdained measures) is so that in America, a university press can publish the Danish cartoons in a book about the Danish cartoons, and do so without fear. If we didn't have that line of defense, we would constantly have to censor ourselves and ban whole classes of free expression, lest we be tormented by fanatic extremists. Given a choice between undergoing a baggage search and muzzling themselves, Americans prefer the former. More than that: if you threaten their freedoms, they may just cross an ocean to search for you. That's why America is free and a refuge for the world. What sort of American would prefer the muzzle? Now we know.
1 |
Herbert Kaine, Berkeley,CA,
Tuesday Aug 18, 2009
I recommend that "Professor" Inhorn engage in productive labor, like picking lettuce in California's central valley. Despite her travel and Yale appointment, I cannot figure out how her activities benefit humanity
2 |
ole,
Tuesday Aug 18, 2009
Says it all. Thank you so much for this little vignette of foolishness amonge inteligensia.
The hyprocrasy, inconsistency of thought, lack of integrity of many academics is pathetic.
Publicly riducule laws and decision makers....committed to protecting our freedoms.... in cute little enlightened articles ....and privately making their own own laws to restrict our freedoms and appease fanatics. It almost shows a carefully hidden agenda and activisim based on knowing the truth and hiding it in order to change behaviors, namely restriction of our freedoms here in the west.
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emmitt22,
Tuesday Aug 18, 2009
mr. kramer is awesome.
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Shel Zahav,
Tuesday Aug 18, 2009
Everybody should read the landmark work by Alan Bloom, The Closing of the American Mind. Written some 25 years ago, Professor Bloom correctly saw the trend in American universities and discourse. And now, so many students see that the atmosphere on campus is shutup and be a leftist or leave.
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Ulf, Berlin,
Tuesday Aug 18, 2009
Great read! Thank you Mr. Kramer!!!
6 |
art Jersey city,
Wednesday Aug 19, 2009
Inhorn would censor Charlie Chaplin's Great Dictator fearing it might instigate violence and anger. What she is doing is furthering the policies of the Islamists who want to censor us, who want to make it a crime if anyone lacks respect of their beliefs, as determined by their standard, in effect make their standards and beliefs infallible. This is what their resolution in the UN was all about. Make our views crimes, blasphamy, punishable by death
7 |
Sherlock Holmes London,
Wednesday Aug 19, 2009
Some years back there was a study of the funding for Middle Eastern studies in American universities. The only two top class centres without Arab funding were Princeton and Johns Hopkins. Is it, therefore, any surprise that university publishers are afraid to offend those who pay part of the bill?
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Joseph London,
Wednesday Aug 19, 2009
After the Danes published the cartoons we had massive aggro here in London -- even though N O London paper published the cartoons !!! There were banners calling for the beheading of anyone who insults the prophet etc. When there are problems with Muslim fanatics demonstrating they blame the police. When there are pro-Israel demonstrations there is no hint of the slightest violence or breaching the peace. It is, of course, the very same police.
9 |
Matthew Kramer, Cambridge University,
Wednesday Aug 19, 2009
An excellent column (by someone with a fine surname!). What a grotesquely craven hypocrite Ms Inhorn is. As an alumnus of Harvard, I suppose that I derive a small amount of gratification at seeing Yale besmirch itself with such a terrorism-abetting coward on its faculty. Still, as a liberal, I lament Yale's abandonment of its scholarly values and responsibilities.
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Hersh K USA,
Wednesday Aug 19, 2009
Get off quickly of Arab oil...break their econmic back! They use the money we overpay for oil against our very values. When will ouit Govt realize the "Generations of Islamic Vipers" are even worse than Hitler and his nazi butchers. As for the universities of "lower learning"..some of thes administrators and professors can't even keep our kids from getting drunk on campus. Our children go away to college and learn how to become screwy by doing all the things we, as parents, dont want them to have. Its the "dumbing down" of America. God (if there is one) help us!
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Arik in Fayetteville, NC,
Wednesday Aug 19, 2009
Political correctness morphed into dhimmitude when it found an enemy it couldn't intimidate with words.
12 |
Tzachi, Canada,
Wednesday Aug 19, 2009
What a joke!! Klausen writes a book about the Danish cartoons and the book won't even show the cartoons!? Time to find another publisher!!
13 |
AD Passaic New Jersey,
Thursday Aug 20, 2009
I would suggest to Professor Klausen that he find a better publisher. There are plenty of honest publishers in America unafraid of printing the truth.
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Bonnie Canada,
Thursday Aug 20, 2009
This world can be a strange place. Would someone please tell me why the intellectual mind is put on the auction block, to be bought and sold to the highest bidder? Should not the intelligent mind reject the bondage of slave status? One would expect our institutions of higher learning to raise the bar. The very idea of indentured service should be repugant to them!
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Marvin, Israel,
Friday Aug 21, 2009
Just one more example of western dhimmitude in the face of Islamist coersion. That tide will recede only when we can close ranks and resist it.
16 |
Jonas Andersen, Denmark,
Sunday Aug 23, 2009
Actualle Jytte Klausen herself were strongly against the publication of the cartoons in the first place. Calling it racist and saying that nobody was against freedom of speech (including the muslim world).
It is so much fun to realise that she cant even have the cartoons in her book because everybody is afraid.
17 |
Colin Beck, Surrey, B.C., Canada,
Monday Oct 19, 2009
The Holocaust occurred in 2 year increments from 1933 - 45. We are not aware of the gradual erosion of our civil liberties because we are under the delusion that the beast can be tamed. DOES NOT THE TURKEY HAVE TO THAW OUT UNDER WATER? DOES NOT CHARLIE POTATOES DEFINE THE TURKEY? The West has weak leaders who tell people what they KNOW they NEED to hear in order to get what they WANT which is their money or power. [or both] Was Dec. 7/41 and Sept. 11/01 caused by an ALAMO COMPLEX? Did Hitler have one? Was that what World War Two was all about? Is it caused by a wandering spirit? Luke 11:24:26
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