August 13, 2020
MY CORNER by Boyd Cathey
The English Language and Grammar are Racist! Get Rid of them!
Friends,
In these revolutionary times it had to
come sooner or later—any brief moment of serious reflection (rare these days,
it seems) would reach this point inevitably. And it is not like it’s totally new,
but this time it’s with us with a force that we should expect to grow
inexorably and be picked up by the advance guard of the cultural fanatics as a
magic talisman that will be foisted on our schools and on us.
If “white supremacy” and “racism” are
purveyed and maintained by the use of the structures and historic foundations
of “white” language and grammar, well then, that language and grammar must be
undone, critically deconstructed, and “other” forms of written and verbal
communication admitted as equal. Indeed, if our historic means of communication
is so infected with traditional “whiteness,” is there not an extreme case for
not only reducing its importance and influence, and recognizing, for instance, “black
English,” but maybe even eradicating “white language”? After all, by the logic
of this argument, language is and has been a “weapon” of historic cultural racism
and control by “white oppressors.”
While this agenda has not yet asserted
its dominance over the literary canon or the accepted norms and style for
serious writing and communication, it has in fact had tremendous success in
modes of communication such as Twitter and Instagram, which increasingly
control cultural expression. And one can argue that it is just a matter of time
before the swirling linguistic revolution, with its already de facto acceptance
and everyday normalcy, reaches the college classroom and the publishing houses,
as well as the media. Indeed, the entertainment industry no longer resists it
to any great extent.
As a sign of the future, just recently
I ran across the statement
of the chairman of the English Department at Rutgers University (June 19). The
open letter of chairman Rebecca Walkowitz will, no doubt, be the precursor of
additional actions, some stated, others just implemented, to follow.
Here is how the Reuters News Service
characterized Walkowitz’s intentions:
The letter expresses the Department’s plans to respond to
the calls of BLM to “create and promote an anti-racist environment in our
workplace, our classes, our department, our university, and our communities;
and to contribute to the eradication of the violence and systemic inequities
facing black, indigenous, and people of color members of our community.”
Within the letter Walkowitz outlines a series of
concrete steps to promote departmental changes, including expanding the
availability of seminars engaging with discussions of social justice and
improving graduate student life.
This same section also includes Walkowitz talk[ing] about incorporating
“critical grammar” into the university’s pedagogy. This approach,
according to Walkowitz, is meant to “challeng[e] the familiar dogma
that writing instruction should limit emphasis on grammar/sentence-level issues
so as to not put students from multilingual, non-standard “academic” English
backgrounds at a disadvantage.
“Instead, it encourages students to develop a critical awareness
of the variety of choices available to them w/ regard to micro-level issues in
order to empower them and equip them to push against biases based
on ‘written’ accents,” the letter noted.
If you can read through the
fashionable pseudo-intellectual framework that surrounds what Ms. Walkowitz is
essentially saying, it is this: “we’re going to eliminate standards in grammar
and writing, and let students who don’t speak or write ‘traditional English’
express themselves accordingly.”
And more ominously, there is the
assertion that traditional modes of communication are inherently biased and
oppressive. Is not the next step in this process a radical deconstruction in
grammar? Already great works of our literary heritage have undergone this
deconstructive process to reflect critically the goalposts of “woke”
anti-racism and feminism, standards that now regulate how we read and interpret
them.
Grammatical expression is next.
The logic, as I say, is inexorable.
For the cultural revolution to succeed it must transform or suppress the
language of the oppressors.
My friend Dr. Clyde Wilson’s solution
to our academic problems grows more attractive by the day: “Napalm our
universities,” he once wrote me. Although written mostly (I suspect) in a
jocular vein, there is much truth to what Professor Wilson wrote and observed.
Until we get control of higher education—and until our Republican-dominated
legislatures stop buying into the dangerous practice of trying to outdo their
Democratic cohorts in throwing millions of dollars at those financially-bloated
sinecures of lunatic leftist plutocracy and revolution—there is simply no way
we can even think about saving our culture, much less restoring it.
I remember when this was tried before. It was call Ebonics.
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