Thursday, February 01, 2007

Group of 88 for Credit

Yesterday, Duke students started their fourth week of spring-term classes. Offerings include a cross-listed course in women’s studies and cultural anthropology entitledHook-Up Culture at Duke.” An appropriate subtitle would be “Group of 88 for Credit.”

Instructor Anne Allison’s syllabus avoided the following sentence from the course’s previously published catalog description: “Finally, what does the lacrosse scandal tell us about power, difference, and raced, classed, gendered and sexed normativity in the US?” But while a casual observer might have speculated that, as the case collapsed, Allison dropped discussion of it from her course, in fact, she just evaded mention of it from her syllabus description. The class builds up to a discussion of the lacrosse case that rationalizes the Group of 88’s worldview.

The syllabus asks, “What is ‘hook-up culture,’” and “is the concept useful for framing gendered, raced, classed, and sexualized experiences at Duke?” (The implicit answer, of course, is “yes.”) The goal of the course? “To understand ‘hooking-up’ at Duke in terms of larger frameworks of race, capitalism/consumerism, class, lifestyle, identity, (hetero)normativity, and power, and 2) to enable students to critically assess both the nature of Duke hook-ups and the institutional setting of Duke itself.

Multiple references to “campus culture” in the syllabus seem to be no accident. Allison, a Group of 88 member, also co-chairs the gender subcommittee of the Campus Culture Initiative. She joined the recently-resigned Karla Holloway and Peter Wood to provide extreme anti-lacrosse professors (who comprise, at most, 20 percent of the arts and sciences faculty, and probably less) with a majority of the CCI subgroup chairs.

The class requires six ethnographic research projects (interviews and observations, in this case of other Duke students). The syllabus lacks mention of approval from Duke’s Institutional Review Board, a prerequisite for any academic class involving college students observing and interviewing other college students. Nor does the syllabus include a class devoted to teaching students how to conform to often rigorous IRB guidelines. I e-mailed Allison to ask what sort of IRB clearance the students had received; she did not reply.

Given the firestorm of criticism that has greeted the Group of 88’s seeming disregard for their own institution’s students, Allison might have been expected to show extraordinary care in how the course framed the lacrosse case. Instead, she took the opposite approach, creating an almost laughably one-sided syllabus.

The course’s run-up to the lacrosse case occurs over a four-week period, beginning with students spending a week on Peggy Sanday’s Fraternity Gang Rape: Sex, Brotherhood, and Privilege on Campus. The book’s deskjacket leaves no doubt of its theme: “how all-male groups such as fraternities or athletic teams may create a rape culture where behavior occurs that few individuals acting alone would perpetrate.

Allison moves on to a week’s examination of sports and alcohol,” with the featured reading a book by William Bowen—whose previous involvement in the lacrosse affair, the Bowen-Chambers report, was appropriately described by Stuart Taylor as an attempt to “slime the lacrosse players in a report . . . that is a parody of race-obsessed political correctness.”

The course then detours to an essay by Allison’s fellow Group of 88 member, Kathy Rudy, who explores how “many urban-based gay male, lesbian, and mixed-gender sexually radical communities (such as leather and/or S/M groups) portray their interests in sexuality in terms of arousal and pleasure . . . Thus, as long as people consent, a wide variety of practices can be authorized in this system, such as non-monogamy, group sex, anonymous sex, domination, etc.,” leading to “the possibility that these sex groups are in the process of providing for us a new kind of ethic based not on individuality, but rather based on community.” Keep this rhetoric in mind when viewing the latest denunciation of the lacrosse players for hiring strippers from Group of 88 member Alex Rosenberg.

Having framed a discussion of the lacrosse case through texts on fraternity gang rape, the relationship between college sports and alcohol, and the superiority of radical sex alternatives, Allison moves on to the course’s examination of the lacrosse case.

For an overview of the events of the evening, what of Ed Bradley’s painstaking review of events of the evening? Allison instead assigns Buzz Bissinger’s Vanity Fair article, most notable for Kim Roberts suggesting that a rape could very well have occurred, despite both her police statement and her more recent assertions.

For a case overview, Allison chooses Peter Boyer’s New Yorker article, which portrays Brodhead as quoting Shakespeare while his campus burned, but treats as wholly credible the anti-lacrosse faculty extremists—Peter Wood and Orin Starn—with no balancing voice from, say, Jim Coleman.

To top off this one-sided litany, Allison assigns Janet Reitman’s Rolling Stone screed, most notable as an example of how journalists can abuse anonymous sources. Though the course assigns other Duke committee reports (such as the university’s report on the status of women), Allison wants nothing to do with the Coleman Committee report, which noted that the lacrosse players drank too much, but also were good students, with good records of community service, and who treated both their colleagues and Duke staff with respect.

The broader cultural context through which Allison has students interpret the lacrosse players’ behavior? Tom Wolfe’s I Am Charlotte Simmons and the movie Rules of Attraction, whose plotline imdb.com describes as, “The incredibly spoiled and overprivileged students of Camden College are a backdrop for an unusual love triangle between a drug dealer, a virgin and a bisexual classmate.”

Students are asked to complete six assignments involving interviewing and observing other Duke students. The results seem pre-ordained. Specific assignments include students exploring “the links between eroticism, capital, bodies, and identities at Duke.” Or examining sports teams “in terms of the themes covered so far in class: gender, race, heteronormativity, power, everyday culture, image and prestige of Duke. Consider the role of alcohol in these cultures.” And finally, “Hook-up Culture at Duke” has students look into the role “played by race, gender, sexual preference, class, drinking, and selective groups (Greeks, sports teams).” Students are told to “do participant observation”—though it’s not quite clear how.

If students’ results fails to conform to Allison’s preconceptions, it appears they’re out of luck. I wouldn’t recommend any of the students examining what the lacrosse scandal might tell us about, to use Allison’s language, “the institutional setting of Duke itself”—a campus culture where 88 faculty members could sign a rush-to-judgment public denunciation and then, months later and after the underlying case has imploded, issue a “clarifying” statement proclaiming that they’d do it all over again.

It would be, of course, almost inconceivable that these assignments would yield a positive portrayal of Duke students. IRB guidelines require human subjects to give their “informed consent” in any interview or observation. Why would any Duke student allow himself or herself to be used by Allison to use class time to salvage the Group of 88’s tarnished reputation?

Hat tip: C.O.

234 comments:

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Anonymous said...

10:50am said,
"I hope many white male athletes signed up to keep a balanced discussion and keep the professor "on an even keel."

From: RateMyProfessors.com

http://ratemyprofessors.com
/ShowRatings.jsp?tid=239745

Your Professors Guide

Anne Allison
Duke University
City: Durham, NC
Department: Anthropology

7/12/06
"a lof of readings, but if you go to class and take notes you don't really have to do them. the class is pretty enjoyable, a lot of fb players make the class fun. the grading is ridiculously random, and the TAs are absolutely useless and unhelpful- she isnt much better. an A- or A is definitely is doable, but it's not as easy as some people say"

Anonymous said...


And for the many others who want Allison fired, you seem to think that academic freedom only applies to those who teach about Lyndon Johnson...many odd people on this blog.


Ahh, yes, academic freedom. The academic freedom to insist that three Duke students should be railroaded into long jail terms for rapes that did not happen.

Anonymous said...

"Couldn't this be taught in a community college somewhere?"

No, the students there are much to tightly focused on improving their employability.

Only rich kids spending their parents' money, and more concerned with the recognizability of the Duke (or Harvard/Brown/Stanford etc.) designer label than the quality of the garment it's attached to, would so waste their time.

Anonymous said...

http://ratemyprofessors.com
/ShowRatings.jsp?tid=239745

That's the Introduction to Anthropology course, I believe.

M. Simon said...

12:02PM,

David Y. (Bad Eagle) is one of my faves.

The article you linked to is an excellent read.

Anonymous said...

Darn it KC, I have lived 58+ years, raised two wonderful college educated children (one of which works for a division of Duke U.) and been successful in my chosen field without cluttering my mind with the rot that this woman (I shudder to use that term for her) passes off as higher education material. You have ruined that.

It is truly amazing and disgusting what is passed off as college education material these days. I'll bet my farm and yours also that any of the students taking her course could live fine, upstanding and successful lives without having darkened the door of her classroom.

And as far as reading her writing, as many of the trolls on here today have suggested, thanks but no thanks. I just don't have a need for feeding my mind with her garbage.

Anonymous said...

"Pikachu iconizes this weave of relationality taken, I will argue, to the age of
millennial postmodernity."

This is iconic in itself. Really says all we need to know about this matter. I hope to see it in Bartletts.

Anonymous said...

A fitting epitaph.

Anonymous said...

My oldest daughter graduated from Duke in 2003. I told her the day she was accepted that we would not pay tuition for ANY classes in the Women Studies or African American Studies departments. My second child began Duke this past Fall. She is a science major, but was given the same message. These departments are the same at every campus in this country and any parent who pays for one of these courses is negligent, plain and simple. There are so many important things to learn in college, and being a victim, which is the first thing you must accept on the the first day of class in any of these courses, is not what I want my daughters or son to learn.

Anonymous said...

Note that Duke has two anthropology departments. The actual scholars among the anthropologists could no longer stand the nonsense being promulgated by the "cultural" anthropologists and thus were allowed to form a separate department, now linked to the medical school.

It is a fundamentally conservative position to argue that only people with the proper credentials, employed at adequately elite institutions, are qualified to comment on the issues of the hour.

What do you suppose is the average grade given in cultural anthropology classes at Duke? I would bet that it is closer to an A- than to a B+. Compare that to average grades given in science and engineering classes. That's how class enrollment is maintained.

Postmodernism is better described as "marxian" than as "marxist," although Allison and many other 88ers would describe themselves as "Marxists."

Anti-Leftist Liberal

Anonymous said...

Reading the syllabus for Ms. Allison's course, it would be better named "From Nifong to MyThong"

MGM

Anonymous said...

M. Simon wrote:
"weave of relationality

Strunk and White would not approve."

I think you mean Strunk and *Whitey*.

Anonymous said...

M. Simon wrote:
"weave of relationality

Strunk and White would not approve."

I think you mean Strunk and *Whitey*.

Anonymous said...

"Why would I want to get a degree?

I have no need to impress any one with letters after my name.

Besides I'm having more fun poking holes in credentialism than I could ever have with credentials."

Even better is to get the credentials and THEN poke holes at them because then it doesn't look like sour grapes.

Anonymous said...

I'm laughing that the focus the debate has shifted from the white privelaged racists who committed an atrocity to the qualifications of an academic who writes about essays on Japenese lunch boxes.

I find it telling that KC could be considered a right winger. How far to the left do you have to be to consider KC right wing?

Anonymous said...

I've been writing all night, so I'm a bit tired.

Help me out, here:

We need to coin a new term to describe Duke, et al's BS Studies departments. Yes, we just might make history today (LOL).

As I see it, the new term should combine the following:

1. Angry Studies
2. Pointless Studies
3. Indoctrination Studies

Polanski

Anonymous said...

FYI, www.americanthinker.com has a solid article today comparing a former faculty member's defamation suit v DePaul to the Duke 3's situation. Other universities are infected with the same PC mentality. Sad.
gk

Steven Horwitz said...

I checked with my IRB person here and if that course were offered on my campus it would definitely need IRB approval for that work. To not make that clear in the syllabus and to not take class time to help students understand the IRB process and, more importantly, why it is important to deal ethically with human subject research, is totally unacceptable.

Of course, dealing ethically with human beings has not been a strong suit of the Group of 88.

Anonymous said...

“The syllabus asks, “What is ‘hook-up culture,’” and “is the concept useful for framing gendered, raced, classed, and sexualized experiences at Duke?” (The implicit answer, of course, is “yes.”) The goal of the course? “To understand ‘hooking-up’ at Duke in terms of larger frameworks of race, capitalism/consumerism, class, lifestyle, identity, (hetero)normativity, and power, and 2) to enable students to critically assess both the nature of Duke hook-ups and the institutional setting of Duke itself.””

WTF? When I was in college, my friends and I “hooked-up” every chance we got, which was quite a bit. Never did we consider race, capitalism, class, lifestyle, identity, heteronormativity (whatever the hell that is), or power. The only consideration was attractiveness (which was usually inversely proportional to alcohol consumption) and willingness of the other party to participate. We “hooked up” with White, Black, Asian, Hispanic, rich, poor, skinny, fat, smart, not smart, straight, bi-sexual, etc. To try to put our “hooking up” in terms of anything other than being horny males is laughable at best. Then again I was at NSCU instead of an elite university like Duke (Thank God!).

Anonymous said...

Thank you, 12:36, for the brilliantly apt and humorous subtitle to Allison's "Hook-up Culture At Duke" course: "From Nifong to MyThong." I hope campus readers of this blog make "From Nifong to MyThong" the unofficial name for the course, as it captures both the content and the absurdity of the course.

Anonymous said...

For what it's worth, in the interest of accuracy, the "Hook-up Culture" class is not fully enrolled. There are 30 spots, of which 27 are taken.

I actually think you could teach a very interesting and potentially very worthwhile class on "hook-up culture" at Duke or more generally, though I know some of the commenters on this blog would reject that notion outright. However, if KC's characterization of the readings and the syllabus is accurate, I doubt this class is it--the apparently one-sided reading list and heavy emphasis on the lacrosse case specifically and the apparent evils of sports and fraternities more generally suggest much more of an agenda (and one that ultimately doesn't have much to do with hooking up) than an exploration.

That being said, while we might speculate on whether the class is total BS, whether it's possible to express views in the classroom that don't match the professor's, or whether all cultural anthro classes are easy A's as long as one spits back the right opinion, we don't really know any of these things without being in the classroom and/or talking to a lot of people who have been in the classroom. I can see how those who feel universities (and we should, really, be talking about universities more broadly on this point, not just Duke) have lost their way would find useful supporting examples in this class and in some of Ms. Allison's scholarship--but this is a systemic issue that needs a systemic solution, not sarcastic mockery of one professor or one syllabus. What the class syllabus may suggest about Ms. Allison's possible bias against, or dislike of, a substantial contingent of Duke students, on the other hand, is an issue that might appropriately be addressed both individually and systemically.

To the commenter who said he (she?) would never hire someone with even a single course that appeared to the commenter to be insufficiently rigorous or a waste of time, I hope you will reconsider. One of the potential benefits of college (one at risk of being lost as we get ever more pragmatic and career-oriented) is the opportunity to expand one's horizons by trying new things and getting exposure to ideas and frames of reference different from one's own. A well-taught class in sociology, cultural anthropology, or even race/gender studies can present the perspective of these fields without requiring the students to parrot dogma to succeed--and sometimes one of the most valuable educational lessons is the opportunity to study and then reject a particular viewpoint. If a cultural anthropology major doesn't have the right background for your workplace, fine, but I think you might eliminate a lot of highly qualified applicants if you won't hire anyone who ever took a cultural anthropology class.

Gary Packwood said...

Participant Observer Defined: UCLA Reference

Someone asked for a definition of participant Observer.

Nothing is said about Mazola :-)however the importance of Rapport Building is stressed.

Observations of research subjects may be done by non-participant observers, those who spend time among research subjects only to collect observations but do not significantly interact with subjects. For example, one may observe a classroom, an encounter between doctor and patient, or the way people use public parks. On the other hand, some observations are enhanced by participating in the daily lives of those being observed-"participant observation." This is often done as a part of long-term ethnography (usually considered its sine qua non). But participant observation

may be done as part of shorter, more directed ethnography, such as that of a fishing boat by Gatewood (1985). However, it is not a method that may be taken on frivolously and briefly. A good deal of time and rapport-building is usually necessary before informants stop noticing the novelty of the researcher's presence and participation, and go about their daily routine as they would normally. And one must attend to the ethics of gathering and possessing information about the daily activities of people who may have come to think of the participant observer as more of a participant than an observer, with the attendant level of confidence that produces.

Gary Packwood said...

Someone asked about normative statements in the Group of 88 for Credit.

A normative statement is a statement regarding how things should or ought to be. Such statements are impossible to prove or disprove, thus forever banishing them from the world of the scientific.

That means to me that you can talk about it (whatever it is) until everyone in the class gets 'sick' of it and goes to the local pub to hook up.

Anonymous said...

Thank God my kid went to the University of Florida and majored in Chemistry. There is something to be said for state schools and technical majors. Just reading about these garbage majors and low life professors makes my skin crawl. I feel sorry for those parents paying $40K per year at Duke for a "studies" degree.

Anonymous said...

Allison moves on to a week’s examination of “sports and alcohol,” with the featured reading a book by William Bowen—whose previous involvement in the lacrosse affair, the Bowen-Chambers report, was appropriately described by Stuart Taylor as an attempt to “slime the lacrosse players in a report . . . that is a parody of race-obsessed political correctness.”

KC, when you're writing your history of this event, some biography might help to explain how Bowen, a leading U.S. public intellectual, would be motivated to write such a biased, intellectually shoddy report. Some suggested questions:
Why did Bowen leave his position as president of Princeton? While president of Princeton, did Bowen have female students living in his family house? One possible source of information might be Cynthia Nitta, who graduated from Princeton about 1983.

Unknown said...

Uh, KC, in the interest of accuracy, you might want to state what academic department this class is in.

Most likely it is a 'house course' taught by students and is worth 1/2 credit. Really nothing more than an enrichment by a fellow student -- one young woman's opinion, supported by whatever 'facts' she can marshal.

Can't hate it too much because it is part of what universities do -- allow for independent and critical thinking. Might be interesting to sit in and see whether it is indoctrination or whether is encourages open and frank diversity of views. Does her evidence support her or does it not?

You get to Durham; why not ask if you can sit in?

PS. I'm a different Jim than the other who has posted.

Anonymous said...

Jim at 9:07--
It's actually not a house course. There used to be a house course on this (or a similar topic), but this is a straight-up full credit culanth class. (You can find it posted on the Registrar's schedule of courses.)

Anonymous said...

Hmmm, perhaps class time at Duke would be better spent considering the plight of actual rape victims and how this stripper just damaged their credibility. I would rather listen to an intelligent discussion about how the G88 has encouraged such deplorable behavior from this alleged victim. How about a course discussing the enabling of the "victim" mentality by people like Ms. Allison?

Anonymous said...

Speaking of enabling the victim mentality...
http://independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1903

Sorry, don't know how to link it.

M. Simon said...

11:16PM link

====


HTML cheats

M. Simon said...

1:28 PM,

I'm an aerospace engineer, practically a rocket scientist (LOL). Why would sour grapes even enter the equation?

I worked my way up starting as a technician. I've signed million dollar contracts. I've done logistics for lap top production. I redesigned part of the landing beacon for aircraft carriers when the parts became obsolete. I have a few lines of code riding in the SR-71 Blackbird. And some 32 bit math routines in the A320 and F-16 (it was such a good bit of software it was replicated). I was a tech writer for the manuals of Motorola's first Electronic Mobile Exchange - the precursor to the cell phone. An I/O board I designed went into the world's first BBS. etc.

Why the hell should I have sour grapes? They should have them.

Anonymous said...

There is no defending the group of 88. They violated Duke's own harassment policy which states;"The first form of harassment is verbal or physical conduct-which may or may not be sexual in nature-that, because of its severity and/or persistence, interferes significantly with an individual's work or education, or adversely affects an individual's living conditions."
Universities have been the biggest liberal group pushing for harassment and speech codes...so, live by the sword, die by the sword!
Duke University Harassment Policy and Procedures

Buzz said...

You show me in my Vanity Fair story where there was the suggestion from the second dancer, Kim Roberts, that a rape had taken place. The story said precisely this: "Roberts has said in prveious interviews that she did not witness the alleged rape and has kno knowedge of whether it took place." Did the article say that Roberts felt unsafe? Yes, probably because of one of the players making a crude comment in reference to a broomstick. Was the epithet "nigger" used as she left? Yes. My article was written very early in the game and was incredibly even-handed and made the point that the evidence was already very weak and that the accuser had already changed her story several times.
As for the lacrosse players, they had a history of boorish unacceptable behavior. Does that constitute rape? Of course not. But they were not angels. Someone called Ms. Roberts a "nigger," and the last time I checked, a well-known radio personality got fired for saying something milder. Did the lacrosse players have a record of misconduct far worse than any team at Duke with the exception of men's golf, which has roughly seven members? Make your comments. Do whatever the hell you want. But do not miscast me.


Buzz Bissinger

Buzz said...

One other point: I think the course is silly. Peter Boyer's article, written months after mine and with access to all the discovery (I had no access since virtually none it had been filed at that point) contained no new information and was a clip job. The Rolling Stone piece as I recall did not have a single real name in it. It was not substantive journalism. I resent the professor lumping me in with them. I am proud of the piece given the time frame in which it was written and published, early June. And by the way, I said on the Today Show shortly after the piece ran that Nifong should be disbarred.

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