What's in a name? Among the reasons offered by the leaders of the Australian National University for rejecting a multimillion-dollar gift to the humanities was a dispute about the name of a proposed course. The Ramsay Centre for Western Civilisation wanted the course to be called 鈥淲estern Civilisation鈥 while the ANU preferred 鈥淲estern Civilisation Studies鈥.聽
If this reminds you of John Cleese trying to explain the difference between the Judean People鈥檚 Front and the People鈥檚 Front of Judea in Life of Brian,聽then you are old enough to remember that we have been here before. In 1988, civil rights campaigner, Jesse Jackson, led Stanford students in chanting, 鈥淗ey, hey, ho, ho, Western civ has got to go!鈥 Stanford dropped the course, and other universities followed suit. Except for a few diehards that still teach the 鈥淕reat Books鈥 (Chicago, Notre Dame, Columbia), courses in Western civilisation have faded away.
Fast forward to the present. Humanities academics live in perpetual fear of being tossed overboard as leaky finances force universities to jettison disciplines just to聽stay afloat. So, on that blissful dawn, when the Paul Ramsay Foundation announced that it would use part of its $3.3 billion endowment to revive the humanities in Australia, universities rushed to register their interest.
The foundation established the Ramsay Centre for Western Civilisation and chose John Howard聽鈥 a former prime minister from the conservative side of politics聽鈥 to chair its board. The centre created an 鈥渋ndicative curriculum鈥 that begins with 糖心Vlogr and ends with Foucault, making stops at Dante, Shakespeare, Marx and a broad smorgasbord of worthy books, musical works and fine art along the way. Around one-third of the course was unspecified, to聽enable students to pursue electives in other areas.
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The centre proposed that all subjects be taught in small tutorials so that students and academics could discuss their readings in depth; it offered to provide generous scholarships for students and stipends for academics to make such personal teaching possible.
It did not take long for disquiet to emerge. ANU Student Association president, Eleanor Kay, feared聽that Western Civilisation was a 鈥渁 rhetorical tool to continue the racist prioritisation of Western history over other cultures鈥. Kay did not explain how thinking deeply about Marx and Foucault, not to mention Bartolom茅 de las Casas, the 16th-century campaigner against colonialism (who is also on the centre鈥檚 reading list) could make someone a racist. It is possible that she has not had the opportunity to study these texts聽鈥 which, of course, is the whole point of the Ramsay Centre鈥檚 initiative.聽
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Another former prime minister and Ramsay Centre board member, Tony Abbott, stirred matters up by saying that 鈥渢he key to understanding the聽Ramsay Centre for Western Civilisation聽is that it鈥檚 not merely about Western civilisation but聽in favour of it鈥.
Malcolm King, the ANU academic union branch president, interpreted Mr Abbott鈥檚 remarks to mean: 鈥淭he Ramsay Centre seeks to pursue a聽narrow, radically conservative program聽to demonstrate and promulgate the聽alleged superiority of Western culture and civilisation.鈥 Mr King was also concerned that the centre would 鈥渨ield considerable influence over staffing and curriculum decisions鈥. The ANU leadership agreed. Citing 鈥渋rreconcilable differences over the governance of the new program鈥, the university pulled out of negotiations.聽
Not everyone was buying it. Critics noted that the university was happy to accept donations for its Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies, so why not one devoted to Western civilisation? They believed the university caved into political pressure from academics and students.
The Ramsay Centre has turned to the University of Sydney to see whether it would accept its Western Civilisation programme. The omens are not auspicious. More than 100 academics published a letter opposing the acceptance of scholarships, which they construed as unfair: 鈥淭he Ramsay program represents, quite simply, European supremacism writ large: it signals that the study of the European cultural tradition warrants better educational circumstances than that of others.鈥 By this logic, the university should reject any donated scholarship lest some students have better 鈥渃ircumstances鈥 than others.
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For now, the millions of dollars targeted to go to the humanities will remain in the Ramsay Centre鈥檚 bank account. Humanities departments will continue to struggle, and the Great Books will collect dust. The ANU says it has struck a blow for academic freedom. Perhaps鈥ut at what cost?聽
Steven Schwartz is the former vice-chancellor of Brunel, Murdoch and Macquarie University and former executive director of the Council for the Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences. He is a senior fellow at the Centre for Independent Studies, Sydney.
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