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Uncivil Rites: Palestine and the Limits of Academic Freedom, by Steven Salaita

Joanna Williams on a controversial academic鈥檚 interpretation of where the boundaries lie

Published on
January 14, 2016
Last updated
January 14, 2016
Review: Uncivil Rites, by Steven Salaita

Few academics are sufficiently high profile to warrant having a photo of themselves adorn their book cover. Steven Salaita rose to fame in 2014 after being dismissed from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in the midst of that summer鈥檚 intense media coverage of the Israel-Gaza conflict. Salaita is a leading figure in the BDS (boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israel) movement and his Twitter feed reflects his political sympathies.

Salaita was dismissed for 鈥渋ncivility鈥; he stood accused of sending anti-Semitic tweets. In turn, Salaita argues in his book that his firing was a result of 鈥渢he machinations of right-wing operatives鈥 and that the university 鈥渁cted in response to donor pressure鈥. He is clear where blame lies: 鈥淶ionist interests directly oppose communities in academe that wish to effect structural change.鈥 As hero of his own story, he represents noble change-agents, while enemy Zionist operatives lurk everywhere.

Whatever the truth of the matter, Salaita has since become the poster boy for academic freedom. He correctly demands to know: 鈥淲as my speech on Twitter reason enough to undermine a long tradition of academic freedom?鈥 But there is something odd about his having achieved this figurehead status. This is far less a book about academic freedom than it is a book about Steven Salaita. It is his opportunity to put his side of the story and settle scores, and thus his picture on the front is entirely fitting.

In Uncivil Rites we learn of Salaita鈥檚 loathing of the many people and institutions he considers to be Zionist. He describes his disgust at the colonialism of his native US. His attachment is to Palestinians 鈥 鈥淎 Palestinian would never destroy a healthy olive tree鈥 鈥 rather than to Americans, who 鈥渁re fundamentally outsiders to the land they occupy鈥. We learn of his relationships with family, friends and colleagues, and his young son鈥檚 remarkable empathy. Salaita tells us about his ethnic identity, 鈥渕ore nuanced than simply 鈥楶alestinian鈥 鈥; his father came from Jordan, and his mother, whose parents were Palestinian, was raised in Nicaragua. He was born in Appalachia but he does not identify as American; instead, he tells us, 鈥淚 happily identify as Palestinian鈥. Likewise, he is 鈥減erfectly content鈥 to identify as the Muslim he is often mistaken for rather than the Christian he is, describing himself as 鈥渃ulturally Islamic鈥.

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It is not until halfway through Uncivil Rites that discussion turns to Salaita鈥檚 views on academic freedom. It then rapidly becomes clear that the limits of academic freedom referred to in the book鈥檚 title are Salaita鈥檚. Despite having cited academic freedom in his own defence, he describes himself as 鈥渢epid about academic freedom as a right鈥. His fight for social justice makes his view of academic freedom entirely instrumental. He explains: 鈥淎cademic freedom is important insofar as it protects our ability to do this work.鈥

Ultimately, Salaita defends academic freedom only for those who share his political views. He wants the insurance policy of academic freedom while treating the concept with intellectual disdain. It is this contradictory logic that enables him to argue that a 鈥渂oycott is not a contravention of academic freedom, but an expression of it鈥. Unfortunately, as his case demonstrates, such a partial defence of academic freedom is no defence at all.

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Joanna Williams is director of the Centre for the Study of 糖心Vlog, University of Kent, and education editor at Spiked.


Uncivil Rites: Palestine and the Limits of Academic Freedom
By Steven Salaita
Haymarket Books, 254pp, 拢16.99
ISBN 9781608465774
Published 17 December 2015

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline: Speak freely, if of a like mind

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