[Peace-discuss] Fwd: [New post] Steven Salaita at Brooklyn College

Jenifer Cartwright via Peace-discuss peace-discuss at lists.chambana.net
Tue Dec 2 03:11:47 EST 2014


Thanks for posting this and trying to get it to the attention of Phyllis Wise et al. Can't you just forward it to her? And to the DI?
     From: Morton K. Brussel via Peace-discuss <peace-discuss at lists.chambana.net>
 To: Peace-discuss List <peace-discuss at lists.chambana.net> 
 Sent: Thursday, November 20, 2014 9:09 PM
 Subject: [Peace-discuss] Fwd: [New post] Steven Salaita at Brooklyn College
   
FYI.  I’d like this somehow to get to Phyllis’ Wise notice, to her supporters, and to the university community at large. Any chance?
—mkb


Begin forwarded message:
Date: November 20, 2014 at 8:58:32 PM CST
To: mkb3 at mac.com
From: Corey Robin <comment-reply at wordpress.com>
Subject: [New post] Steven Salaita at Brooklyn College
Reply-To: Corey Robin <comment+r38qziukobd_j2qopky617v at comment.wordpress.com>

 #yiv3304325574 a:hover {color:red;}#yiv3304325574 a {text-decoration:none;color:#0088cc;}#yiv3304325574 a.yiv3304325574primaryactionlink:link, #yiv3304325574 a.yiv3304325574primaryactionlink:visited {background-color:#2585B2;color:#fff;}#yiv3304325574 a.yiv3304325574primaryactionlink:hover, #yiv3304325574 a.yiv3304325574primaryactionlink:active {background-color:#11729E;color:#fff;}#yiv3304325574  
<a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://WordPress.com" class="yiv3304325574">WordPress.com</a>
|   Corey Robin posted: "Steven Salaita and Katherine Franke spoke at Brooklyn College tonight; I moderated the discussion. Three quick comments.First, the event happened. We had an actual conversation about Israel/Palestine, BDS, Zionism, nationalism, academic freedom, civil"  
|  
| Respond to this post by replying above this line |

  
|  
|  |

 
|  
 New post on Corey Robin 
  |    |

 
|  
|  
|    |  
Steven Salaita at Brooklyn College
 by Corey Robin  |

 Steven Salaita and Katherine Franke spoke at Brooklyn College tonight; I moderated the discussion. Three quick comments.First, the event happened. We had an actual conversation about Israel/Palestine, BDS, Zionism, nationalism, academic freedom, civility. Students offered opposing views, tough questions were posed, thoughtful answers were proffered, multiple voices were heard, there was argument, there was reason, there was frustration, there was difficulty, there was dialogue, there was speechifying, there was back-and-forth. There was a college.Going into the event, the usual voices mobilized against it. Politicians tried to shut it down. Alan Dershowitz complained he wasn't invited. I told him to calm down: "In all the years that Professor Dershowitz was a professor at Harvard Law School, he and his colleagues never once invited me to speak, so I’m not exactly clear what all the fuss is about." Outsiders called the political science department to shout at us.But there was a difference this time: it was all fairly muted. At no point did any of us think that the administration would cancel the event. We've turned that corner. Even the usual suspects seem to be getting tired of their schtick. And the reason is that the event did what it was supposed to do: it created a space for conversation. Maybe we're moving on?Which brings me to my second point. All of us at Brooklyn College, and in the larger community, owe a debt of gratitude to the Students for Justice in Palestine. This is now the fourth or fifth (probably more) major event of its kind that they have put on at Brooklyn College since the BDS affair. And each time, they've managed to offer members of the College—on all sides of the Israel/Palestine issue—and the community a chance to have a thoughtful discussion. Whatever your position is on this issue, there should be little disagreement that SJP has enriched the College. Not because they advocate for justice in Palestine—though they do that, too—but because they have provided us all with a space to stretch our minds.Which brings me to my final point. Though I was obviously sympathetic to Steven Salaita going into this event, I came out of it extraordinarily impressed by him. Not merely his character—he's as haimish as can be—but his intellect. He has an extraordinarily agile mind. Within minutes he can move you from Cotton Mather to Franz Fanon, and throughout the ride, you know exactly where you are. You can see why he's such a good teacher and why his students love him so much: not because he tells you what you know, but because he takes you somewhere you've not been. He had a brilliant riff about how it's an old trope in colonial discourse that the native corrupts the colonizer, that it's the native that turns the colonizer from someone who's as pure as the driven snow into the foulest heart. And suddenly Salaita leaped to Spielberg's Munich, and showed how it illustrated that exact principle.This is the man the University of Illinois fired. Because, they claimed, he would be a toxin in the classroom. They have no idea what they've squandered.   Corey Robin | November 20, 2014 at 9:57 pm | Tags: Katherine Franke, Steven Salaita | Categories: Education, Middle East | URL: http://wp.me/p1FPJG-1IT  
| Comment |    See all comments |

   |

  |

 
|  Unsubscribe to no longer receive posts from Corey Robin.
 Change your email settings at Manage Subscriptions.  Trouble clicking? Copy and paste this URL into your browser: 
 http://coreyrobin.com/2014/11/20/steven-salaita-at-brooklyn-college/   |

  |

 
|  |

   |

 
|  Thanks for flying with  WordPress.com  |

 
  |



_______________________________________________
Peace-discuss mailing list
Peace-discuss at lists.chambana.net
https://lists.chambana.net/mailman/listinfo/peace-discuss


  
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.chambana.net/pipermail/peace-discuss/attachments/20141202/079f01d2/attachment-0001.html>


More information about the Peace-discuss mailing list