Manage my account

 

Ruminations on Academic Freedom, Professorial Rant, and the Sublime Virtue of Putting a Sock in It



  

by Elizabeth J. Carter

Compare and contrast the following scenes from the Chicago Tribune and CNN.com:

March 26, 2003, in the rotunda of Low Library at Columbia University: professors have gathered at an anti-war teach-in to protest U.S. military involvement in Iraq. At some point during the 6-hour event, full-time assistant professor of anthropology, Nicholas DeGenova, reportedly tells those present that the American flag symbolizes imperialism, and that he would like to see “a million more Mogadishus”—a reference to the 1993 deaths of more than a dozen U.S. soldiers during a peacekeeping mission in Somalia. Columbia’s president, Lee C. Bollinger, immediately issues a press release condemning DeGenova’s comments but also defending his right to free speech. Despite calls for DeGenova’s termination, the university retains him as a member of its full-time faculty.


Welcome! The article you'd like to read is available to Adjunct Advocate subscribers, or to non-subscribers for purchase with AdjunctNation Passport credits. Your AdjunctNation Passport credit purchases compensate the writers directly!

If you like, visit our secure online store to purchase AdjunctNation Passport credits or subscribe. PLEASE NOTE: If you're already registered, you don't need to register again to read the article! You need to login, go to our secure online store, and purchase AdjunctNationCredits.

SEND A LETTER TO THE EDITOR

AdjunctNation E-Newsletters

AdjunctNation Family Newsletter

Want to be notified of Family gatherings, blog, job and magazine updates?

Current Issue

Enter e-mail address



E-Advocate Newsletter

Want to read our weekly e-Newsletter packed with teaching tips, news, and updates about upcoming issues of the Adjunct Advocate magazine?

Current Issue

Enter e-mail address


Book Source

Nation Blogs

Part-Time Thoughts

Lesko Blog