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Opinion

Why do so many academics subscribe to such awful ideas?

The ‘enlightened’ frequently push philosophies that prop up the worst forms of irrationality

January 17, 2022 15:35
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2 min read

In an article published by the Cambridge student newspaper Varsity last week, history undergraduate Samuel Rubinstein agreed with the university’s Emeritus Professor of Mediterranean History David Abulafia that the Twitter tirades of Priyamvada Gopal, a professor of Postcolonial Studies in the University's Faculty of English, were “a disgrace”. 

Gopal’s remarks have included claims that “White lives don’t matter”, comparing the chair of the government’s Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities with Joseph Goebbels, and a flurry of unsavoury remarks about Hindus.

She swiftly took to Twitter to bash Rubinstein’s piece as a “hatchet job” that used ”beloved white supremacist tropes” – as well as complaining that the newspaper was compromised by a “conflict of interest” as its writers had “vociferously lobbied for” introducing the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) Working Definition of antisemitism on campus. 

But unfair as her remarks are, they are entirely unsurprising for modern academia. Her approach is not merely a symptom of so-called “wokery” but a consistent feature of the intellectual tendency toward utopianism throughout the centuries, which is so frequently accompanied by an unwillingness to confront the reality of its own brutality.