ABSTRACT

PC Wars: Politics and Theory in the Academy addresses the very issue of political correctness and the current skirmishes in the culture wars. It includes statements from many of our leading contemporary public intellectuals, including Joan Wallach Scott, Michael Bérubé, Bruce Robbins, Henry Giroux, and Gerald Graff. The collection marks a watershed in the debate about pc in that it presents serious considerations and analyses of the factors, causes, and consequences of the culture wars. Carefully examining the construction of pc, PC Wars analyses political correctness by focusing on the mass media, class politics, and the ideology of managerial democracy. It places the disputes around pc in the context of contemporary developments in critical and cultural theory and the current backlash against theory, manifested in the recent attacks on Marxism, feminism and deconstruction. The book also scrutinizes the undercurrents of anti-intellectualism and anti-professionalism which have tended to create a fertile ground for the pc hysteria. Offering much more than slogans and slinging arrows, PC Wars provides a spirited and critical look at the reaction, ideology, and political forces that have coalesced around the term. Contributors: Michael Bérubé, Reed Way Dasenbrock, Frank Farmer, Henry Giroux, Gerald Graff, Darlene Hantzis and Devoney Looser, John S. Howard and James M. Lang, Tom Lewis, James Neilson, Christopher Newfield, Richard Ohmann, Burce Robbins, Barry Sarchett, Joan W. Scott, Michael Sprinker, Jeffrey Williams

chapter 1|8 pages

Introduction

part |137 pages

The Campaign Against PC

chapter 3|22 pages

The Campaign Against Political Correctness

What's Really at Stake

chapter 4|16 pages

Truth, Justice, and the American Way

A Response to Joan Wallach Scott

chapter 5|30 pages

The Great PC Scare

Tyrannies of the Left, Rhetoric of the Right

chapter 6|19 pages

“Political Correctness”

A Class Issue

chapter 7|37 pages

What Was “Political Correctness”?

Race, the Right, and Managerial Democracy in the Humanities

part |103 pages

The Trouble with Theory

chapter 9|12 pages

We've Done It to Ourselves

The Critique of Truth and the Attack on Theory

chapter 10|21 pages

Theory Against Itself

New Historicism's Return to Practice

chapter 11|17 pages

“Not Theory … But a Sense of Theory”

The Superaddressee and the Contexts of Eden

chapter 12|28 pages

Of Safe(r) Spaces and “Right” Speech

Feminist Histories, Loyalties, Theories, and the Dangers of Critique

part |62 pages

Othering the Academy

chapter 14|15 pages

Othering the Academy

Professionalism and Multiculturalism

chapter 15|14 pages

Academics as Public Intellectuals

Rethinking Classroom Politics