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Richard Harris's avatar

Two quick, additional points about David Kaiser's thoughtful analysis:

1. When I first read Kendi's Stamped from the Beginning, pretentiously subtitled, "The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America," I was immediately reminded of an older book I had read as an undergraduate, Winthrop Jordan's 1969 classic, White Over Black: American Attitudes Toward the Negro 1550-1812. Incidentally Jordan won the the 1969 National Book Award for that SCHOLARSHIP. Indeed, Kendi footnotes Jordan at one point. However, if one reads Kendi's stories and vignettes about 18th and early 19th century American racism, one finds barely amended versions of Jordan's painstaking research. It's instructive, for example, to compare Kendi's discussion of Benjamin Banneker's correspondence with Thomas Jefferson to Jordan's discussion of the same correspondence. The language and sequence of the the two narratives are disturbingly similar. If I had seen this from a doctoral student, I'd have been torn between having a serious private conversation and turning the case over to an academic integrity office. Since this work derived from Kendi's dissertation, I can only assume that he was ill-served by his department. This confirms John McWhorter's argument that Kendi is not an academic in the traditional sense, but rather an activist/polemicist who happens to have an advanced degree. The real blame, however, falls on the institutions like the National Book Foundation that bestowed its highest award on Kendi's book.

2. It always struck me a more than a bit bizarre that Kendi (and other social justice warriors) decry the Enlightenment, science, and the western scholarly tradition as bastions of racism, while deploying unsophisticated and frankly sophomoric applications of that tradition. Kendi's tortured concept of equity is, as David Kaiser implies, low grade social science; just count up differences based on race and compare, with no meaningful statistical controls. Similarly, Kendi's outlandish proposal for a national Department of Anti-Racism staffed by credentialed experts is a bastardization of classic Progressive Era programs, which Daniel Rogers in his study, Atlantic Crossings, brilliantly traces back to the Verein für Socialpolitik, Humbolt University, and the German scholars (e.g. Gustav Schmoller and Adolph Wagner, etc.) with whom many American Progressives studied.

Sadly, I suspect Kaiser is correct that we are not going back to an Enlightenment hegemony any time soon...too much money and too many careers, especially administrative ones, are tied up in the Social Justice Industrial Complex.

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CarlW's avatar

This essay shows how kind and complementary Glenn's "empty suit" description of Kendi is.

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