College Formerly Known as Yale

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The College Formerly Known as Yale

Any renaming push on the Ivy campus should start at the top—with Elihu Yale, slave trader extraordinaire.

By ROGER KIMBALL / Wall Street Journal

Aug. 8, 2016

The English novelist Kingsley Amis once observed that much that was wrong with the 20th century could be summed up in the word “workshop.” On American campuses today, I suspect that the operative word is “committee.”

On Aug. 1, Yale University president Peter Salovey announced that he is creating a Committee to Establish Principles on Renaming. There has been a craze for renaming things on college campuses the last couple of years—a common passion in unsettled times.

In the French Revolution, leaders restarted the calendar at zero and renamed the months of the year. The Soviets renamed cities, erased the names of political enemies from the historical record, and banned scientific theories that conflicted with Marxist doctrine.

At Princeton, Stanford, Georgetown, Harvard and elsewhere, students have demanded that buildings, programs and legacies be renamed to accommodate modern sensitivities. Amherst College has dropped Lord Jeffrey Amherst as its mascot because the colonial administrator was unkind to Indians. Students at the University of Missouri have petitioned to remove a statue of the “racist rapist” Thomas Jefferson. This is part of a larger effort, on and off campuses, to stamp out dissenting attitudes and rewrite history to comport with contemporary prejudices.

But isn’t the whole raison d’être of universities to break the myopia of the present and pursue the truth? Isn’t that one important reason they enjoy such lavish public support and tax breaks?

A point of contention at Yale has been the residential college named for John C. Calhoun, a congressman, senator, secretary of war and vice president. Alas, Calhoun was also an avid supporter of slavery.

Mr. Salovey is also perhaps still reeling from the Halloween Horror, the uproar last year over whether Ivy League students can be trusted to pick their own holiday costumes, which made Yale’s crybullies a national laughing stock. In the wake of that he earmarked $50 million for such initiatives as the Center for the Study of Race, Indigeneity, and Transnational Migration.

He then announced that Calhoun College would not change its name. Apparently, he has reconsidered. After the Committee on Renaming has done its work to develop “clearly delineated principles,” he wrote, “we will be able to hold requests for the removal of a historical name—including that of John C. Calhoun—up to them.”


I have unhappy news for Mr. Salovey. In the great racism sweepstakes, John Calhoun was an amateur. Far more egregious was Elihu Yale, the philanthropist whose benefactions helped found the university. As an administrator in India, he was deeply involved in the slave trade. He always made sure that ships leaving his jurisdiction for Europe carried at least 10 slaves. I propose that the committee on renaming table the issue of Calhoun College and concentrate on the far more flagrant name “Yale.”


There is also the matter of historical artifacts. Earlier this year an unhappy employee at Calhoun College smashed a stained-glass window because it depicted slaves. He was dismissed but then, after a student outcry, rehired. In response, Mr. Salovey convened a Committee on Art in Public Spaces. Offending objects, he explained, including “certain windows,” would be “relocated” and “conserved for future study.” Wasn’t there a similar initiative in Europe in the late 1930s and 1940s?

Yale’s leaders have compared the renaming committee to the so-called Woodward Committee that, in the mid-1970s, issued on behalf of the school a ringing defense of free speech (“to think the unthinkable, discuss the unmentionable, and challenge the unchallengeable”).

A closer historical parallel, however, might be the Committee of Public Safety, which during the French Revolution worked overtime to assure that citizens lived up to its ideal of virtue. “Virtue” was a word always on the lips of the revolutionaries in France. They took the term from the man whom Robespierre called a “prodigy of virtue,” Jean-Jacques Rousseau.

In everyday life, acting virtuously means such boring things as being kind, honest and dutiful. For moral prodigies, such pedestrian examples are beneath notice. Rousseau, “drunk with virtue” as he put it in his “Confessions,” nonetheless shipped off to a foundlings home all five of the children he had with his semi-literate mistress. She protested, but Rousseau cared not for he had “never felt the least glimmering of love for her.”

Robespierre floated aloft upon a similarly callous intoxication. The Republic, he said, was founded on “virtue and its emanation, terror.” Hence the work of the Committee of Public Safety, whose chief handmaiden was the guillotine and whose activities depended critically on anonymous reports about those whose commitment to virtue was less than wholehearted.

Yale, though sitting on a tax-exempt endowment of $24 billion, does not have the guillotine. But like many institutions entrusted with educating America’s future leaders, it is hard at work undermining due process and fostering an atmosphere of anonymous accusation. In a campus-wide email this spring, Stephanie Spangler, a Yale professor of obstetrics and gynecology as well as “University Title IX Coordinator,” discussed the school’s plans to launch “on-line tools for reporting sexual misconduct anonymously.”

The right of due process and the right to face one’s accuser have been hallowed guarantors of liberty since the Roman Republic. They are enshrined in the U.S. Constitution. But those who are infatuated with their own virtue find it easy to dispense with such unwieldy constraints.

I suspect that Mr. Salovey believes he will be able to pacify the professional grievance-mongers on his campus by bribes and capitulations. He should remember what an earlier cultural provocateur, the Yippie leader Jerry Rubin, said: “Satisfy our demands, and we’ve got twelve more. The more demands you satisfy, the more we’ve got.”

The Committee of Public Safety came into being in April 1793. On July 28, 1794, Robespierre, the man who oversaw the murder of so many, was himself guillotined. Thus do revolutions consume their abettors.

Mr. Kimball is editor and publisher of the New Criterion and president and publisher of Encounter Books.
 
Yale: The Slippery Slope of Renaming History

In literary and historic analysis presentism used to be a serious academic flaw.

Aug. 15, 2016 6:12 p.m.


Regarding Roger Kimball’s “The College Formerly Known as Yale” (op-ed, Aug. 9): In literary and historic analysis, “presentism” used to be a serious academic flaw, but apparently no longer. Presentism is defined as the introduction of present-day ideas into the interpretation of past events as if the cultures then and now are the same. It’s the juxtaposition of persons, events, customs (including morality) from different time periods. Perhaps humans always understood that slave trading was always wrong, but very likely not.

The tenured professorate is so secure in wealthy institutions that it has become a new, independent aristocracy. When Lawrence Summers got booted out of Harvard the faculty demonstrated its control of the school. Now the students appear to be leading the faculty. Where are the trustees of such institutions? They appear to have become irrelevant.

Ronald J. Carroll

New Harbor, Maine

Faculty and administrators who support changes to dorm names will never agree to any movement to change the name of the university or college itself. No student wants to be a graduate of the “College of Southern Central Connecticut” after paying annual tuition of $65,000.

Wayne Baden

Rhinebeck, N.Y.

Once Yale University renames itself Diversity University, a kinder, gentler mascot is essential. Handsome Dan has got to go. Bulldogs were bred for aggressive acts of animal cruelty, and seeing Handsome Dan at the Yale Bowl could instill fear, disrupt student learning and make students feel unsafe.

Frank Roth

Portsmouth, N.H.

Let there be formed, in every college and university, a “committee for the expurgation of the names of despicable persons.” Then the real business of higher education can begin: screaming at the past as an excuse to avoid addressing the present. Of course, in short order, the newly named edifices and institutions will, themselves, come under the scrutiny of the next crop of scholars. Let’s stop naming colleges after people. Let’s name them according to, say, the nearest body of water. Consider: Pemigewasset River College, or Lake Erie University, or Water Treatment Plant A&M. Isn’t that better? There is also the question of what impact all of this will have on endowments, but no matter. Education will be free, so not to worry.


Shlomo Groll

Suffern, N.Y.

Why doesn’t Mr. Kimball offer some mature, constructive suggestions? For example: After World War II, East Germans rebuilt the main building of Berlin’s Humboldt University. On the wall behind a landing is Karl Marx’s famous 11th thesis on Feurbach: “The philosophers have only interpreted the world . . . the point, however, is to change it.”

Reunification prompted a debate over the inscription. Rejecting the precedent of Nazis and Communists, who often erased the past, authorities formed a committee that sponsored a contest for a design establishing a new context for the quotation. The creative winner was “Vorsicht Stufe”: “Mind the step,” a sign placed in front of each step leading to and from the landing. We need to bring about change, but we should be careful about the steps taken in doing so.

Brook Thomas

Irvine, Calif.

Mr. Kimball should have offered a suggestion as to what Yale’s new name should be. The answer is obvious: The unsung hero Jeremiah Dummer, a man hugely important to the school, who got Elihu Yale to donate more money and who strongly supported Yale in other ways. What would be more fitting than to see New Haven’s pride renamed Dummer University?

Jack Belck

Scottsdale, Ariz.

Mr. Kimball makes me glad I went to Notre Dame. She’s pretty much above the fray.

Dan Scanlan

West Bloomfield, Mich.







Jack Kramer 8 hours ago
Rename it John Kerry University. Isn't he an alumnus? The committee can vote for it before they vote against it, or vice versa. I am not sure.




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