Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Everything Wrong with Everything Wrong with Universities -- Short Assignment 3 Analysis



A number of problems plagued Stanley Fish’s “Political Correctness on Campus” article. At first glance, the text was dense, disorganized, and at inconclusive at best.  I found these problems to be mostly accentuated in the fact that the author was attempting to write the piece in a sort of stream-of-consciousness, as if they were standing and verbally delivering a speech instead of creating a written analysis.

To begin with, I turned to the designated chapters of Style to diagnose the basic problems. The overarching difficulty in the piece was that of a lack of clarity. Page 7 of Style explains that “when we say that [a piece] is unclear, we mean that we have a hard time understanding it; we say it is dense when we struggle to read it.” This is true of the “Political Correctness” piece. This is so because of the author’s continual shifts the subject of the piece. Although the main anecdote of the piece is by a documentary, the author spins off in a number of directions, talking about everything from guest speakers on campus to the political stances of teachers to political correctness of bus drivers. The author gives little concern to proper transition of ideas. However, the author spends too much time transitioning between sentences. Here, I am speaking of the ‘throat-clearing’ that the author continually uses. Throat clearing, as defined by the Style book, “typically begins with metadiscourse that connects a sentence to the previous one, with transitions such as and, but, or therefore.” Half of the changes I made in the article were simply taking out the metadiscourse.

Digging deeper into the article, I looked to McDonald’s “I Agree, But…” reading.  What first catches the eye is McDonald statement that one cannot express all the different views in a particular debate. This is what the Political Correctness article fails to realize. The debate of political vs. objective agendas in the classroom is a heated one, however the author tries too hard to show all the different facets of the debate instead of focusing on a main issue.

“The rhetorical practice of accepting the key arguments of opponents… [was] important because it allowed groups of people with conflicting opinions to realize that although they desired different outcomes, they did share many views, and each party had valid claims that needed to be addressed (pg. 213).” This is another thing that Fish failed to include. Fish spends the majority of the article lamenting how politics and political correctness have invaded the university and rarely mentions the other side of the story. This imbalance in the argument causes the article to be heavily one-sided, and therefore endangers the ethos. Without considering both sides, one cannot have a full grasp of the issue.

Lastly, I look to Kaufer’s “I Have a Plan” article to conclude my analysis. Although Fish’s piece fulfills the third level of policy conflict (that of conflicting local values), he overlooks one of the key parts of addressing a stock issue: that is, he doesn’t present a solution. Kaufer immediately jumps into the issue of dealing with whether the given solution is capable of solving the problem and if the cause can be eliminated without changing the entire status quo. The Political Correctness article is all about changing the entire status quo. Fish’s article firstly ignores the necessary step of presenting a solution, and secondly forgets that a solution should not attempt to annihilate the present situation. Instead, the closest thing he gives to a solution is lamenting how we were warned of politics stepping into the classroom as far back as 1915.

To conclude, Fish’s “Political Correctness” article lacks the criteria presented in Style, “I Have a Plan”, and “I Agree, But…”. There were three overarching issues with the article which caused it to not meet expectations. Firstly, there were a number of grammar fallacies, from single sentences pulled into whole paragraphs to the excessive use of metadiscourse. Secondly, the organization of the article was lax at best, and so a number of my corrections took the form of comment boxes expressing where certain passages should have been placed, or questioning the passages use in the text itself. And finally, the piece failed to give a conceivable solution to the issue.

Hopefully, by addressing these issues, the article could become something of note instead of something scribbled over with notes.

-Melissa DeHart

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