The University Bookman,
Vol. 42, No. 4 (Winter 2002–2003)
Editor’s Note
Correcting the Record
In her enjoyable new book, Useful Idiots: How Liberals Got it Wrong
in the Cold War and Still Blame America First, Mona Charen quotes the response
of the historian Henry Steele Commager to President Reagan’s famous “evil
empire” speech in March 1983. Commager considered it “the worst
presidential speech in American history, and I’ve read them all. No
other presidential speech has ever so flagrantly allied the government with
religion. It was a gross appeal to religious prejudice. ”
George W. Bush’s reference to an “axis of evil” has, of
course, elicited many similar responses today—not least from religious
people themselves, sorely troubled by representatives of the people appropriating
the language of “good” and “evil” in matters of
politics. Indeed, the charge that these political theologians make against
theological politicians contains three characteristics of the humbug that
has come to characterize the wider response of sections of the intellectual
establishment to the pressing social and political issues of our day: a
pious prejudice against religious prejudice; an elitist hatred of hierarchies;
and a demonization of anyone who still believes in demons.
In this sense, perhaps, and only in this sense, our professional
academic, legal, and religious thinkers might be considered among the most
conservative of interest groups. While fully discharging their responsibility
to encourage intellectual and material progress, and to think the unthinkable,
a number of them balance this energy with a mindset that has changed not
a jot in centuries. It is as if these revolutionaries, from their coffee
shop retreats, urge les misérables around the world to take up arms
against elitism and moral scapegoating, while carefully playing Inspector
Javert behind the barricades, ensuring that prejudice, elites, and scapegoats
remain firmly in their appointed places.
This issue of the University Bookman contains reviews of recent
works that confront this scholastic schizophrenia by attempting to correct
the record of history in important respects. Bruce Thornton and Robert Woods
explore the exclusive discourse gripping areas of our academic life and
institutions, where those who fail to use the correct language, or who argue
for greater popular involvement in the academy, find that there are no empty
chairs or tables set aside for them. David Bardallis and Glen Olsen expose
the enduring vibrancy of demonology in modern academic circles, where there
remains a powerful prejudice against the Catholic Church and the cultural
achievements of the Middle Ages. Somehow, while much of the rationalist
hubris of the Enlightenment has been left in tatters, eighteenth-century
prejudices against religious institutions (together with Jefferson’s
casual reference to a “wall of separation”) have taken deeper
root. The effect of this prejudice is, of course, not only to obstruct scholarly
advancement, but to stifle serious intellectual debate and thereby prevent
the emergence of effective responses to contemporary problems—a point
made forcefully in other contexts by William Hay and Mark Winchell.
Correcting the historical record is a vital first step to breaking
the cycle of humbug. Yet, as Michael Dauphinais shows us in his review of
a welcome new edition of Dorothy Day’s On Pilgrimage, and as anyone
will know who has read Victor Hugo’s magisterial Les Misérables (or even, dare I say it, seen it on stage), there is also a path to real
social progress (“regeneration” might be a better word) and
a deeper understanding of our humanity that lies in front of us all, if
we care to look. It is found in the conscience that is sharpened by an awareness
of the demons that lurk among and within us, in the spirit that enables
ordinary individuals to make extraordinary differences in their own neighborhood
routines, and in the faith that is strengthened by the example of our Christian
heritage. Dorothy Day, recalling Georges Bernanos’s novel The
Diary of a Country Priest in an interview with Robert Coles, put it this way:
Maybe it’s my reading, and no one else’s, but I think of
the rainy, melancholy weather as an accompaniment to the curé’s
life, to his daily duties. Others make clear weather for themselves!
They write and talk and imagine themselves getting rid of every
problem, solving
all the puzzles; they tell others what will be ahead, a bright,
sunny future, if only they pay attention, listen to every word
spoken, read every word
written. Not that curé; he knew that even the best weather is only
temporary, that clouds and a downpour are around every corner.
But he chose to stay there, do what he could; the true reality,
as our Lord told us when
He chose a ministry, rather than a book to write and an empire
to lead.