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Fundies need not apply

Academic bigotry is just another front in the culture war


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Blacklisting." a senior in the journalism history course I teach at the University of Texas did not know who U.S. Grant was, but she knew all about the dreaded "McCarthy era," that time in those dismal 1950s when sweet, kind Hollywood screenwriters on the left had trouble getting jobs.

That's typical. Many of the students who graduated from major universities during May have a distorted view of the past. Many sat through lectures emphasizing minor episodes designed to teach students about the nastiness of the right or the virtues of the left. Most have no understanding of little things like the role of Christianity in American history.

Even when it comes to "blacklisting," few students learned about Hollywood's discrimination against Christians and conservatives during the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s. They never heard of the Hollywood Stalinist tyranny of the mid-1940s, even though Screen Actors Guild president Ronald Reagan got his political start standing up against it.

One reason few students learned what actually happened is because of the academic blacklisting of Christians and conservatives that occurs today. I was reminded of this recently by a telephone call from David Snodgrass, chairman of the Mass Communication Department at Florida Southern University. He was calling because I had supervised the doctoral dissertation of a candidate for a faculty position there, and he wanted my opinion of that gentleman's capabilities.

And then, hesitantly, Prof. Snodgrass asked for something more: "There's, uh, one question that arose concerning [the candidate's] background ... just a hunch, something that came out of my going through his vita ... 1977-79, assistant managing editor, Good News Magazine."

When I asked what the hunch was about a job from two decades before, Prof. Snodgrass whispered the horrible possibility: Is the candidate a "fundamentalist"? The concern, he hastened to say, was not with religious belief as such, but "we would not want a person who held beliefs that would interfere with his ability to do mainstream scholarship.... We are so very, very eager to have someone doing mainstream research and publication. We want someone who will be nationally recognized, who will have stature in the field."

Prof. Snodgrass's caution is logical. Given the bigotry of leading academics and their journals, a fundamentalist (unless he stays in the closet) will be frozen out, and a university's national reputation will not grow. But is such discrimination right? How many universities have informal blacklists against Bible-believing Christians or political conservatives?

I have some personal experience with academic bigotry. During my first year in graduate school as an atheist and a communist, professors at the University of Michigan called me a genius; they were wrong. When I left as a Christian and a conservative, one professor believed I had become a moron; he also was wrong, but he tried to keep me from receiving a Ph.D., and probably would have succeeded but for the intervention of the one outspokenly conservative professor on campus.

Ever since then I have been very sensitive to ideological bias in grading: I have been teaching at the University of Texas since 1983, and in all that time no student, to my knowledge, has ever accused me of such unfairness.

But, from what students have told me and shown me concerning other courses, it does appear that such bias occurs elsewhere. This is not to say that I'm a more virtuous grader than others; since I work in hostile territory and know that everything I say or do is examined critically, I would have to play it straight with grades even if my preferences were to push me in a different direction. Such restraints may not exist elsewhere.

We do not know what informal blacklisting does to the academic prospects of Christians and conservatives. I have been blessed with good health, a tough skin, a supportive family and church, and the ability to write fairly quickly. But lots of others who refuse to ignore God in their work never get through the ideological pounding of graduate school, never get a university job, never get tenure.

There is, after all, a culture war going on throughout the United States, and it is becoming ever more vicious in our academic hothouses. Discerning alumni and taxpayers should ask whether the universities they support have a policy, "No fundamentalists allowed." Christian students and professors should not allow themselves to be shut up, slammed down, and forced out without a fight. When they are attacked, they deserve the full support of Christian alumni, taxpayers, and the entire church community.


Marvin Olasky

Marvin is the former editor in chief of WORLD, having retired in January 2022, and former dean of World Journalism Institute. He joined WORLD in 1992 and has been a university professor and provost. He has written more than 20 books, including Reforming Journalism.

@MarvinOlasky

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