Resolved: pedagogic enthusiasm plus naivety about the likely reactions of the “safe space” brigade shouldn’t be a burning-at-the-stake kind of offense.
Or any kind of firing offense.
Bright Sheng, University of Michigan professor of composition and survivor of China’s Cultural Revolution, showed his class the 1965 movie “Othello,” which stars Laurence Olivier. Olivier was in blackface.
Sheng failed to give a trigger warning so that safe-space aficionados could either gird their loins or skip the class.
Uh oh.
As Reason magazine’s Robby Soave notes, Olivier’s use of blackface “was controversial even at the time.”
Given the sub-venial nature of the sin, what might any sane-but-offended student have done? Go up after class and say, “Gee, Professor Sheng, love your class, but shouldn’t you have made some preparatory comment about the blackface? Well, have a nice day.”
But no. It’s got to be a wailing reenactment of Edvard Munch’s painting The Scream, with rabid students (and others) demanding Sheng be booted. No attention to context, no proportionality, no common sense.
Sheng has offered an abject apology, saying, in part, that “time has changed, and I made a mistake in showing the film, and I am very sorry.”
Was the mob demanding his ouster appeased? No. The mob never is.
The professor has for now stopped teaching his class, and the university is “investigating.”
The investigation actually needed, alas, will not be done. What administrators must discover is a backbone.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
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2 replies on “Bright Sheng Dimmed”
Unfortunately, the administrators are, by and large, on the same side as the mob. The professor should never have had to apologize for the abject ignorance of those he attempts to teach.
The inmates are running the asylum.