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Letter
to the Editor--
Here is an article I wrote
for a student publication at Wesleyan back in Spring 1997. I hope
it's relevant to your advocacy page. One other thing we did for
this effort is get students to write 1-2 page testimonials about
their experiences in courses with queer studies materials. We
presented those to the University President and VP of Academic
Affairs.
We're Here, We're Queer... And We Want to
Study
by Aongus Burke
1997
So youre gay. Or bi(curious).
Or maybe you dont have any tendencies in that direction
at all (yeah, weve heard that one before). Who knows why
youre interested in the field of gay, lesbian, and sexuality
studies? But you are, and you figure "hey, Im at Wesleyan-I
should learn something about this stuff while Im here."
And why not? On the whole, people here will be pretty supportive
of that kind of interest. It sure beats bringing, say, Fear of
a Queer Planet to the counter at your local bookstore back home.
So you go to the coursebook and
try to see whats available. Invariably, you discover that
theres not much there. There probably arent any courses
devoted exclusively to gay, lesbian, and sexuality studies. Maybe
there are a couple that devote a decent amount of time to the
field, but its definitely not central. And then a good few
courses mention the word "Sexuality" in the course description,
almost always proceeded by "Race, Class, Gender, and..."
So youre in a conundrum.
You decide you dont want to take one of those courses that
contain a token amount of gay, lesbian, and sexuality stuff-the
rest of the course just isnt interesting enough to you.
You grudgingly consider taking one of the semi-queer-oriented
courses. Then you realize that you have to put it as a second
or, more probably, first primary if you want to get it. But youre
a such-and-such major and youve all these courses you have
take and to take them you have to get to them...Or theres
some other courses that are entirely devoted to stuff that youre
really interested in. Youve got to prioritize, and that
means queer studies has to go.
This is an all-too-familiar scenario
for many students, myself included. This year Ive
been working on the Gay, Lesbian, and Sexuality Studies (GLASS)
Committee to do something about it. One thing weve been
doing is collecting information before pre-registration about
exactly which courses being offered the next semester have a decent,
if not substantial, amount of queer-related material in them and
letting students know about them; hopefully, most of you got our
list in your mailboxes a few weeks ago.
Our other main project has been
pressuring the university to institute a queer faculty line. A
queer faculty line is a professor specifically recruited by the
university to teach queer studies. Incidentally, Professor Henry
Abelove, who teaches in the English department and American Studies
program, does not fulfill this function. Abelove, like every other
faculty member at Wesleyan, was recruited to teach courses in
a non-queer studies field. Faculty members get to teach a certain
number of electives each year (rarely more than two), although
if they take on additional departmental and/or administrative
duties, or go on leave, this number is reduced. Abelove, for example,
almost always devotes his electives to queer studies courses,
but he was forced to cancel his Queer Theory course this semester
when he became chair of the American Studies program.Since Abelove
took a sabbatical during the 1995-6 academic year, his course
on gay and lesbian literature, The Newest Minority, was the only
course offered at Wesleyan during the past two years that dealt
primarily with gay, lesbian, and sexuality studies. One wonders
how anyone ever fulfills the (mysteriously unadvertised) concentration
in Queer Studies offered for American Studies majors.
Do students want more queer studies
courses to be offered? You be the judge. I coordinated a petition
drive for a queer faculty line earlier this semester. Im
sure a few of you remember because many of you signed it-692 people,
in fact, all in about 5 hours of petitioning. Certainly the numbers
for the queer-relevant courses offered at the University are suggestive.
The Newest Minority enrolled 97 students in the Fall 1996 semester,
an unheard of number of students for an English course. The number
is especially impressive since Abelove only let in sophomores,
juniors, and seniors who listed the course as a first or second
primary during preregistration. This semester, there were about
10 courses offered at Wesleyan that gave more than a passing reference
to queer issues. Of these, however, only a few really dealt with
gay, lesbian, and sexuality studies to any significant degree.
The pre-registration figures for these courses also show how much
demand there is for them. Race and Sexuality in American History,
taught by Renee Romano, originally had a class limit of 20. Given
the excessive demand for the course, Romano expanded the cap to
22. That meant she still had to turn away 17 other students who
tried to pre-register for the course (almost all as first
or second primaries), as well as 10 other students who expressed
interest. The class limit for Lisa Wedeens Sex, Gender,
and Sexuality course was 35. There were 15 failed enrollments
for this course (again, almost all first and second primaries)
and about 5 other students expressed interest. (Note to professors:
if you want students to preregister for your class, put the word
"sexuality" in the title.) The numbers for Sex, Gender,
and Sexuality are particularly impressive since a similar course,
Feminist Theory, was offered this semester. Feminist Theory, normally
an extremely difficult course to get into for non-majors, only
enrolled 20 spaces this semester. The major difference between
Feminist Theory and Sex, Gender and Sexuality: the level of queer
studies content. Claire Potters Women and the American Experience
and Gary Comstocks Introductory Sociology section, queer
relevant courses taught by openly queer professors, also had astronomical
numbers of failed enrollments and turn-aways.
Gary Comstock, the universitys
Protestant chaplain, is perpetually listed as a visiting professor.
Wedeen and Romano are untenured; Potter just got tenured this
semester. This points to another problem students interested in
queer studies courses face: since such a large number of those
courses are offered by either visiting or otherwise untenured
professors, no one looks out for them. The tenure issue is an
especially prickly one for professors who teach queer studies
material because politics have a way of figuring into university
employment practices. Wedeen, for example, is leaving the university
after this semester amidst rumors of friction between her and
others in the notoriously conservative Wesleyan Department of
Government. One wonders if her decision to teach Sex, Gender,
and Sexuality as an elective fits into that. There are good reason
to believe as much. Abelove was originally denied tenure in the
early 1970s until pressure from gay students got the decision
overturned. In recent years, queer visiting professor of sociology
Becky Thompson, who taught popular courses with significant amounts
of queer material, was not offered tenure-track positions at the
university. Thompson alleged to The Argus that word leaked that
several members of the Wesleyan Department of Sociology were displeased
with her "activist" politics, which were supposedly
in conflict with her intellectual responsibilities.
Which brings us to the question
of academic legitimacy. When members of the GLASS Committee spoke
with President Bennet and Vice President of Academic Affairs Richard
Boyd about the possibility of instituting a queer faculty line
at Wesleyan, they werent much impressed with our arguments
concerning the student demand for queer studies courses. They
wanted arguments about the legitimacy of queer studies as a field
of inquiry. This is a familiar reply, of course-it has been issued
to the proponents of womens studies and African American
studies programs in the past, often by those whose political leanings
make them prone to disfavoring such programs. But no serious scholar
today can neglect incorporating things like race, class, and gender
into their analyses of literature or social phenomena. Im
sure well be saying the same thing one day about sexuality.
What makes queer studies a legitimate
field? Well, first of all, try the fact that gay people exist.
We have always existed, everywhere. Im reminded of the argument
that womens studies advocates still have to make, that women
represent half of the worlds population. How can you justify
not studying them? How can you justify not studying us? Like women,
people engaging in homosexual behavior have always existed, and
those people have almost always been oppressed. Why have societies
gone to such great lengths to oppress a group of people marked
only by activities they consensually engage in with one another?
How have societies done this? How have queer people responded?
It is beyond me how anyone could argue that these are not legitimate
questions for academics to attempt to answer.
Answering them requires a serious
intellectual effort. It requires people to question some of their
deepest assumptions-about gender, sex, anatomy, evolution, the
family, power, science, God...the list, Im always discovering,
goes on and on. It requires people to think across disciplines.
Oppression of gay people has roots in and/or is expressed in politics,
economics, philosophy, religion, language, socialization, and
medicine.
Questioning assumptions, thinking
across disciplines: isnt this is what a liberal arts education
is supposed to be all about? I certainly know the impact that
the works of queer theorists like Michel Foucault, Monique Wittig,
and Judith Butler have had on my thinking. In addition to the
substantive knowledge I have gained from their writings, they
have also effected a thorough revolution in my analytical and
critical skills. When I read now, I am much more attuned to what
the authors underlying premises are, what s/he normalizes,
what analytical categories are being used, what s/he treats as
ahistorical or natural, and so on. These are contentious matters,
ones that I encounter in almost all of my classes-even the ones
that have no obvious relation to queer studies (like the classes
in my decidedly straight CSS major).
Many of these analytical skills
could, I suppose, have been acquired in non-queer studies classes.
Maybe the only reason I learned them in courses with queer studies
content is because Im queer and am close to the material.
Of course, there are a lot of queer students here at Wesleyan.
If we want them to pick up those all important critical thinking
skills, giving them queer studies courses is a pretty sensible
and efficient strategy for the administration to pursue. But queer
studies does more than cater to a specific audience. It has the
potential to produce knowledge that no other field can. Being
queer forces you to examine fundamental assumptions because your
very existence defies them. It gives you an intimate knowledge
of what oppression is. In fact, I would argue that gays generally
have a capacity to understand oppression in a way that no other
group can. Unlike most ethnic minorities and (straight) women,
most gays get to experience life as both oppressor and oppressed
for the same category of oppression. We know what its like
to identify as both straight and gay. We know the radical shift
in ones consciousness that is effected when one undergoes
the identity transformation that is at the very essence of coming
out. Personally, I dont share the viewpoint that all oppression
is the same or even interconnected. But I do believe that are
broad similarities involved, if only because since coming out
I better understand why other oppressed groups are also so angry,
also harbor separatist tendencies, also demand self-determination.
But, in the end, whether or not
a queer faculty line get instituted at Wesleyan isnt about
academics. The GLASS Committee knows this; for the most part,
were letting our allies in the faculty handle the legitimacy
questions. The real issues are political and economic-the biases
of administrators, their fears about alienating alumni, parents
of prospective students, and anybody else who helps keep Wesleyan
financially afloat. Our goal is to counter those forces. Our meetings
with President Bennet and Vice President Boyd and the petition
drive have been part of an effort to show that students interested
in queer studies are a political force on this campus too. And
our more recent efforts to gain the support of queer alumni and
parents of queer students mark our first attempts at addressing
economic issues. Again, the forces of irrational homophobia, not
of rational argumentation, stand in the way of the institutionalization
of a queer faculty line at Wesleyan. And what better way to conquer
irrationality than through education?
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