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Learning to Be
Stupid in the Culture of Cash
By Luciana Bohne
08/08/03 You might think that reading about a Podunk
University's English teacher's attempt to connect the dots between the poverty
of American education and the gullibility of the American public may be a
little trivial, considering we've embarked on the first, openly-confessed
imperial adventure of senescent capitalism in the US, but bear with me. The
question my experiences in the classroom raise is why have these young people
been educated to such abysmal depths of ignorance.
"I don't read," says
a junior without the slightest self-consciousness. She has not the smallest
hint that professing a habitual preference for not reading at a university is
like bragging in ordinary life that one chooses not to breathe. She is in my
World Literature class. She has to read novels by African, Latin
American, and Asian authors. She is not there by choice: it's just a
"distribution" requirement for graduation, and it's easier than philosophy
she thinks.
The novel she has trouble reading is Isabel Allende's
Of Love and Shadows, set in the post-coup terror of Pinochet's
junta's Nazi-style regime in Chile, 1973-1989. No one in the class, including
the English majors, can write a focused essay of analysis, so I have to teach
that. No one in the class knows where Chile is, so I make photocopies of
general information from world guide surveys. No one knows what socialism or
fascism is, so I spend time writing up digestible definitions. No one knows
what Plato's "Allegory of the Cave" is, and I supply it because it's impossible
to understand the theme of the novel without a basic knowledge of that work -
which used to be required reading a few generations ago. And no one in the
class has ever heard of 11 September 1973, the CIA-sponsored coup which
terminated Chile's mature democracy. There is complete shock when I supply US
de-classified documents proving US collusion with the generals' coup and the
assassination of elected president, Salvador Allende.
Geography,
history, philosophy, and political science all missing from their
preparation. I realize that my students are, in fact, the oppressed, as Paulo
Freire's "The Pedagogy of the Oppressed" pointed out, and that they are paying
for their own oppression. So, I patiently explain: no, our government has not
been the friend of democracy in Chile; yes, our government did fund both the
coup and the junta torture-machine; yes, the same goes for most of Latin
America. Then, one student asks, "Why?" Well, I say, the CIA and the
corporations run roughshod over the world in part because of the ignorance of
the people of the United States, which apparently is induced by formal
education, reinforced by the media, and cheered by Hollywood. As the more
people read, the less they know and the more indoctrinated they become, you get
this national enabling stupidity to attain which they go into bottomless pools
of debt. If it weren't tragic, it would be funny.
Meanwhile, this
expensive stupidity facilitates US funding of the bloody work of death squads,
juntas, and terror regimes abroad. It permits the war we are waging - an
unfair, illegal, unjust, illogical, and expensive war, which announces to the
world the failure of our intelligence and, by the way, the creeping weakness of
our economic system. Every man, woman, and child killed by a bomb, bullet,
famine, or polluted water is a murder - and a war crime. And it signals the
impotence of American education to produce brains equipped with the bare
necessities for democratic survival: analyzing and asking questions.
Let
me put it succinctly: I don't think serious education is possible in America.
Anything you touch in the annals of knowledge is a foe of this system of
commerce and profit, run amok. The only education that can be permitted is if
it acculturates to the status quo, as happens in the expensive schools, or if
it produces people to police and enforce the status quo, as in the state school
where I teach. Significantly, at my school, which is a third-tier university,
servicing working-class, first-generation college graduates who enter
lower-echelon jobs in the civil service, education, or middle management, the
favored academic concentrations are communications, criminal justice, and
social work--basically how to mystify, cage, and control the
masses.
This education is a vast waste of the resources and potential of
the young. It is boring beyond belief and useless--except to the powers and
interests that depend on it. When A Ukrainian student, a three-week arrival on
these shores, writes the best-organized and most profound essay in English of
the class, American education has something to answer forespecially to
our youth.
But the detritus and debris that American education has
become is both planned and instrumental. It's why our media succeeds in telling
lies. It's why our secretary of state can quote from a graduate-student paper,
claiming confidently that the stolen data came from the highest intelligence
sources. It's why Picasso's "Guernica" can be covered up during his
preposterous "report" to the UN without anyone guessing the political
significance of this gesture and the fascist sensibility that it
protects.
Cultural fascism manifests itself in an aversion to thought
and cultural refinement. "When I hear the word 'culture,'" Goebbels said, "I
reach for my revolver." One of the infamous and telling reforms the Pinochet
regime implemented was educational reform. The basic goal was to end the
university's role as a source of social criticism and political opposition. The
order came to dismantle the departments of philosophy, social and political
science, humanities and the arts--areas in which political discussions were
likely to occur. The universities were ordered to issue degrees only in
business management, computer programming, engineering, medicine and dentistry
- vocational training schools, which in reality is what American education has
come to resemble, at least at the level of mass education. Our students can
graduate without ever touching a foreign language, philosophy, elements of any
science, music or art, history, and political science, or economics. In fact,
our students learn to live in an electoral democracy devoid of politics
a feature the dwindling crowds at the voting booths well illustrate.
The
poet Percy Bysshe Shelley wrote that, in the rapacity that the industrial
revolution created, people first surrendered their minds or the capacity to
reason, then their hearts or the capacity to empathize, until all that was left
of the original human equipment was the senses or their selfish demands for
gratification. At that point, humans entered the stage of market commodities
and market consumersone more thing in the commercial landscape. Without
minds or hearts, they are instrumentalized to buy whatever deadens their
clamoring and frightened sensesofficial lies, immoral wars, Barbies, and
bankrupt educations.
Meanwhile, in my state, the governor has ordered a
10% cut across the board for all departments in the state including
education.
Luciana Bohne teaches film and
literature at Edinboro University of Pennsylvania. She can be reached at
lbohne@edinboro.edu.
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