Rating: Not rated
Tags: Education, Higher, Social Science, General, Minority Studies, Lang:en
Publisher: Independent Institute
Added: December 14, 2020
Modified: November 5, 2021
Summary
This is a powerful exploration of the debilitating impact
that politically-correct “multiculturalism” has
had upon higher education and academic freedom in the United
States. In the name of diversity, many leading academic and
cultural institutions are working to silence dissent and
stifle intellectual life. This book exposes the real impact
of multiculturalism on the institution most closely
identified with the politically correct decline of higher
education—Stanford University. Authored by two Stanford
graduates, this book is a compelling insider's tour of a
world of speech codes, “dumbed-down” admissions
standards and curricula, campus witch hunts, and anti-Western
zealotry that masquerades as legitimate scholarly inquiry.
Sacks and Thiel use numerous primary sources—the
Stanford Daily, class readings, official university
publications—to reveal a pattern of politicized
classes, housing, budget priorities, and more. They trace the
connections between such disparate trends as political
correctness, the gender wars, Generation X nihilism, and
culture wars, showing how these have played a role in shaping
multiculturalism at institutions like Stanford. The authors
convincingly show that multiculturalism is not about learning
more; it is actually about learning less. They end their
comprehensive study by detailing the changes necessary to
reverse the tragic disintegration of American universities
and restore true academic excellence.