Confronting the Post-Academic University: In Conversation with Mark Mercer
"Before decolonization, deplatforming, diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) mandates, Indigenization, Black Lives Matter, safe spaces and the war on merit consumed intellectual life on Canadian campuses, there were the Mohammed cartoons...
So began Mercer’s long connection to SAFS. Founded in 1992, the non-profit organization’s primary goal is to “maintain freedom in teaching, research and scholarship” at Canadian universities. It’s a lonely task. And getting lonelier, as universities have grown increasingly intolerant of heterodox opinions, unfettered debate and even the very notion of merit. Among recent examples of the decay are the firing of tenured Mount Royal University professor Frances Widdowson for expressing controversial views on Indigenous issues and DEI, the proliferation of race-based hiring programs, the chilling of free speech and open discourse and numerous disciplinary actions taken against academics for expressing a conservative viewpoint. Since the Mohammed cartoons, allegations of offensive behaviour backed by administrative sanction have become a trump card against free speech on campus.
Through it all, Mercer – who would become president of SAFS in 2015 – proved himself to be Canada’s most visible and vocal defender of academic freedoms...
The campaign has at times become intensely personal. In 2020 Mercer was hauled before a disciplinary inquisition at Saint Mary’s over his own freedom of speech. This followed the uproar about University of Ottawa art professor Verushka Lieutenant-Duval’s mention of the word n****r in a lecture on subversiveness in art. While she displayed no animus or intent to demean, its mere utterance offended some students and Lieutenant-Duval’s class was suspended pending a university investigation.
This prompted a requisite letter from SAFS. “The University of Ottawa could have simply affirmed Dr Lieutenant-Duval’s academic freedom in teaching and informed the students that their complaint was groundless,” Mercer wrote. He forwarded this letter to administrators at other universities. And because his email included the forbidden word spelled out in full, Mercer soon found himself caught up in the same punitive disciplinary inquiry that the SAFS deplores when it happens to others...
Mark Mercer: Peter posted the cartoons on his office door when Canadian news organizations declared they wouldn’t publish them. But the day after he put them up, Terry Murphy, the academic vice president of Saint Mary’s, ordered them down. Both Murphy and university president Colin Dodds said the presence of the cartoons posed a threat to property and personal safety.
Naïve as I was (and still am), I thought the university had perhaps been temporarily overcome by emotion. It took me a long time to realize that most academic administrators in Canada have no love for or commitment to academic freedom, freedom of expression on campus or the educational mission of their institutions. It continues to pain me that our universities are in the hands of people who appear disdainful of these academic values. Saint Mary’s and many other Canadian universities have become what I call “post-academic institutions.”
I initially got involved by writing memos to the central characters at my school explaining how their actions were contrary to academic values and would have baleful consequences for the educational character of Saint Mary’s. I was surprised and disappointed that so few others at Saint Mary’s spoke up...
C2C: Was the cartoon issue an early example of what has since grown to become the Woke revolution afflicting universities and society-at-large?
MM: At least three trends were already taking shape as early as the 1980s. The first was political correctness. This involved censoriousness about how you referred to people of certain groups. That was troubling not only because it was an initial attempt to control people through sanctions rather than argument, but it also diverted attention from what people were saying to the way they said it. Political correctness seemed to die down in the early 2000s, but then it came back with a vengeance as callout culture, cancel culture and now wokeness.
Then there was the Canadian iteration of affirmative action, with its insistence that places be reserved for women in student associations and teaching assistants’ unions. Affirmative action implied that values other than academic merit should prevail in academic contexts. This in turn led to DEI mandates, in which social and political ends, such as seeing more black or Indigenous people in the professoriate, now overrule academic goals, such as sound teaching and research.
Finally, there were the “canon wars” of the late 1980s. [Editor’s note: Often popularly expressed as disdain for studying the work of “dead white males.”] This was initially presented as a way of bringing new voices into the humanities, but what was really going on was the imposition of a sociological viewpoint: a preference for one group of writers over another for reasons unrelated to intellectual merit. A scholar can choose to teach Hamlet because of its quality as a work of imagination, not because it belongs to a certain “canon” of Western literature. This is a very different thing from selecting a book by a woman author for the mere sake of seeing more women authors represented. Hardly anyone speaks of canons anymore, but the idea that we are to read literature and philosophy with a sociologist’s eye has become firmly entrenched.
C2C: With the 1980s as backdrop, how have things changed on campus more recently?
MM: Universities in Canada have become much more hierarchical and managerial. The ascendency of human resources departments, with their proliferation of new and worryingly vague rules, has led to greater oversight and control of professors, departments, programs and students. Administrative discipline is frequently used as the means of control. Sadly, faculty unions don’t seem to mind.
At the same time, there has been tremendous growth in seeing people as representatives of types rather than as individuals in their own right. Hiring and promoting by race, ethnicity, cultural affiliation, sex, gender expression and other academically irrelevant characteristics is now pervasive on campus. Beyond its effect on freedom of expression, the pursuit of non-academic goals such as social justice has also meant a decline in sincerity, honesty and easy personal relations. And this has had a devastating effect on teaching as well as public discourse.
C2C: Let’s talk about what a university should be. Since the Enlightenment, universities have been idealized as places where a culture of intellect is created and where students’ characters are moulded, habits formed and minds educated. How is that going in Canada today?
MM: I don’t want universities to create anything, not even a culture of the intellect. It is true that characters are moulded and habits formed at an academic university. However, developing, forming and educating are not purposes universities should serve or ends they should seek.