The Scandal of Middle East Studies

KURTZ, STANLEY

The Scandal of Middle East Studies Bankrupt scholarship and foolish policy advice, subsidized by the taxpayer. BY STANLEY KURTZ AS CONGRESS prepares to convene hearings on the intelligence...

...But that was the least of it...
...Into the breach stepped John Esposito, a professor of Islamic studies at Holy Cross College who, in books like The Islamic Threat: Myth or Reality (1992) and (with John O. Voll) Islam and Democracy (1996), popularized Said's ideas by purging them of their overt leftism and anti-Americanism and ingeniously applying them to Islam...
...To this day, American scholars have produced not a single serious study of bin Laden, his ideology, or his influence...
...Also in the late seventies, the radical students of the 1960s began to enter the professoriate...
...He and his followers disparaged public concern about terrorism as barely disguised anti-Muslim prejudice...
...By breaking with the European model of learning based on the command of ancient and modern languages, and instead framing their object of study as a region of strategic value to the nation, apolitical scholars could contemplate fifteenth-century Islamic architecture and still do it on the government's dime...
...To what extent do terrorist 'experts' indirectly perpetuate this irrational fear of terrorism by focusing too much on farfetched horrible scenarios...
...They should have been churning out analyses of his ideology and appeal and alerting policymakers to the threat he posed to the United States...
...Drawing on social science texts like Daniel Lern-er's The Passing of Traditional Society (1958), scholars argued that the Middle East had embarked upon a path of gradual but inevitable secularization, urbanization, industrialization, and political participation...
...The government periodically opened its classified archives to scholars, but for the most part was content to reap the benefits of a broad and gradually accumulating scholarly knowledge of the region...
...The region was bound to become mod-ern—that is, more like the United states—and American students saw their job as understanding that process and even helping it along...
...He holds graduate degrees from Princeton and Columbia, has taught at the University of Chicago, Cornell, and Georgetown, and is the author of six books on the Middle East...
...government's assessment of the terrorist threat...
...The most pernicious effect of Said's book was presumptively to impeach as racist the scholarship of anyone not born in the East...
...To a degree, their pitch was self-interested...
...Most important, Said's attack came at a time when the rise of religious reaction and social chaos in the Middle East had undermined the confidence of Middle East scholars...
...The way was cleared for them to wrest power from the Middle East studies establishment when Edward Said's Orientalism (1978) crystallized a new understanding of the field...
...However tendentious the argument of Orientalism, it was carefully drawn—all of it, that is, but the final chapter, which strongly indicted contemporary scholarship as neocolo-nialist...
...Osama bin Laden could only be an embarrassment to scholars who saw political Islam as benign...
...An influential article of Said's appeared in the New York Times Magazine on November 21, 1993, under a title that, in retrospect, nicely encapsulates the worthlessness of his prognostications: "The Phony Islamic Threat...
...Our neglect of the terrorist threat is of long standing and reflects, among other things, the moral and intellectual bankruptcy of American academic programs in Middle Eastern studies...
...The effects of Orientalism on the field were profound...
...The story begins in the late 1940s, when Middle East "area studies" sprouted in American universities...
...It not only made the avowal of a scholar's political principles appropriate, even necessary...
...Said offered virtually no evidence to support his bold condemnations and overlooked vast tracts of scholarly work that cut against his interpretations...
...His reputation growing, Esposito was elected president of the Middle East Studies Association of North America in 1988, and in 1993 took the helm of Georgetown University's new Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding...
...But these were men "of patriotic disposition," who had served their country in war and felt no aversion to maintaining ties to Washington...
...As the progressive forces seized the initiative in Middle Eastern capitals, their allies would do the same on American campuses...
...And Shah Reza Pahlavi had been a leading modernizer...
...Said's postmodern inflection of Marxism had no more place for Islam than did the leftism of the well-heeled secular immigrants who embraced the postcolonial paradigm...
...The founders of this discipline made a pitch for government funding on grounds of national interest...
...They argued, for example, that federal support for American-staffed universities in places like Beirut would strengthen liberal forces in the region, serving as a bulwark against both communism and indigenous movements of sectarian reaction...
...As UCLA historian Nikki Keddie put it, "orientalism" became a sort of swear word with which to dismiss the work of anyone who took the "wrong" position on the Arab-Israeli conflict or whose views were judged conservative...
...This is because, at a time when the influence of Islamic fundamentalism was growing, Said's scheme stigmatized scholarly discussion of Islam as intrinsically "essentializing" and bigoted...
...Six months before September 11, Sarah Lawrence professor Fawaz Gerges, whose work drew on Esposito's paradigm, asked: "Should not observers and academics keep skeptical about the U.S...
...Considering the wide publicity given to Osama bin Laden's activities, American scholars should have been onto him years ago...
...Some dismissed Said's caricature as unseri-ous, while others were cowed by the impossibility of disproving false charges of racism...
...Said himself was hostile to religion, a secular leftist with little knowledge of Islam...
...study Ivory Towers on Sand: The Failure of Middle Eastern Studies in America, commissioned by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy...
...In 1971, Kramer reports, 3.2 percent of America's Middle East area specialists had been born in the region...
...Scholars faced the challenge of explaining the seeming exceptional-ism of Islam—its resistance to modernization and democratization—at a time when belief in Islamic excep-tionalism had been identified as neoThroughout the 1990s, American academics simply refused to study Islamic terrorism...
...Whatever their personal views, the postwar generation, Kramer says, were "careful to keep their politics outside the fences they erected around the field...
...Kramer is the editor of the Middle East Quarterly and a former director of the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African studies at Tel Aviv University...
...They took the chaos in Beirut, the advent of Khomeini, and other signs of transformation in the region as evidence of an emerging revolt of the dispossessed...
...This demographic transformation consolidated the conversion of Middle Eastern studies to leftist anti-Americanism...
...His overthrow by Islamic theocrats in 1979 stunned Americans...
...In those early days, the ruling paradigm in Middle Eastern studies was the investigation of "development" or "modernization...
...By 1992, the figure was nearly half...
...Said's work, in Kramer's words, "enshrined an acceptable hierarchy of political commitments, with Palestine at the top, followed by the Arab nations and the Islamic world...
...Two events unanticipated by Middle East experts brought the modernization paradigm crashing to the ground: the disintegration of Lebanon and the shiite revolution in Iran...
...It is a dismal story, recounted in Martin Kramer's unsparing new Stanley Kurtz is a research fellow at the Hudson Institute...
...Yet, with rare exceptions, American scholars remained silent...
...Any scholarly characterization of the distinctive nature of Islamic civilization or of Middle Eastern culture was taken by Said to be a roundabout justification for Western rule of the irrational natives...
...From the earliest days, immigrant scholars had played a role in the field, without enjoying any sort of preference...
...colonial bigotry...
...Instead, they deliberately avoided the topic of Islamic terrorism and— in their writings, their testimony before Congress, and their advice to the intelligence community—argued that America could bring peace and democracy to the Middle East only by supporting Islamic fundamentalists...
...BY STANLEY KURTZ AS CONGRESS prepares to convene hearings on the intelligence failures exposed by September 11, it is important to recognize that the failures go beyond the dearth of agents on the ground in the Middle East and the shortage of Arabic speakers at the CIA...
...Thus, after the first World Trade Center bombing in 1993, Columbia historian Richard Bulliet organized a conference not to grapple with the emergence of terrorism in New York, but to attack the wave of anti-Muslim prejudice that supposedly would be set off by a guilty verdict in the bombers' trials...
...Throughout the 1990s, American academics simply refused to study Islamic terrorism...
...A new order would arise in the Middle East, they thought, and it would be one that empowered women, students, intellectuals, and refugees...
...But no progressive revolution materialized in the Middle East...
...Said drew no distinction between the most ignorant and bigoted remarks of nineteenth-century colonialists and the most accomplished pronouncements of contemporary Western scholars: All Western knowledge of the East was intrinsically tainted with imperialism...
...Edward Said, meanwhile, was approvingly recycling the argument of Esposito's book The Islamic Threat—that the fear of terrorism is the latest mutation of Cold War paranoia...
...Now in control of America's bastions of Middle Eastern studies, the Saidians (whose luminaries included University of Chicago historian Rashid Khalidi and MIT historian Philip Khoury) were nevertheless no better placed than the modernizers had been to make sense of developments in the region...
...Esposito's solution was to announce that Islamic fundamentalism had been a movement of democratic reform all along, and only orientalist prejudice had prevented Westerners from seeing this happy truth...
...Instead, they searched in vain for a Muslim "Martin Luther...
...The founding text of postcolonial studies, Orientalism effectively delegitimated all previous scholarship on the Middle East by branding it as racist...
...Instead, they searched in vain for a Muslim "Martin Luther," some thinker who might reinterpret the Islamic tradition so as to adapt it to democracy...
...Khomeini ruthlessly purged the secular left, fundamentalism spread, and even "modern" women in many places began to don the veil...
...Instead of a fundamentalist revival, Said's followers awaited a progressive revolution...
...Americans would need to transcend their ethnocentric notions of democracy in order to understand that fundamentalist Islamic movements might forge "effective systems of popular participation" in ways unknown to the West...
...The decline of Middle Eastern studies is a sobering story of intellectual failure—of the persistent inability of scholars to predict or explain real-world developments in the region of their supposed expertise...
...Orientalism was turned into a manifesto for affirmative action for Arab and Muslim scholars, who, despite their predominantly upper-class origins, could gain admittance to the academy's racial spoils system once they were cast as victims of racist, colonialist oppression...
...Having stigmatized any attention to the religious or cultural character of Islam as an orientalist thought crime, the postcolonialists were left without a way to address these developments...
...The Clinton State Department actually made John Esposito a foreign affairs analyst in its intelligence bureau...
...Martin Kramer has performed a crucial service by exposing the intellectual rot in a scholarly field of capital importance to our national well-being...
...This Kramer says was superficial, unsubstantiated, and "lazy...
...Under these circumstances, Kramer writes, "the duty of the sympathetic scholar was to study these forces, prove their potential on a theoretical level, and support them as a practical matter...
...Lebanon had been the center of cosmopolitanism, tolerance, and American influence in the Arab world before it was engulfed in civil war in 1975...

Vol. 7 • November 2001 • No. 10


 
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