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ILLIBERAL EDUCATION by Dinesh D'Souza; Free Press; 319 pages...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Failing To Make the Grade | 5/6/1991 | See Source »

Conservative polemicist Dinesh D'Souza is living every nonfiction author's fantasy: to publish at precisely the politically correct moment. Like the cavalry in an old-time western racing over the hill to save the wagon train from the murderous Indians -- oops!, misunderstood Native Americans -- Illiberal Education: The Politics of Race and Sex on Campus arrives just as public outrage is building to a peak. Liberals and conservatives alike have suddenly joined forces to ridicule the excesses of left-wing policies and posturing in academia. It is almost as if, having exorcised the legacy of Vietnam in foreign policy, Americans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Failing To Make the Grade | 5/6/1991 | See Source »

...rewards of being topical carry with them the risks of overfamiliarity. That is the problem with the six case studies that make up the heart of Illiberal Education. D'Souza ably documents the prejudice against Asian Americans in the admission policies of Berkeley, the absurdities of recasting the introductory civilization course at Stanford to purge many Western white male thinkers, the affront to civil liberties in the racial-speech code at the University of Michigan, along with analogous flaps at Howard, Duke and Harvard. But he rarely transcends his material; the writing is earnest, the details repetitive and the analysis...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Failing To Make the Grade | 5/6/1991 | See Source »

This is not to suggest that the book is entirely a cut-and-paste job. D'Souza, 30, a native of India who as an undergraduate was an editor of the militantly conservative Dartmouth Review, slips behind enemy lines on campus. In fact, he boasts that "I can still pass for a student." Maybe so, but his interview style is that of a patronizing pedant. At Stanford, D'Souza confronts a black undergraduate woman with a scholarly account of the complicity of African middlemen in sending their compatriots to the New World in bondage. "((She)) became very quiet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Failing To Make the Grade | 5/6/1991 | See Source »

Illiberal Education disappoints because it never delves beneath the surface of its all-too-easy targets. We read the self-important jargon of professors like Fish, but we never understand them. University presidents have uttered public relations bromides for decades; D'Souza reacts as if he is hearing them for the first time. Too young to have lived through the Vietnam era on campus, D'Souza fails to realize that tenured professors with radical views are not solely a postmodernist phenomenon. Like the Broadway theater, liberal education always seems in peril. Luckily for D'Souza, equally constant...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Failing To Make the Grade | 5/6/1991 | See Source »

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