t byfield on Fri, 25 Feb 2011 19:35:00 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> How a Library Saved My Life. |
memorse@comcast.net (Thu 02/24/11 at 04:02 PM +0100): > Now, to repeat your question, what is being or can be done in regard > to an unsustainable system of student loans? I'd be very curious to hear what faculty have to say about this, but they seem to be awfully silent on the subject, don't they? This is the kind of observation that segues very naturally these days into quoting Upton Sinclair's line that "It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on his not understanding it." It's apropos, for sure; but complicity in ensnaring students in staggering levels of debt has immense consequences, particularly since student loans are a privileged class of debt that can't be repudiated. And I don't mean 'complicity' in the lite late-80s sense of a cheap debating gambit masquerading as a profound insight. Rather, I mean that we (I'm one, and at a private university no less) benefit from this infernal machine. Now we can cue the prevarications that we don't really benefit because we're salaried rather than having a speculative interest; that, of all the different kinds of higher-ed employees, we're (at least most of us) are the most precarious; that we have no control or even say over the compounding costs of running of a viable higher-ed institution (really what am *I* supposed to do about health-care costs?!); and so on. And, again, these are all true -- but not all that satisfying, at least not to my ears. Higher ed in the US is in serious trouble. Costs are skyrocketing, even as the population that can reasonably cover those costs is shrinking -- which means that the people who *can* cover those costs will, over time, because increasingly 'unreasonable.' (Of course, I feel compelled to add 'not in personal terms,' but that's a Scylla and Charybdis: it wouldn't do to use such an impolite word to describe the wealthy en masse -- but nor would it do to suggest that the absence of students from, what?, 'non-wealthy' backgrounds has no impact.) These secular trends, combined with ever-growing demand for educational credentials, put universities in a structural position that, in any other context, would seem a bit rentier (if anyone still used that word, that is -- it starts to lose its descriptive power in a property-obsessed and 'knowledge-based' economy.) But you asked what is being or can be done? I think the traditional phrase is "What *is* to be done?", isn't it? Granted, that's a bit more loaded -- which is sort of the point. I think it'd be unwise for faculty to wait for operational administrators to move first in the direction of driving 'tuition' costs down: it'll have staggering implications for operations, sure, but it shouldn't be an operational question first and foremost. And it'd be cowardly, unfair, and sophistical for faculty to wait for *students* to move first; and, anyway, in *this* context the category 'student' basically means the larval stage of an indentured alumnus/a. So should we wait for alumni/ae to move first? Surely not. So who's it going to be? The 'financial services' sector? Obama? Maybe Congress? The courts, which sit atop one of the most ruthless systems for exchanging legitimacy for putting up and paying up? The working classes who bear the brunt of the most exploitive manifestations of this technique of expropriation? The answer's pretty obvious -- about as obvious as the silence in those quarters. If robbing younger people blind isn't a moral question, I don't know what is, but if I had to imagine a club I don't want to belong to it'd be the Academics Opposed to Tuition Hikes -- talk about unbearable committee meetings, ecch. The heroic posturing, the studied silences, the endless self-serving 'considerations,' the consensus-building...OMG please just kill me now. There's another way to approach it, which is both less and more direct: de-instrumentalizing academic degrees. The first step would be for schools to stop requiring terminal degrees for academic positions. Poof! (I can hear the cries of joy already. :) But, seriously, the moment an advanced degree is no longer brandished as *the* sine qua non for an academic appointment -- from that moment -- we'd end up with a very different kind of discussion about what exactly academics are supposed to do. We'd also end up with a very different kind of discussion about what advanced degrees mean and how they relate to the tasks at hand. And, not by coincidence, we'd also end up with much more explicit forms of ideological warfare within higher ed -- less like an aristocratic masquerade ball and more like a riot. (Guess who'd play the role of the 'police.') Cheers, T # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org