Joanna Williams, who I profile in this weekâs issue, has long been a fierce critic of much that is going on in British universities.
Her 2012 book, Consuming Higher Education: Why Learning Canât Be Bought, launched a full-scale assault on the marketised, âstudent as consumerâ model. She has used her position as education editor at Spiked Online to attack âtrigger warningsâ, âsafe spacesâ and other attempts to âprotectâ students from ideas they find uncomfortable or upsetting. Her new book, Academic Freedom in an Age of Conformity: Confronting the Fear of Knowledge, draws all this together.
In the past, she told me, âcensorship and calls for conformity (seen most explicitly in McCarthyism)â came largely from right-wingers outside the academy. Today, she is more worried about âthe Left and intellectual radicalsâ operating within universities.
Part of the blame for what she sees as a significant decline in academic freedom, she argues, must be laid at the door of critical theory; feminism and other forms of identity politics; and the decline of academic disciplines which, while inevitably excluding outsiders and restricting the kind of questions that can be asked, also provided âa shared knowledge base, methodological approaches and theoretical frameworks [that] allow knowledge to advanceâ. Â
Âé¶č
Read more: Joanna Williams on teaching and the Green Paper
So, between these two books, Williams has made a powerful case for where universities have gone wrong. She summarises this by saying that they have largely abandoned âthe liberal project of advancing knowledge through competing truth claimsâ, and adds that the promotion of âemployability skillsâ or âinclusive valuesâ should not be seen as satisfactory substitutes.
Âé¶č
But why do I say that she has taken her ideas to their logical conclusion? Partly because she does embrace the hard, extreme cases. Though universities obviously have to operate within the law, she is worried that âthere is less free speech on a university campus than there is in society at largeâ and that they should accept speakers putting forward not only contentious but actively offensive views, if only so they can be challenged and opposed.
Yet there is also another question. If Williams, currently programme director for the MA in higher education at the University of Kent, is so unhappy with the ethos of todayâs universities, why does she continue to work within them? Here too she has the courage of her convictions and is radically cutting back on her academic workload so she can pursue some of the controversial ideas she feels are largely taboo in a climate of âmoral orthodoxiesâ.
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to °Ő±á·Ąâs university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?




