OPINION
JOHN
MCWHORTER
Why Claudine Gay Should Go
Dec. 21,
2023
John
McWhorter
By John
McWhorter
Opinion
Writer
Harvard’s
president, Claudine Gay, should resign.
I don’t
love thinking so and hoped we would not reach this tipping point in the
controversy over whether she should be retained in her position. But a tipping
point it is.
Harvard has
a clear policy on plagiarism that threatens undergraduates with punishment up
to the university’s equivalent of expulsion for just a single instance of it.
That policy may not apply to the university’s president, but the recent,
growing revelations about past instances of plagiarism by Dr. Gay make it
untenable for her to remain in office.
As a matter
of scholarly ethics, academic honor and, perhaps most of all, leadership that
sets an example for students, Dr. Gay would be denigrating the values of
“veritas” that she and Harvard aspire to uphold. Staying on would not only be a
terrible sign of hollowed-out leadership, but also risks conveying the
impression of a double standard at a progressive institution for a Black woman,
which serves no one well, least of all Dr. Gay.
It has
always been inconvenient that Harvard’s first Black president has only
published 11 academic articles in her career and not one book (other than one
with three co-editors). Some of her predecessors, like Lawrence Bacow, Drew
Gilpin Faust and Lawrence Summers, have had vastly more voluminous academic
records. The discrepancy gives the appearance that Dr. Gay was not chosen
because of her academic or scholarly qualifications, which Harvard is thought
to prize, but rather because of her race.
There is an
argument that a university president may not need to have been an awesomely
productive scholar, and that Dr. Gay perhaps brought other and more useful
qualifications to the job. (She held the high-ranking post of dean of the
Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Harvard before the presidency, and so may have
administrative gifts, but that job is not a steppingstone to the modern Harvard
presidency.) But Harvard, traditionally, has exemplified the best of the best,
and its presidents have been often regarded as among the top in their given
fields — prize winners, leading scholars, the total package.
As such,
the academic writings and publications of a Harvard president and other top
university presidents matter, including the integrity of that work. It might
seem counterintuitive that university presidents typically begin their careers
writing dozens of academic papers and multiple academic books. One might see
their current duties — as administrators, fund-raisers, troubleshooters,
meeting-havers — as only diagonally connected to the publish-or-perish realm of
being a college professor.
This is
especially because the world of academic papers and books is a weird and often
gestural thing. Beyond the work of the occasional star, this academic material
is often read only by a few reviewers (if even them) and university library
shelves groan under the weight of countless academic books engaged by
essentially no one. As to one of my own academic books — my favorite one, in
fact — I am aware of a single person who has actually read it. And that’s about
normal in this business.
But the
allegations of plagiarism leveled at Dr. Gay come on top of her thin dossier
and present a different kind of challenge.
There are
indeed degrees of plagiarism. The allegations against Dr. Gay do not entail
promoting actual substantial ideas as her own, but rather lifting phrases for
sections of dutiful literature review and explicating basic premises without
using quotation marks, or changing the wording only slightly, and, at times,
not even citing the relevant authors shortly before or after these sections.
This qualifies less as stealing argumentation than as messy. Much has been made
of the fact that even her acknowledgments section in her dissertation has
phraseology transparently cribbed from those of others. Sloppy, again — but
still, this is not about her actual ideas.
But there
are two problems here. One is Harvard’s plagiarism policy for students, its
veritas image and other standards of integrity and conduct. Second is the sheer
amount of the plagiarism in her case, even if in itself it is something less
than stealing ideas. If the issue were a couple of hastily quoted phrases in
one article, it would be one thing. But investigations have shown that this
problem runs through about half of Dr. Gay’s articles, as well as her
dissertation. We must ask how a university president can expect to hold her
head high, carry authority and inspire respect as a leader on a campus where
students suffer grave consequences for doing even a fraction of what Dr. Gay
has done.
That Dr.
Gay is Black gives this an especially bad look. If she stays in her job, the
optics will be that a middling publication record and chronically lackadaisical
attention to crediting sources is somehow OK for a university president if she
is Black. This implication will be based on a fact sad but impossible to
ignore: that it is difficult to identify a white university president with a
similar background. Are we to let pass a tacit idea that for Black scholars and
administrators, the symbolism of our Blackness, our “diverseness,” is what
matters most about us? I am unclear where the Black pride (or antiracism) is in
this.
After the
congressional hearing this month where Dr. Gay made comments about genocide and
antisemitism that she later apologized for, and now in the aftermath of the
plagiarism allegations, some of her supporters and others have argued that the
university should not dismiss Dr. Gay, because doing so would be to give in to
a “mob.” However, one person’s mob is another person’s gradually emerging
consensus among reasonable people.
I, for one,
wield no pitchfork on this. I did not call for Dr. Gay’s dismissal in the wake
of her performance at the antisemitism hearings in Washington, and on social
media I advised at first to ease up our judgment about the initial plagiarism
accusations. But in the wake of reports of additional acts of plagiarism and
Harvard’s saying that she will make further corrections to past writing, the
weight of the charges has taken me from “wait and see” to “that’s it.”
If it is
mobbish to call on Black figures of influence to be held to the standards that
others are held to, then we have arrived at a rather mysterious version of
antiracism, and just in time for the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday
in less than a month. I would even wish Harvard well in searching for another
Black woman to serve as president if that is an imperative. But at this point
that Black woman cannot, with any grace, be Claudine Gay.
And if
Harvard declines to dismiss her out of fear of being accused of racism — a
reasonable although hardly watertight surmise — Dr. Gay should do the right
thing on her own. For Harvard, her own dignity and our national commitment to
assessing Black people (and all people) according to the content of their
character, she should step down.
John
McWhorter (@JohnHMcWhorter) is an associate professor of linguistics at
Columbia University. He is the author of “Nine Nasty Words: English in the
Gutter: Then, Now and Forever” and, most recently, “Woke Racism: How a New
Religion Has Betrayed Black America.” @JohnHMcWhorter
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