Critical Race Theory and Arizona.
In recent weeks, the state of Arizona has intensified
its attack in its schools on an entire branch of study — critical race theory.
Books and literature that, in the state’s view, meet that definition have been
said to violate a provision in the state’s law that prohibits lessons
“promoting racial resentment.” Officials are currently bringing to bear all
their influence in the public school curriculum, going so far as to enter
classrooms to confiscate books and other materials and to oversee what can be
taught. After decades of debate over whether we might be able to curtail
ever so slightly the proliferation of violent pornography, the censors have
managed a quick and thorough coup over educational materials in ethnic studies.
I have been teaching critical race theory for almost 20
years. The phrase signifies quite a sophisticated concept for this crowd to
wield, coined as it was by a consortium of theorists across several disciplines
to signify the new cutting edge scholarship about race. Why not simply call it
“scholarship about race,” you might ask? Because, as the censors might be
surprised to find, these theorists want to leave open the question of what race
is — if there is such a thing — rather than assuming it as a natural object of
inquiry.
Far from championing a single-minded program for the purpose of
propaganda, the point of critical race theory is to formulate questions about
race.
Arizona’s House Bill 2281, which was signed into law by
Gov. Jan Brewer in May 2010, does not actually mention critical race theory,
but the term has been all over the press with a “damning” image from 1990 of
Barack Obama, then a Harvard law school student, hugging the law professor
Derrick Bell, one of the field’s founders. State Superintendent Tom Horne
devised the bill particularly to put a stop to what he describes as the “racist
propaganda” of critical race theory, and now other conservatives are sounding
the call against what they say is a “deeply disturbing theory.” Perhaps the
negative publicity recently produced by the Republican stance on contraception
has the party looking for a new target to shore up the base.
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