August 24, 2023
Troy D. Smith
“Politicians, Libraries, Schools, and the Power of
Knowledge”
I am starting off this week with another academic deep dive,
but -as you will see -it has direct relevance to what is going on right now politically.
For the past several decades, people attending grad school
programs in the humanities -in any field -have been heavily exposed to the work
of French philosopher Michel Foucault (pronounced foo-ko), one of the most
influential thinkers of the late 20th century. Foucault wrote about
the connections between knowledge and power, and about the role control plays
in those connections. Control, he argued, comes from surveillance and
discipline. In other words, people in power (in the modern world) keep close
watch on everyone else, control what they know and what they think, and punish
them if they get out of line by thinking/saying something that is not the
official doctrine. Control the narrative and you control knowledge. Control
knowledge and you maintain power. This process, Foucault said, comes through
modern institutions like prisons, factories, and schools, the goal being to
produce people who are easily controlled.
And that brings us to Florida and Ron DeSantis, and all the
red-state politicians who are following his lead.
They want to control what you read in the library. They want
nothing there that does not conform to their specific political ideology. They
want nothing there that could lead anyone to even question their specific
political ideology.
They want to control what your kids are taught about in
school -even in college, where those “kids” are legal adults with minds of
their own. They especially want to control what students are taught about in
history classes, and how it is presented to them. A couple of good examples
came to light last month in new Florida guidelines for middle school history.
One of the new guidelines states that students must be
taught that slavery benefited some black people because it taught them useful
skills. Not only is this stupid -how do “useful skills” benefit you if you are
a slave, if you are still a slave no matter how “useful” you are? -it is
patently offensive. The same guidelines stated that, essentially, “both sides”
must be represented when teaching about the massacres of black people by white
mobs in 1910s/1920s Florida. Because a handful of black people tried to defend
themselves, the lessons must stress that there was violence “by and against”
black people. Well, gee, that makes it sound like there was fault on both
sides, and if there even was racism it must’ve been both ways… which sounds a
lot like absolving the white rioters for their hateful actions. And that
“useful skills” business… gee, that sounds like slavery wasn’t really all bad,
and even had some benefits.
As a historian, I am compelled to point out (whether
politicians want me to or not) that these are the same kinds of things used to
defend slavery before the Civil War.
Those are just a couple of recent, egregious examples. I
could go on and on. But what is the end game?
The end game is to make those historical facts -if they in
any way inconvenience or embarrass contemporary white conservatives -disappear
as if they never happened. A couple of generations of this kind of education, and
that is exactly what will happen. And if no one can point out the mistakes of
the past, because no one has been taught about them… no one can challenge the
actions of politicians in the present, or be socially aware enough to try to
stop them from doing whatever they want to.
Every week, my friend John admonishes all of you to “think
for yourselves.” Yet it is conservative politicians who are working overtime to
deny you the tools to do that, thereby manipulating you into accepting their
ideology (or else) because it is the only one presented to you.
Academics have a word for that. Foucauldian.
--Troy D.
Smith, a White County native, is a novelist and a history professor at
Tennessee Tech. His words do not necessarily represent TTU.
Buy the book A Liberal Dose: Communiques from the Holler by Troy D. Smith HERE
You can find all previous entries in this weekly column HERE
A list of other historical essays that have appeared on this blog can be found HERE
Author's website: www.troyduanesmith.com
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