Nick Gillespie from the July 1998 issue
With over 30,000 members, the Modern Language Association is one of the largest academic organizations in the world, filling its ranks primarily with professors of literature working at U.S. colleges and universities. Founded in 1883 to promote "the study and teaching of language and literature," the MLA interprets that charter broadly, as can be seen from the resolutions being considered by the group's membership. For a resolution to be put to a vote, a member need only gather between 10 and 25 signatures from active members (depending on the time of year); in recent years, says an MLA official, total ballots cast have usually numbered between 5,000 and 10,000, depending on the "interest level" of the members.
Members will vote on four resolutions this spring including one that states "Whereas higher education seeks to promote a vital intellectual community that represents diverse points of view and diverse experiences...Be it resolved that members of the Modern Language Association support the inclusion of disability as a value in academic hiring."
"Whereas, despite a falling crime rate," states another of the
resolutions, "a racially structured system of forced labor is
developing in the U.S. prison system; inmates perform `outsourced'
work often at less than the minimum wage; impoverished white
working-class rural areas become economically dependent upon the
incarcerations of largely African American, Latino, and Native
American populations; and this development is justified by a
rhetoric of `getting tough on crime,' although in reality it
reveals that the capitalist system cannot provide full employment
at a living wage and that it promotes a politics of divide and
conquer....
Whereas a recent Rand study shows that more money will soon be
spent nationally on prisons than on education, and the New York
Times (28 Sep. 1997) reports that in California almost the
exact amount of funding lost to higher education (1990-97) has been
expended on prisons; and...workfare has driven thousands of
students--disproportionately students of color and single
parents--out of bachelor's degree programs and into dead-ended,
poorly compensated employment; and Whereas standardized tests
contribute to racial segregation by frequently tracking low-income
students, disproportionately of color, into vocational programs and
community colleges and higher income students, predominantly white,
into `flagship' campuses; Be it resolved that the MLA urge its
members to (1) speak out against the diversion of public funds from
education to prisons and expose the failures of the current
socioeconomic system, rather than rampant `criminality,' as the
reason for the trend toward mass incarceration; (2) support
affirmative action, urge limited use of standardized tests as
admissions criteria, and support the continuation of developmental
programs; (3) call for government-supported programs guaranteeing
that no student be forced out of college to perform workfare."
Ballots will be counted after June 1, and results will be announced sometime afterward.
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