{"id":217009,"date":"2017-06-06T17:50:23","date_gmt":"2017-06-06T21:50:23","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/uncategorized\/the-groves-of-academe-on-keep-the-damned-women-out-lareviewofbooks.php"},"modified":"2017-06-06T17:50:23","modified_gmt":"2017-06-06T21:50:23","slug":"the-groves-of-academe-on-keep-the-damned-women-out-lareviewofbooks","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/intentional-communities\/the-groves-of-academe-on-keep-the-damned-women-out-lareviewofbooks.php","title":{"rendered":"The Groves of Academe: On Keep the Damned Women Out &#8211; lareviewofbooks"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    JUNE 3, 2017  <\/p>\n<p>    IN THE INTENTIONAL COMMUNITY of Twin Oaks, Virginia, co is    not merely a prefix for words like coeducation and    cooperative. The hundred or so people who live in Twin Oaks,    which has operated as an egalitarian commune since 1967, also    use co as a pronoun. Co is both gender inclusive  used in    situations applying to men and women and people who identify as    neither  as well as gender neutral. As one member wrote,    Gender-neutral pronouns can help minimize [] gender    assumptions and help others get to know people for other    characteristics.  <\/p>\n<p>    In a community like Twin Oaks, where both work and rewards are    shared equally by all, even subtly gendered stereotypes could    prove corrosive to a strictly neutral division of labor. Co,    then, is more than an artifact of speech. It is an elementary    principle, as expressed in Twin Oakss creed: From everyone    according to cos abilities, to everyone according to cos    needs.  <\/p>\n<p>    As Nancy Weiss Malkiel argues in Keep the Damned Women    Out: The Struggle for Coeducation, the promise embodied    in the co of coeducation was considerably more superficial    for the elite universities that suddenly began admitting both    men and women in the late 1960s and 1970s. Women who enrolled    in previously all-male universities found that they were lucky    to be given full-length mirrors and better lighting in their    restrooms. Concessions to womens preferences or needs in most    other areas of life  from dining to the curriculum  were    always begrudging and often elicited both disbelief and    indignation. Men could treat almost any adjustment as an    injustice, as women found out when a Yale faculty member    harangued the new co-eds that they were responsible for the    abolition of that most sacred male prerogative: to be able to    stroll naked in the gym!  <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>    When a reader picks up a book like Malkiels, they expect    numerous such anecdotes, instances of entitlement that both    disgust and titillate the reader. That is, in a sense, one of    the genre conventions of the Ivy League history, although to be    strictly accurate, Keep the Damned Women Out is not    about coeducation in the Ivies: about 40 percent of its 609    pages (not counting index and notes) are about non-Ivy    colleges, and Malkiel only discusses the experiences of four    Ivies  Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Dartmouth  in any depth.    (The other schools covered are Vassar, Smith, and Wellesley in    the United States and, across the pond, Oxford and Cambridge.)    But so strong is the Ivy undertow that most reviewers have    treated the book as a de facto Ivy history, and I will follow    suit.  <\/p>\n<p>    That is just as well, for Malkiel has much to contribute to the    ample  and sometimes distinguished  tradition of books that    peel back the Ivy Curtain and reveal the pettiness of    privilege. But Keep the Damned Women Out is very    different in tone from the jaded memoir-cum-exposs of figures    like Walter Kirn, Ross Douthat, William F. Buckley, Dinesh    DSouza, or William Deresiewicz. It is more comparable to    Jerome Karabels The Chosen: The Hidden History of    Admission and Exclusion at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton or    Craig Steven Wilders Ebony and Ivy: Race, Slavery, and the    Troubled History of Americas Universities, books that    have nobly excavated histories of exclusion and exploitation in    the nations elite colleges.  <\/p>\n<p>    Like Karabels or Wilders books, Keep the Damned Women    Out tells how gatekeepers addressed the question of who    belonged in the Ivy League and who did not. But where those    books focused primarily on the efforts of college officials to    build up the ramparts of inequality, Malkiel gives us the story    of the people who tried to break them down. Her book is, she    writes, a case study in leadership as a fundamental element in    institutional change. Malkiel, who was formerly a dean of the    college at Princeton, bucks long popular and scholarly    traditions of casting administrators in the role of reactive    and reactionary stand-patters, always trying to slow down    progress and outflank dissenters. There is no Dean Wormer from    Animal House to be found here.  <\/p>\n<p>    Malkiel builds her case for these administrators solidly in the    endless paper trail of memos and minutes; she demonstrates    considerable skill by interpreting much of the coded language    and hidden pressures that lay beneath meetings of trustees,    admissions staffs, or alumni donors. Malkiels method is    exhaustive, tracking almost every movement of the principal    administrative players as they debated, listened, cajoled,    polled, and planned the issue of whether to go co-ed.  <\/p>\n<p>    This approach yields an abundance of quotes and anecdotes like    the one about Yales gym, but Malkiel is not out to shock the    reader. Rather, she presents this evidence of male    intransigence and masculine entitlement as proof of the agility    of these schools leadership. For almost all these anecdotes    are about people outside the administration: the opposition was    almost wholly located among alumni, with pockets of students    and faculty also acting obnoxiously. The threat of alumni    revolts  conducted above all through the withholding of    donations  is a persistent beat felt throughout the book. The    question, then, which the book seeks to answer is how these    presidents  Robert Goheen of Princeton, Nathan Pusey of    Harvard, Kingman Brewster of Yale, and John Kemeny of Dartmouth     won the acquiescence if not the approval of their schools    alumni.  <\/p>\n<p>    Posed that way, the books ambitions seem rather special or at    least specific, but in crediting the efforts of these figures,    Malkiel hopes to make a subtler but also more far-reaching    point. This is not a story of women banding together to demand    opportunity, to press for access, to win rights and privileges    previously reserved for men, she writes. Coeducation resulted    not from organized efforts by women activists but from    strategic decisions taken by powerful men.  <\/p>\n<p>    Malkiel is not credulous about the motivations of these    powerful men. She notes time and again that it was    self-interest and pride that drove them first to consider and    then implement coeducation. Certain that they were starting to    lose some of the best (male) applicants to elite schools like    Stanford that already were co-ed, Pusey, Brewster, and Goheen    in particular felt obligated to move quickly to maintain their    institutions national preeminence by removing that liability.    They would add women to their campuses rather as a president    today might add a climbing wall, or larger dorm rooms: it would    look better in the brochures.  <\/p>\n<p>    Malkiel doesnt put the matter quite that brutally, but the    implication is certainly there. And in that implication, her    assertion about the responsibility of powerful men for the    coming of coeducation seems to me to take on another meaning.    For while  as Maggie Doherty has pointed out in The    Chronicle of Higher Education  Malkiel tends to scant the    power of student activism to get administrations to change    their ways, her insistence on crediting the men who ran the    Ivies with making coeducation happen leaves the responsibility    for the shortcomings of coeducation at these universities    firmly in the laps of those same powerful men.  <\/p>\n<p>    Here is where Malkiel demonstrates the tragic and frustrating    superficiality of the struggle for coeducation as it was    waged and won by powerful men. Malkiel argues forcefully that    the all-male schools of the Ivy League were frequently cavalier    about undertaking the responsibilities entailed by educating    both men and women. All too often, they asked what kind of    effect the women might have on their male students, but to    women the answer was always an avant la lettre, lean    in!  <\/p>\n<p>    Our approach has not been, Do women need Princeton? but    rather, Does the Princeton of the future need women? wrote    the author of Princetons influential report on the feasibility    of coeducation, Gardner Patterson. What the Patterson Report    tried to answer, Malkiel highlights, is whether the presence    of women would heighten the value of the educational experience    of the students, where students quite obviously meant male    students. Women were not equals; they were, at best, honorary    men, as one student reminisced, and that honor could easily be    rescinded. Women felt at all times that they were there on    sufferance, and that they had to prove not just that they    belonged but that they were doing something extra to compensate    for taking the spot of a hypothetically deserving man.    Malkiels sober awareness of the frequent failures of    administrations to give equal weight to the pedagogical,    emotional, and social needs of the newly admitted women extends    to the ways that a lack of administrative resolve  of    leadership as a fundamental element in institutional change     has abetted the persistence of quiet and not-so-quiet biases    against women students in the formerly all-male institutions,    from traditions of disproportionately rewarding men with the    highest honors to the tenacious stereotypes keeping the number    of women enrolled in STEM courses low.  <\/p>\n<p>    But if Malkiel ends the book by considering the short- and    long-term effects of coeducation  such as it was  on women    and holds men accountable for not doing more to make the new    arrangement work for its women students, the reader receives    only tantalizing glimpses of how this experiment affected its    female subjects. There are barely any exchanges  social or    intellectual  between women. And while Malkiel does quote from    a number of later reminiscences by these pioneer women, they    mostly point to but do not really redress the lack of a    substantial account of coeducation as a history of women,    rather than as a history of institutions and transformative    leadership.  <\/p>\n<p>    To her credit, Malkiel clearly recognizes this paucity of    womens dialogues and reflections about coeducation within her    book. She delicately allows her sources to address it rather    than didactically disavowing responsibility for it  the    conventional beyond the scope of my study disclaimer. But a    passage like the following aches for further exploration, for a    sort of historical reversal of its haunting solitude:  <\/p>\n<p>    Women find no natural mechanisms for becoming close to one    another. Perhaps the most important womens complaint is that    they spend so much time sorting out their activities with men    that they lose a sense of their own directions; and further,    when they do begin to move toward their own goals in some    independent way, men feel abandoned and threatened.  <\/p>\n<p>    The Ivy Leagues first women, it turns out, were in need of    more than full-length mirrors. Plus a change.  <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>    The desire to find out more about the women who first attended    these schools leaves the reader feeling both somber and hopeful    that another study as ample and ambitious as Malkiels will    delve into the records of student organizations and perhaps    student records (if they are open for research). But Malkiel    makes other choices that left this reader wishing she had    either spelled out her assumptions more clearly or taken note    of the questions she did not wish to pursue. Three issues stood    out to me as needing much more solid answers than the ones    Malkiel gives. The first concerns the presumption that the Ivy    League is the pacesetter of academic change. Elite    institutions, Malkiel writes, are not more important than    other institutions, but what happens at elite institutions has    an outsized influence on other institutions [] [They] set a    tone and provide a model that profoundly influences other[s].  <\/p>\n<p>    Such a statement in the context of coeducation is curious, to    say the least. Certainly, it is notable that so many    universities  elite and not  moved in the late 1960s and    early to mid-1970s to erase various forms of sex segregation in    practices ranging from admission to housing assignments.    Furthermore, Malkiel demonstrates clearly that research    undertaken by the Ivies, particularly by Princeton, aided    administrators at other universities who were trying to    decrease forms of sex segregation. But when the history of    mixed-gender higher education in the United States dates back    to before the Civil War, does it make sense to call the Ivies    leaders or laggards?  <\/p>\n<p>    Moreover, while Malkiel addresses the broader social context    that surrounded the debates over coeducation in a chapter named    Setting the Stage: The Turbulent 1960s, her account is    truncated. The unfinished assimilation of Jews and Catholics on    these WASP campuses is apparent from allusions scattered    through the book, and while Malkiel does not draw the threads    into any kind of conclusion, an attentive reader will note how    often (male) student leaders agitating for coeducation had    typically Jewish names. The Yale Hillel, which was still fairly    new in 1968, helped to welcome women during a sort of trial run    for coeducation in that year by offering a bagel and lox    breakfast.  <\/p>\n<p>    Race was never disconnected from coeducation in the minds of    many alumni who opposed changes to the student body, and    Malkiel could have done more to connect the two in her account.    You cant very well get rid of those already admitted, wrote    one Yale alumnus in 1970, but for Gods sake dont admit any    more blacks or coeds. While alumni saw these two forms of    desegregation as two parts of one whole, Malkiel doesnt    inquire if that view was shared by anyone else. It would be    especially interesting to know, for instance, if some of those    pioneer women who broke the gender barrier at Yale or    Dartmouth took for their own historical model not Mrs. Daniel    Boone entering the Cumberland Gap but James Meredith enrolling    at the University of Mississippi. Malkiels choice to treat    coeducation as a discrete development in higher education    concentrated among elite schools at the end of the 1960s is    particularly frustrating at this point: as soon as we see    coeducation as, instead, part of a broader and longer movement    toward desegregation starting with the racial integration of    the military in 1948, new vistas open and the Ivy League once    again looks like a latecomer, not an innovator.  <\/p>\n<p>    While Harvard might quiver in irritation at thinking that it    was, in some way, responding to changes originating in the Deep    South or the outer boroughs, it is more accurate to see the    Ivies decision to go co-ed as nearing the end of desegregation    than as leading a new venture in diversity. That is not to say    that the question of why so many elite institutions were    simultaneously wrestling with the issue of coeducation  and    why so many decided in favor  isnt important on its own. But    the narrative is shaped differently if we imagine Brewster,    Goheen, and others belatedly giving in to a broad consensus    that coeducation was normal rather than forging a new ideal    that coeducation was the future.  <\/p>\n<p>    The second issue that needed more consideration was the place    of queerness on these campuses both before and after    coeducation. While Malkiel makes an effort to acknowledge the    impact of the Civil Rights movement on student consciousness,    there is no real presence in the book for the percolating gay    rights movement of that historical moment, or, indeed, for    queer life at all. With so many lines redrawn and roles    destabilized, the latent queerness of the process of gender    desegregation would seem to be at least a necessary subtext.    Many people would have identified with the sentiments of either    of the two cartoons Malkiel includes in the book. CONFUSED     of course, Im confused! a father shouts in the first. I have    a son at Vassar and a daughter at Yale! In the second cartoon,    we find two women chatting (or flirting?) at a cocktail party:    Princeton, did you say? How interesting. Im a Yale man    myself.  <\/p>\n<p>    The situations entailed by the novelty of coeducation were    quite obviously ripe for such gender confusion. But one also    wonders if some of the anger and resentment at the intrusion of    co-eds into what Dartmouth men called the masculine heaven    of Hanover was due to the changes it forced upon the casual    homoeroticism of the locker room and fraternity. Even the small    number of women who were admitted to these previously all-male    institutions necessitated the rewriting of formal rules    governing interactions between men. They must certainly have    rewritten less formal ones as well.  <\/p>\n<p>    From time to time, Malkiel provides evidence that    administrators did see coeducation as an opportunity to redraft    the sexual codes of their campus, although she appears    reluctant to parse what mostly appears to be coded language.    Much of the administrators concerns, however, seem to have    been not about homoerotic play but rather about sexual assault    and date rape. The debauchery of the weekends when Ivy League    men brought girls back to their campuses was legendary: one    thinks of Dorothy Parkers quip about the Yale prom that if    all the girls attending it were laid end to end, I wouldnt be    a bit surprised. But other artifacts of this culture of    weekend revelry luxuriated in the element of coercion which    accompanied these dates: Dartmouths in town again \/ Run,    girls, run went one well-known drinking song.  <\/p>\n<p>    Given the different standards he would have had regarding    consensual sex, it is difficult to know for sure what Yales    Kingman Brewster had in mind when he made the following    comment:  <\/p>\n<p>    The social and moral value of having two thousand college girls    of outstanding intellectual and personal qualifications    resident in New Haven is apparent [] The crash week-end, the    degrading form of social activity known as the Mixer, have been    [] a most unhealthy and unnatural part of the four Yale    undergraduate years. Such an environment is not conducive to    the development of a considerate, mature, and normal    relationship among the sexes.  <\/p>\n<p>    Less ambiguous, however, was the fact that one of the changes    made to the physical plant to adjust to the arrival of women    undergraduates was to augment campus lighting and install    locks on doors.  <\/p>\n<p>    But it was the crass opposition to coeducation at Princeton    that reveals how much sex was on peoples minds when it came to    coeducation. One Princeton alumnus wrote (in a letter that    actually appeared in the Princeton Alumni Weekly), a    good old-fashioned whorehouse would be considerably more    efficient and much, much cheaper. Such a remark, while crude,    was representative of one objection to coeducation: having sex     or scheming to have it  would consume the whole attention of    Princeton men once they had access to women at all hours. The    Patterson report addressed this belief head on. It was not    true, the report read, that men would use the women    undergraduates for their social and sexual convenience.    Instead, the only reason Princeton men seemed so priapic was    because of the unnaturalness of the weekend hunt for dates. The    presence of women would stabilize rather than inflame their    libidos.  <\/p>\n<p>    Men at both Princeton and Yale believed that the presence of    women would civilize men. When Princeton repeated Yales    experiment with hosting women for one week as a trial run for    coeducation, The Daily Princetonian wrote that For    one week Princeton was a more humane place to go to school []    The whole campus seemed more natural. Men on their own  or    with limited access to women  were animals; with women, they    were humane.  <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>    Making humans more humane is not the particular responsibility    of anyone, or of any gender, because it is  or should be  the    mission of everyone, of all gender identities. It has often,    however, been a role taken on energetically if not always    consistently by higher education: the humanities, after all, is    generally one of the divisions of a university for a reason.  <\/p>\n<p>    And that is where we might return to the example of Twin Oaks,    Virginia, and its experiments in equality in language and in    everyday life, in making humaneness or mere humanity the    responsibility of everyco.  <\/p>\n<p>    Twin Oaks is known as an intentional community because it is a    place where people voluntarily come together to live according    to a shared set of principles. But we might equally acknowledge    that universities are intentional communities as much as    communes are. Universities are, from one point of view, the    most successful utopian projects ever created, even if they do    not feel like utopias much of the time. Much as has been the    case for other utopian communities from Brook Farm to the    Soviet Union, the failures which we find difficult to explain    are often chalked up to human nature  thats just the way    people are: acquisitive, lustful, cruel, or    fearful.  <\/p>\n<p>    Keep the Damned Women Out is clear in laying the    blame for coeducations limited progress toward true equality    at the doors of the men who never fully committed to remaking    their institutions into schools and homes for women as well as    men. But in some ways, it accepts that failure as a product of    the nature of these schools and perhaps even a product of the    nature of men. It could hardly have been otherwise, Malkiel    seems to say, you can see what they were working with.  <\/p>\n<p>    And perhaps that is true; perhaps it is even fair. But the    purpose of critique is not just to weigh what was plausible but    to project back into the past the seeds of a better present, to    imagine what would have been necessary then to make a    better now. To do that, we cannot lean on clichs    about human nature or about the characters of particular    institutions: the limits our subjects believed in for their own    actions cannot be our limits for the imagination of what could    have been.  <\/p>\n<p>    Coeducation at the Ivies, Malkiel demonstrates, was not a    utopian project but a pragmatic acquiescence to necessity and    self-interest. Yet that does not mean that further work in the    name of coeducation must be pragmatic, that the co in    coeducation must mean only with a few (more) women or with a    few trans* or genderqueer persons now added. Bare inclusion     not equality  was the paltry goal of the administrators whose    story Malkiel tells. It need not be ours as well.  <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>    Andrew Seal received    his PhD from Yale University in 2017. He is a regular blogger    at the Society forUS Intellectual Historyand his    work has appeared in TheChronicle of Higher    Education,n+1, Dissent,    andIn These Times.  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Read the rest here:<\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/lareviewofbooks.org\/article\/the-groves-of-academe-on-keep-the-damned-women-out\/\" title=\"The Groves of Academe: On Keep the Damned Women Out - lareviewofbooks\">The Groves of Academe: On Keep the Damned Women Out - lareviewofbooks<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> JUNE 3, 2017 IN THE INTENTIONAL COMMUNITY of Twin Oaks, Virginia, co is not merely a prefix for words like coeducation and cooperative. The hundred or so people who live in Twin Oaks, which has operated as an egalitarian commune since 1967, also use co as a pronoun. Co is both gender inclusive used in situations applying to men and women and people who identify as neither as well as gender neutral <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/intentional-communities\/the-groves-of-academe-on-keep-the-damned-women-out-lareviewofbooks.php\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"limit_modified_date":"","last_modified_date":"","_lmt_disableupdate":"","_lmt_disable":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[431651],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-217009","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-intentional-communities"],"modified_by":null,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/217009"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=217009"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/217009\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=217009"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=217009"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=217009"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}