Plus: Republicans come for tenure, hard. ADVERTISEMENT [The Review Logo]( Did someone forward you this newsletter? [Sign up free]( to receive your own copy. You can now read The Chronicle on [Apple News]( [Flipboard]( and [Google News](. For better or worse, Richard Hofstadterâs seminal 1964 Harperâs Magazine essay, âThe Paranoid Style in American Politics,â still undergirds much analysis of politics left and right. Its centrality was apparently confirmed first by Trumpism and then by conspiracy theories around Covid. A few examples, out of scores available: In The New York Times, Paul Krugman wrote about â[The Paranoid Style in Conservative Politics]( back in 2017; last month, Bill Schneider, writing in The Hill, warned â[America now embracing the âparanoid styleâ]( and just last week, [Laura Kipnis]( gave a talk at UMass-Amherst on â[The Paranoid Style in Campus Politics]( Hofstadter was interested not just in the American penchant for conspiracy theories (anti-Masonic and anti-Catholic in the 19th century, anti-Communist in his own time) but in their perfervid rhetoric and in the unstable psychology that rhetoric reflected: âheated exaggeration, suspiciousness, and conspiratorial fantasy.â Hofstadterâs interest was pointedly not in the paranoidâs factual wrongness. âNothing,â he writes, âreally prevents a sound program or demand from being advocated in the paranoid style. Style has more to do with the way in which ideas are believed than with the truth or falsity of their content.â The concern, then, is not with whether the paranoidâs beliefs are true but with whether they are justified â and for Hofstadter the key to knowing that, as Nicolas Guilhot emphasizes in an intriguing [article]( in the most recent issue of The Journal of the History of Ideas, is to pay attention to aesthetics: thatâs why itâs âthe paranoid styleâ and not âthe paranoid substanceâ or âthe paranoid contentâ or âthe paranoid ideology.â After all, Hofstadter says, the paranoid style can be found equally âin the popular left-wing press, in the contemporary American right wing, and on both sides of the race controversy today, among White Citizensâ Councils and Black Muslims,â just as, say, the hard-boiled noir style in detective fiction can be found both in the angry right-wing fantasies of Mickey Spillane and in the radical protest politics of Chester Himes. Hofstadter himself, in the book-length version of his Harperâs essay, gives Guilhot the clue: âWhen I speak of the paranoid style, I use the term much as a historian of art might speak of the baroque or the mannerist style.â Guilhotâs article is devoted to exploring âthe idea that artistic style provided a model for cultural and political analysis,â which, he says, can be traced to interwar essays by the intellectual historian Karl Mannheim. There is, according to Guilhot, a âsleight of handâ involved in Hofstadterâs concept: âCould a style be said to be âparanoidâ in the same way it was âManneristâ? Did the detour through art history sufficiently distance the paranoid style from the psychopathological condition?â Guilhotâs answer, basically, is no. After tracing a rich genealogy of the âpolitically heuristic value of styleâ â E.H. Gombrich, Ernst Cassirer, Hannah Arendt, Ludwig Binswanger, and Hans Prinzhorn all make appearances â he concludes that Hofstadter and other âthinkers of the paranoid style remained trapped in a contradiction ... that led them to rely on âstyleâ as the manifestation of invisible phenomena.â In other words, the identification of the paranoid style itself deployed a species of interpretive paranoia. âThe result,â Guilhot says, âwas no longer a historical interpretation of political protest movements in relation to processes of cultural sedimentation and social transformation; it was the denunciation of a psychological atavism, the conjuring of an eternal enemy, and the production of liberal myths and liberal propaganda â if not of liberal paranoia.â For Guilhot, paranoid style is the paradigmatic politically heuristic aesthetic style â and all inferences about politics that are based on style, he mischievously suggests, risk being paranoid. Guilhot is surely right that accusations of âparanoid styleâ can themselves be paranoid. When The New York Timesâs medical-science reporter Apoorva Mandavilli [wrote]( in a since-deleted tweet, that âSomeday we will stop talking about the lab leak theory and maybe even admit its racist rootsâ â perhaps an instance of âliberal myths and liberal propagandaâ â she could certainly be accused of the paranoid ascription of paranoia to others. Which isnât to say that some lab-leak speculation wasnât rooted in racism and associated paranoias. As Jon Allsop [wrote]( about âthe lab-leak messâ in the Columbia Journalism Review, in a formulation that owes something to Hofstadter, âA given theory can be a conspiracy and racist and, at root, true, just as a given theory can be scientifically grounded and not racist and, at root, false; who is propounding it, and why, and based on what, matters.â For Hofstadter, paranoid style is less a way of doing politics than politicsâ replacement: âThe difference,â he says, between the paranoiacâs ââevidenceâ and that commonly employed by others is that it seems less a means of entering into normal political controversy than a means of warding off the profane intrusion of the secular political world.â I wonder, though, whether the concept might not have more purchase now if the accent were put on truth rather than politics. It is the openness to surprise and the experience of uncertainty intrinsic to all genuine truth-seeking that the paranoiac wants to ward off. Mandavilliâs apology, which emphasizes the importance of investigation, makes that point well: âI deleted my earlier tweets about the origins of the pandemic because they were badly phrased. The origin of the pandemic is an important line of reporting that my colleagues are covering aggressively.â âBadly phrasedâ is among other things a judgment of style. Some habits of language inhibit openness to the truth â even when they happen to be attached to true statements. As long as those bad verbal habits are common enough to organize a political community, âparanoid styleâ will remain a valuable tool of analysis. Identifying and avoiding it might even be one of the academyâs purposes. NEWSLETTER [Sign Up for the Teaching Newsletter]( Find insights to improve teaching and learning across your campus. Delivered on Thursdays. To read this newsletter as soon as it sends, [sign up]( to receive it in your email inbox. OK, but this isnât paranoia ... The Republican war on higher education has ratcheted up a few notches. In Texas, as our Sarah Brown [reports]( SB 18, which would prohibit public colleges from granting tenure to new hires, passed the state Senate. (It remains to be seen whether the House and the governor will also approve.) Meanwhile, in [North Carolina]( HB 715 would âprospectively eliminate academic tenure and establish uniform contracting procedure for faculty at constituent institutions and community colleges.â ADVERTISEMENT UPCOMING PROGRAM [The Chronicle's Strategic-Leadership Program for Department Chairs] [Join us in June]( for a virtual professional development program which will provide the space, time, and tools to help department chairs take on the challenges and opportunities of the role. Through workshops, high-level seminars, and individual development plans, chairs will think strategically about their departmental and institutional impact. [Register today!]( The Latest THE REVIEW | ESSAY [The Beloved, Besieged Humanities Classroom]( By Johann N. Neem [STORY IMAGE]( Education reformers have killed the joy of learning. Letâs recapture it. ADVERTISEMENT THE REVIEW | ESSAY [My #MeToo Moment]( By Deborah Chasman [STORY IMAGE]( When Junot DÃaz was accused of misconduct, he worked for me. Things got complicated. Recommended - âWhen a psychonaut breathed ether or injected cocaine, where was he hoping to travel?â In The New Yorker, Clare Bucknell [on drug-taking]( as a form of self-exploration from the 19th century on, occasioned by the historian Mike Jayâs new book on the subject. For more on drugs, check out our Tom Bartlettâs recent essay about the [father of âshroom-based psychiatry](.
- âI couldnât tell him that my blood had stopped. I couldnât tell him about the gas in my blood.â In Harperâs, Michael Clune [on what it feels]( like to have an anxiety attack.
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- âHe is intrigued by the obstinate opacity of affinity, which is so misty as to defy definition.â Becca Rothfeldâs [debut]( column as The Washington Postâs nonfiction book critic is about the art critic Brian Dillonâs Affinities. Write to me at len.gutkin@chronicle.com. Yours, Len Gutkin FROM THE CHRONICLE STORE [The Future of Advising - Buy Now]( [The Future of Advising]( Good advising is widely seen as central to student success, but it is one of the most misunderstood and under-supported divisions on campus. [Order your copy]( to learn how university leaders can improve advising systems to help close equity gaps, and ensure students effectively navigate their path to a degree. NEWSLETTER FEEDBACK [Please let us know what you thought of today's newsletter in this three-question survey](. This newsletter was sent to {EMAIL}. [Read this newsletter on the web](. [Manage]( your newsletter preferences, [stop receiving]( this email, or [view]( our privacy policy. © 2023 [The Chronicle of Higher Education](
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