If you've ever attended college, you've interacted with a professor. If you were lucky, you might have run into a black one. Chances are, you probably never had a black professor in college.
I'd never taken a class from a black professor until I actually became one, since many universities don't hire black scholars very often. When universities actually do hire black scholars, they enjoy getting rid of them after concluding that they are not as qualified as the white faculty members.
Like my respected colleague Dr. Cornel West, I've had battles on this issue with my own school, Syracuse University, which has a horrible history when it comes to hiring black people who don't dribble a basketball. Even Historically Black Colleges and Universities have this problem. Have you ever counted how many black professors there are in the sciences and business schools of HBCUs? The numbers might surprise you. Your kids are not being taught by black professors as much as they might lead you to believe.
What is saddest, however, is not the racism of academia. Even more shocking is the manner by which many intellectuals (black and non-black) are "dumbed down" by the way scholars and professors are trained to think.
Rather than exploring the world and engaging in high-action scholarship, we are trained, like monkeys, to sit inside our man-made bubbles within the ivory tower, focusing on minuscule, insignificant problems. Once these problems are solved, we are told to publish the work in academic journals, which are read by a very small number of people in our tiny little niche. We become like some Baptist ministers who are so caught up with the collection plate that they no longer care about God. Professors are here to share knowledge, and we've lost the desire to educate anyone other than ourselves.
The academic bubble for black scholars is incredibly comfortable and inviting, and as destructive as a crack house next to a day care center. Throughout history, the best way to conquer a people has been to murder the scholars and intellectual leaders. African American scholars have not been killed in body, but in mind and spirit. We are lulled into a sense that "you've made it....you are the chosen negro," which means that you can then leave behind all the problems of blackness in exchange for your comfortable seat in the ivory tower.
If you are well-behaved and perpetuate the white power structure, you get to keep your position. When a black man gets shot by police, that's not your problem. When Hurricane Katrina leaves dead bodies in the street, that's not your problem. When significant black organizations go bankrupt and you have the expertise to save them, that's not your problem. Your focus is on writing that research paper for the academic journal that only 30 people are going to read. After that, you take your vacations to Martha's Vineyard and sip iced tea on the front porch of your summer home. That becomes your mission in life. The same way that Chinese citizens were controlled by Opium exported by the British during the 19th century, the spirit of the African American scholar has been neutralized by the comforts of the academic bubble.
Most black scholars don't come to academia pre-trained to have such a meaningless existence. You must be fully brainwashed to accept your new and impotent reality. Your first two years of doctoral study are spent asking your professors why they are discouraging you from doing meaningful work. They then explain to you that in "the academy, we only do things that are scholarly." Keeping it scholarly becomes the rule of the day, the same way some brothers in the hood choose to "keep it gangsta." This means keeping a firm distance from those people in the "real world" whose opinions don't matter nearly as much as your own because you are educated and they are not.
If you'll notice, most of the members of black academia do not engage in much professional association with people outside the ivory tower, the same way that some churches don't want their members speaking to people with a different perception of God. Interacting with those who think differently becomes a threat to the psychological incubator you've created for yourself, making your ideas vulnerable to alternative points of view. I even recall hearing a prominent black management scholar tell me that my ideas were "dangerous" for young black scholars to hear because they would lead them to think about other career paths. When the suppression of ideas becomes the answer to your problems, that usually means that you, yourself, have become the problem.
In much of academic research, whether your theory actually works in the real world is far less important than whether the so-called leading experts in your field have signed off on it. I would even dare to say that it was the reliance on many of these flawed theories that led to the collapse of our global financial system. People thought that because professors teach finance at Harvard, they actually know how financial markets work. Believe me, I've spent a great deal of time with black scholars in business and management, and I honestly wouldn't trust them to manage a Burger King, let alone the world's financial system. This is not to say that they are not well trained, rather, the lack of real-world experience makes their work incapable of having effective practical implications.
The only logical way to rationalize the decision of black scholars to ignore the masses in exchange for journal outlets is to conclude that they've somehow been convinced that the second audience is of higher quality than the first. Speaking to 10,000 people without a Ph.D. is not considered as important to many black scholars as speaking to 20 people who have a doctorate. What is most tragic about such thinking is that it not only disrespects the humanity of other African Americans, but it also reflects the same kind of elitism that has always served to oppress the black community.
Many of our most brilliant citizens have been taught to think small, selfishly and with great delusion. Our book smarts go through the roof, while our common sense has been left at the door. We live and die, and no one knows or cares that we were here. That's the tragedy of black America, and the most glaring reflection of Carter G. Woodson's 'Miseducation of the Negro.' The only thing worse than being fed psychological poison is to be given an overdose of that poison, which makes us, as black scholars, among the most intellectually handicapped citizens in our nation. Yes, I am part of that group, too, and I am working to outgrow my handicaps every day.
So, if you went to college and wondered why your professor taught you a bunch of things that you never used in your career, it's because he probably doesn't even understand what you do on a day-to-day basis. The truth is that professors don't need to understand what you do, and many of them don't really care. If you've ever wondered why black scholars are never on the forefront of the most significant debates of the day, it's because they would be punished by their superiors for speaking out on black issues. We've had a bubble built for us, our own little heaven. In this heaven, there is no crime, no poverty and no black struggle. There is only wine, cheese, bow ties and ivy. Our most powerful minds are enslaved, and I am not sure what it will take to free them. The intellectual suicide of the black American scholar has become one of the great tragedies of the 21st century.
Dr. Boyce Watkins is a finance professor at Syracuse University. He does regular commentary in national media, including CNN, MSNBC, BET and more. To have Dr. Boyce's commentary delivered directly to your e-mail, please click here.



Comments: (27)
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By: Fierce on 8/12/2009 7:02PM
I totally disagree with your reason for the financial crisis. It is actually because in practice, the industry threw away all the good theory thought by Harvard Professors & that’s what led to the collapse of the capital market. They threw out things like, due diligence, mitigating risk, asset allocation & diversification, you get the idea? They had scientist from NASA (Neil Cashcari) come with wild formulas about assessing risk for credit default swap. He took a scientific approach by assuming everything is always “ceteris peribus” (all things being equal). That is only in the scientific world! In business, like Harvard Professors would tell, there are constant variables. Cashcari & those nit wits from AIG never factored in plummeting housing prices!!! They seriously believed prices would keep rising for ever & ever more!!
What business professor would teach you that? In fact had we stuck with the fundamentals thought in business school, everything would be fine now. No astronomical returns, but just steady, good old moderate returns and a still strong market.
You got it wrong Boyce!
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By: Fierce on 8/12/2009 8:05PM
I totally disagree with your reason for the financial crisis. It is actually because in practice, the industry threw away all the good theory thought by Harvard Professors & that’s what led to the collapse of the capital market. They threw out things like, due diligence, mitigating risk, asset allocation & diversification, you get the idea? They had scientist from NASA (Neil Cashcari) come with wild formulas about assessing risk for credit default swap. He took a scientific approach by assuming everything is always “ceteris peribus” (all things being equal). That is only in the scientific world! In business, like Harvard Professors would tell, there are constant variables. Cashcari & those nit wits from AIG never factored in plummeting housing prices!!! They seriously believed prices would keep rising for ever & ever more!!
What business professor would teach you that? In fact had we stuck with the fundamentals thought in business school, everything would be fine now. No astronomical returns, but just steady, good old moderate returns and a still strong market.
You got it wrong Boyce!
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By: EbonyLeaf on 8/13/2009 10:26AM
I agree.. I recently graduated from a top-research university here in Florida, and some of the black professors I encountered were very elitist. Approaching them was very uncomfortable and I felt like we had nothing in common. I respect(ed) their position and what it takes and took for them to get where they are, however it seems some have gotten lost along the way. For an example, I had this black or should I say colored South African professor. This man and I did not get along, he came off as an a$$hole and arrogant. He even went as far to disrespect me on numerous occasion either by evil eye stares and ignoring emails. The icing on the cake.... I was either the only black student in the class or amongst the few in the class and department. Despite our differences, I still made it my duty to sit in front of class everyday, to prove to him that I wants his typical "lazy American Negro"!
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By: monique on 8/13/2009 2:21PM
I think that what you are going through at Syracuse and what Cornel West went through at Harvard are reminders that we have a long way to go become the academy becomes fair.
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By: mp921 on 8/13/2009 3:41PM
Sounds like Cruse. But do you understand there is no need to "cow down" to the police. a White Prof. would have that problem. Maybe that is why Balck Profs. do not deal directly with the community. Also there is that heirarchy. The less mainstream the Prof. is the the Prof. is less likely to achieve the respect deserved.
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By: Genius_Deferred on 8/14/2009 10:40AM
There is something to be said about the constant assault on Blacks in Higher Education (including scholars and students), but I must say I see the irony (and slight hypocrisy) of this article in comparison to the previous one you had encouraging Black kids to go to college. Is college really gonna be worth it if you decide you want to stay in the Academy and become an academic? Is college only really worthwhile for Blacks if they use it for credentialing/networking purposes? I suppose these questions are rhetorical, but from my experience, there seems to be such extreme anti-intellectualism among Black people and americans in general that a discussion about it for any purposes seems to be rather fruitless.
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By: Lisa on 8/14/2009 6:37PM
I found this article to be very contrived. I am a black faculty member in a research intensive university with a PhD from an ivy and undergrad degree from an HBCU. I am very connected to my blackness and I still do work in my community. I do not know any professors who are as jaded and detached as the ones he refers to maybe they are all in business schools.
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