Ambient Rage

Peter Wood

Editor’s note: This article is a selection from “Books, Articles, and Items of Academic Interest” in the 2018 Winter issue of Academic Questions.

This quarter’s harvest of books of academic interest deals with higher order bamboozling. Howard S. Schwartz’s Political Correctness and the Destruction of the Social Order: Chronicling the Rise of the Pristine Self (Palgrave, 2016; just reissued in paperback) probes the now familiar topic of “political correctness.” Schwartz, an emeritus professor of organizational behavior, has ventured two previous volumes on “the psychological processes underlying political correctness,” an approach newly popularized by Greg Lukianoff and Jonathan Haidt in The Coddling of the American Mind: How Good Intentions and Bad Ideas Are Setting Up a Generation for Failure (Penguin, 2018).

Lukianoff and Haidt approach their quarry through Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, which aims to train people to change the way they think about life’s setbacks and challenges. Schwartz grounds his analysis in psychoanalytic theory. The divergence is apparent in the temperament of the two books. Lukianoff and Haidt treat the shouters-down and thuggish enforcers of the progressive orthodoxies as victims of teachers who have taught them bad ways to respond to life’s vicissitudes. Schwartz treats them as willing participants in “ambient rage.”

The “pristine self” of Schwartz’s title is identical to the “fragile” self described by Lukianoff and Haidt. Schwartz says this pristine self “is touched by nothing but love,” which ill suits a world in which we are touched by other forces. So the pristine self is fragile, and the fragile self is hopelessly in pursuit of a pristineness that not even the most rigorously policed regime of microaggression suppression will ever achieve.

Schwartz’s analysis is far more ambitious than Lukianoff and Haidt’s, and deeper. He writes, “Taken to its extreme, narcissism is nihilistic, and aimed at the destruction of anything outside the self, and outside the loving mother who is its mirror.” (106) Schwartz is ready to assign a portion of the blame to institutions for fostering the underlying attitudes, as when he concludes that the administration at Oberlin became a willing partner to a racial hoax crime because the narrative had become “in effect, the meaning of the college.” (85) But Schwartz ultimately fixes the blame on larger social pathologies, including the decline of religion and “a world without God.” (173)

  • Share

Most Commented

January 24, 2024

1.

After Claudine

The idea has caught on that the radical left overplayed its hand in DEI and is now vulnerable to those of us who seek major reforms. This is not, however, the first time that the a......

February 13, 2024

2.

The Great Academic Divorce with China

All signs show that American education is beginning a long and painful divorce with the People’s Republic of China. But will academia go through with it?...

October 31, 2023

3.

University of Washington Violated Non-Discrimination Policy, Internal Report Finds

A faculty hiring committee at the University of Washington “inappropriately considered candidates’ races when determining the order of offers,” provided “disparate op......

Most Read

May 15, 2015

1.

Where Did We Get the Idea That Only White People Can Be Racist?

A look at the double standard that has arisen regarding racism, illustrated recently by the reaction to a black professor's biased comments on Twitter....

October 12, 2010

2.

Ask a Scholar: What is the True Definition of Latino?

What does it mean to be Latino? Are only Latin American people Latino, or does the term apply to anyone whose language derived from Latin?...

September 21, 2010

3.

Ask a Scholar: What Does YHWH Elohim Mean?

A reader asks, "If Elohim refers to multiple 'gods,' then Yhwh Elohim really means Lord of Gods...the one of many, right?" A Hebrew expert answers....