London, Tuesday, July 9, 2002
MLA
President Criticizes Journal Publisher for
Dismissing Israeli Academics By HAIM WATZMAN STEPHEN Greenblatt, president of the
Modern Language Association, has
criticized the publisher of two British
translation journals for dismissing two
Israeli scholars from roles on her
publications simply because of their
nationality. Mr. Greenblatt, a professor of
English at Harvard University, wrote an
open letter to Mona Baker, a
professor of translation studies at the
University of Manchester Institute of
Science and Technology, saying that her
action "violates the essential spirit of
scholarly freedom and the pursuit of
truth." The dismissals have been the most
prominent manifestation so far of a
boycott by some European scholars of
Israeli academic institutions, on the
grounds that only such extreme actions
would push the Israeli government to end
what the scholars see as violations of
Palestinian human rights. Ms. Baker, the owner and publisher of
the two translation journals, dismissed
Miriam Schlesinger, a senior
lecturer in translation studies at
Bar-Ilan University, and Gideon
Toury, a professor in Tel Aviv
University's School of Cultural Studies,
from the boards of her journals. Mr. Greenblatt's letter is the latest
expression of widening American
involvement in the conflict between the
largely European group of academics who
support the boycott and the Israeli
scholars who oppose it. In its June 7
issue, the journal Science ran an
editorial declaring that it would not
accept submissions from scientists who
withheld research information from the
Israelis or otherwise refused to cooperate
with them. The British journal
Nature also denounced the boycott,
in May. A Web petition condemning the boycott
of Israeli academic and scientific
institutions has garnered more signatures
to date than the original boycott
petition. The boycott petition now has
just over 700 signatures, while the
anti-boycott petition boasted 980, as of
July 5. The anti-boycott petition, which may be
seen at http://www.aaisc.net,
was begun in April by a largely American
group of
scholars from
prominent universities, and has now been
signed by many Europeans and Israelis. The petition states: "The recent calls
for moratorium on contacts with Israel,
and other calls for boycott, miss the mark
in many respects. For the Israeli public,
a boycott reinforces the perception that
it must fend for itself. Within the
Palestinian community, it sends the
message to the non-compromising extremists
that their strategy of violence is bearing
fruit." About 10 Israelis signed the original
boycott petition, which may be seen at
http://www.pjpo.org
Copyright
2002 by The Chronicle of Higher
Education Related
items on this website:-
Main news
report: Fury as academics are sacked
for being Israeli
-
Chronicle
of Higher Education: British Journals
Oust 2 Israeli Scholars From Their
Boards
-
US
warns Texas businessman against
boycott of Israel
-
Jewish
academics threaten to boycott
Oxford over Irving speech
-
Boycott
threat threat to Oxford Union over
Irving
-
Daily
Express headline, March 24, 1933:
"Judea Declares War on Germany" (begin
of the Jewish boycott which
triggered German retaliation)
-
Miami
Jews call for boycott of
Poland
-
Daily
Express headline, 24 Mar 1933 |