In that, and unexpectedly, I received one of the best compliments that I have ever received. The editor had noted my departure from the university and the town with a comment that the area was losing a public intellectual. I was pleasantly shocked.
It was all the more wonderful because it came from a person whom I had never met. This meant that she had based her comment strictly on my op-eds in the local newspaper, the Bakersfield Californian.
I knew even back in my teenage years that my life would be in the intellectual arena. Further, I knew that I wanted my intellectual activities to be in the public, and not in some obscure office, not because of a need to be in the spotlight but because of an obsession of sorts to understand social issues and to discuss and debate with others my understanding.
But, of course, I had no idea then of a phrase "public intellectual." It was one of the many new ideas that came to understand over the course of six graduate school years.
A couple of years ago, a student told me that he wanted to engage in the kind of public discussion of ideas like how I do, and asked me for suggestions on how he could go about it. That stumped me. I had no idea what the formula is. I agree with the author here:
The phrase has come to mean an academic who occasionally addresses a general audience, as if all academics were intellectuals, and some of them were also public ones. In fact, academics and intellectuals are antithetical types. An intellectual is not an expert, and a public intellectual is not an expert who condescends to speak to a wider audience about her area of expertise. An intellectual is a generalist, an autodidact, a thinker who wanders and speculates. As Jack Miles puts it in a stellar essay on the question, “It takes years of disciplined preparation to become an academic. It takes years of undisciplined preparation to become an intellectual.”I love that description of "years of undisciplined preparation." I might never have come up with that phrasing, but that has exactly been my life until now. Undisciplined preparation.
The intellectual’s job is to think past the culture: to question the myths, metaphors, and assumptions that limit our collective imagination. The founder of the breed was Socrates. As Kazin also said, an intellectual is someone for whom ideas are “instruments of salvation.” Becoming one requires a little more than setting up a blog.Indeed.
Engaging the public has been far more productive in terms of creating and sharing knowledge, than my formal scholarship can ever be.
Back in graduate school, I was cautioned against gong this route by one of my graduate school professors. Jim Moore applauded my passion for this approach, but warned me that academia would care only about the formal academic inquiries via the publish-or-perish peer-review process, though they would certainly get jealous about any notoriety that I gained from my approach. Jim was, and is, correct. But, it would not be me, and not my life, if I did anything other than what I wanted to do. I carried on with my Quixotic tilting at windmills.
Every time I visit India, my father asks why I don't write for the Indian newspapers. I have found it difficult to explain to him that the op-eds in the newspapers there are not the kind of the public intellectual discussions that I favor. Often they are filled with jargon, written by experts and not by intellectuals. The writings often seem to have an undertone of the specialist having decided that the ignorant public needs to be educated with his/her expert opinion. As if the public policy issue would be solved, and solved easily, if and only if the public listened to that expert. That does not strike me as the role of the public intellectual.
There is so much to talk about ... never has there been a better time. It will also be nice though if people listened to me! ;)
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