(OPE-L) Kliman v. Brecht Forum

From: Gerald A. Levy (Gerald_A_Levy@MSN.COM)
Date: Fri May 14 2004 - 06:51:49 EDT


I am forwarding this message, not as a "warning to vested
interests that attacks will not be tolerated", but because I
expect it will be of interest to list members./ In solidarity, Jerry

----- Original Message -----
From: "Drewk" <Andrew_Kliman@msn.com>
Sent: Friday, May 14, 2004 2:27 AM
Subject: "Capital" class suppressed, teacher expelled


 "On Feb. 9, the Brecht Forum informed the teacher of its course on
"Capital, Marx's Capital and Alternatives to Capital," Andrew
Kliman, that it does not want him to teach there in the future,
and that it "would not object" to his leaving before the current
course was over. The expulsion letter came in response to Kliman's
and the class' complaints that the Brecht substantively rewrote
the course announcement without his knowledge or consent. The
Brecht's version of the announcement hid the fact that the course
is a seminar on Capital and, without permission, identified him as
having written for NEWS & LETTERS."

 * complete ARTICLE below, and at
http://www.newsandletters.org/Issues/2004/March/teacher_Marchb04.htm

 * extensive DOCUMENTATION supporting the charges made in the
article available at
http://www.newsandletters.org/Issues/2004/March/docum.html


 Brian Martin, a courageous fighter against suppression of dissent,
notes:

 "Publicity is undoubtedly an extremely potent method of opposing
suppression. ...  It is vitally important that action be taken
against suppression. This is because the most important effect of
suppression is ... on others who observe the process. Every case
of suppression is a warning to potential critics not to buck the
system. And every case in which suppression is vigorously opposed
is a warning to vested interests that attacks will not be
tolerated." (from his very cool website
[http://www.uow.edu.au/arts/sts/bmartin/dissent/])

 So please do FORWARD the article and URLs, as a warning to vested
interests that attacks will not be tolerated.  Thanks

 ====================

 NY LEFT INSTITUTION PURGES "CAPITAL" TEACHER

 New York -- On Feb. 9, the Brecht Forum informed the teacher of
its course on "Capital, Marx's Capital and Alternatives to
Capital," Andrew Kliman, that it does not want him to teach there
in the future, and that it "would not object" to his leaving
before the current course was over. The expulsion letter came in
response to Kliman's and the class' complaints that the Brecht
substantively rewrote the course announcement without his
knowledge or consent. The Brecht's version of the announcement hid
the fact that the course is a seminar on Capital and, without
permission, identified him as having written for NEWS & LETTERS.

 "Such numerous and important changes are by no means 'purely
stylistic,' as the Brecht claims," Kliman said. "I have never
before had text substantially altered like this without
consultation. I've never even heard of such a case before. The
Brecht has shown itself to be a petty, sectarian institution
utterly lacking in intellectual integrity."

 Kliman had been teaching for a sixth term at the Brecht to an
unusually large class of 23. The course has resumed at another
location.

 Teachers at the Brecht Forum, a 28-year-old New York City left
educational institution, are not paid. The purged seminar leader
is a widely published Marxist-Humanist theorist whose writings
have clashed with established "Marxist" economics. He and others
have refuted "Marxist" economists' alleged proofs of Marx's
internal inconsistency.

 What was Kliman's crime that merited expulsion? Only that he and
the class objected to the Brecht re-writing the course description
and Kliman's biography without his knowledge and consent for its
catalogue, website, e-mail and flyers. The Brecht did this not
once, but twice. The rewriting, which disguised the fact that the
course was a course on CAPITAL, undoubtedly served to reduce
enrollment.

 Although the Brecht claimed the changes were "stylistic," it is
known that the administration dislikes Kliman's work and politics.
One student reported from personal conversations that leaders of
the Brecht were "out to get" him. During another discussion of the
rewriting problem, an influential person at the Brecht complained
about Kliman's "idealism" and expressed disagreement with his
recently published "Marx's Concept of Intrinsic Value."

 The three-term seminar emerged out of Kliman's Brecht course on
CAPITAL Vols. 2 and 3. He and several students co-wrote the new
course's description. Acting on its own, the Brecht changed the
course title to "Four Questions" and removed several points in the
description, actions that disguised the fact that the course
consists primarily of a close reading of Vol. 1. In addition,
Kliman's biography was changed by removing references to his prior
Brecht teaching, dropping some of his publications, and adding
that he had published in NEWS & LETTERS.

 When this happened last fall, Kliman objected privately, and the
Brecht sent out the correct version of the course description to
its email list. Yet when the winter publicity appeared, the
description had again been modified, and the Brecht's rewrite of
Kliman's bio again replaced his own. This occurred even though he
had asked the Brecht not to alter the text without his permission.

 Kliman and the class then requested a correction, an apology, and
assurance that such re-writing would not occur again. The Brecht's
executive director, Liz Mestres, not only refused, but insisted
she has a right to make changes to course announcements without
the knowledge and consent of their authors, even when the changes
are additions that disclose teachers, supposed political
associations. As one student said, "There is little doubt that
Mestres made this identification to scare off prospective
students."

 Brecht administrators faulted Kliman for discussing the matter
with the class; they interrupted two class meetings by shouting at
him when the matter was being discussed. Several students sent
letters to the Brecht objecting to its rewriting without
permission. Another objected to the idea that such matters should
be kept from the class. Kliman's several attempts to discuss the
matter with Mestres were rebuffed.

 Many class members think the issues at stake are fairly simple: no
school has a right to rewrite course descriptions and bios without
consultation; the class has a right to present its project as it
sees fit; no institution has the right to publish teachers'
supposed affiliations without permission. Yet some class members
held that a left institution should not be challenged, even if it
suppresses other leftists, in order to maintain "unity" -- even
when changing its practices would not harm the institution in any
way.

 Another student countered that "Only through reasoned debate can
leftists work out differences and problems and figure out how best
to fight. That is, the tactic of suppressing dissenting views is
not only wrong 'in principle,' but produces backward movement, not
forward. By debating and developing ideas now about what
non-capitalism means, we are helping the movement go forward
toward that goal. The process we are engaged in is the very
opposite of suppressing dissent."

 --Seminar participants

 (NEWS & LETTERS, March 2004)


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