Patrick Deneen, Associate Professor of Government at Georgetown University, is leaving the university after seven years (ht: Campus Notes):
There are two main reasons for my decision. The first reason broadly
concerns the sense of my place at Georgetown. In the seven years since I
joined the faculty at Georgetown, I have found myself often at odds
with the trajectory and many decisions of the university. In 2006 I
founded The Tocqueville Forum as a campus organization that would offer a different perspective,
one centered on the moral underpinnings of liberal learning that are a
precondition for the continued existence of liberal democracy, and one
that would draw upon the deep wisdom contained in the Catholic
humanistic tradition. I have been heartened and overjoyed to witness the
great enthusiasm among a myriad of students for the programming and
activities of the Forum. However, the program was not supported or
recognized by the institution, and that seemed unlikely to change.
While I did not seek that approval, I had hoped over the years that the
program would be attractive to colleagues across disciplines on the
faculty, and would be a rallying-point for those interested in reviving
and defending classical liberal learning on campus. The Tocqueville
Forum fostered a strong community of inquiry among a sizeable number of
students, but I did not find that there was any such community formed
around the conversations it sought to foster, nor the likely prospect of
one, among the more permanent members of the university. Working
alongside strangers was not how I'd hoped my life as a teacher and
member of an academic community would be like.
Notre Dame has
recruited me explicitly because they regard me as someone who can be a
significant contributor to its mission and identity, particularly the
Catholic identity of the institution. Considerations of "mission fit"
has become a criterion for faculty hiring at Notre Dame - indeed, it was
a major consideration in seeking to hire me - whereas it is generally
not a consideration at Georgetown. Without such a criterion,
Georgetown increasingly and inevitably remakes itself in the image of
its secular peers, ones that have no internal standard of what a
university is for other than the aspiration of prestige for the sake of
prestige, its ranking rather than its commitment to Truth. Its Catholic
identity, which should inform every activity of the community, from
curriculum to dorm life to faculty hiring, has increasingly been
cordoned off to optional activities of Campus Ministry. I would like to
be a contributor to a more widely-embraced institutional mission in the
life of my institution and community. I don't doubt that there will
shortcomings at Our Lady's University. But, there are at least some
comrades-in-arms to share in the effort.
Read Dr. Deneen's entire post on his personal blog. His point about Georgetown seeking prestige for the sake of prestige is amply evidenced by how the University tried to defend it's decision to allow the "IHS" monogram to be covered up when President Obama spoke there in April 2009:
Georgetown University says it covered over the monogram
“IHS”--symbolizing the name of Jesus Christbecause it was inscribed on a
pediment on the stage where President Obama spoke at the university on
Tuesday and the White House had asked Georgetown to cover up all signs
and symbols there.
As of Wednesday afternoon, the “IHS” monogram
that had previously adorned the stage at Georgetown’s Gaston Hall was
still covered up--when the pediment where it had appeared was
photographed by CNSNews.com.
“In coordinating the logistical
arrangements for yesterday’s event, Georgetown honored the White House
staff’s request to cover all of the Georgetown University signage and
symbols behind Gaston Hall stage,” Julie Green Bataille, associate vice
president for communications at Georgetown, told CNSNews.com.
Recent events have shown, of course, that the Obama administration has little to no interest in honoring Catholic beliefs. Quite a contrary. Will Georgetown reverse course? I doubt it. But at least there continues to be some promising signs of life and faith at Notre Dame.