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Timothy Jackson & Philip Ewell — Political Correctness Comes for Music Theory | National Review

It is particularly ominous that Jackson s critique of a fellow scholar falls wholly within the scope of academic freedom that UNT promises to its faculty. Jackson is not a professor going viral after mouthing off on Twitter, although those professors need protection too. He offered a serious critique of that scholar s work, based on archival research within his highly specialized field, and after lifelong study of Schenker specifically and music theory more generally. He now has a legitimate fear that he may lose his job and be rendered persona non grata at any other institution. Questioning the current campus orthodoxy even in the context of serious academic inquiry is now considered a capital offense by the growing number of people who, as Daniel Schwammenthal put it earlier this week in the Wall Street Journal, seem to understand George Orwell s 1984 not as a warning but as a manual.

via www.nationalreview.com

I thought music theory was about notes and stuff.