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Et Tu, New Publisher?

June 11, 2009

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Nearly four years after an academic journal nixed plans to publish a piece about sex between adult and adolescent males of antiquity, the controversy is erupting again. This time, however, it’s not conservative critics yelling the loudest. A group of classicists, now twice thwarted in efforts to publish on the provocative subject, have taken aim at one of the world’s largest publishers, saying Taylor & Francis Group has placed reputational concerns above the legitimate scholarly pursuits it ought to promote.

The story dates to 2005, when Haworth Press announced amid heavy criticism that its Journal of Homosexuality wouldn’t publish an article or book chapter about sexual relationships between men and boys in antiquity. Critics had learned of a particularly controversial piece in the forthcoming collection, which would argue that such relationships “can benefit the adolescent” in certain circumstances, prompting allegations that the author was advocating child molestation. Those allegations were trumpeted first and loudest by the Web site World Net Daily, whose readers vigorously complained to Haworth.

Scholars have for decades explored the implications of "pederasty," a common practice in ancient Greece wherein men and adolescents, who were frequently slaves, had sexual relationships. The difference in the journal's piece, however, was that Bruce Rind, a former professor of psychology at Temple University, appeared to suggest such relationships might be healthy -- even in modern times.

 

For all intents and purposes, Haworth’s decision to refuse publication appeared to end the story. With little fanfare, however, the publisher subsequently entered into a quiet deal with several authors, saying Haworth would be willing to publish a revised collection on the same subject, according to the authors. But fast forward to April of this year, after Haworth was purchased by Taylor & Francis, and a deal that was years in the making had come undone. The new publisher now says it wants nothing to do with such a hot potato.

Beert Verstraete, a co-editor of the now-nixed collection, says Talyor & Francis has shirked its responsibilities.

“Legitimate scholarship can be controversial; that does not mean it should be banned or censored,” said Verstraete, a professor of classics at Acadia University, in Nova Scotia. “I know that the publishers are within their legal rights to refuse publication, but I think they have a moral obligation -- an ethical obligation -- as far as the free dissemination of ideas.… They have violated those principles.”

When Haworth Press initially declined to publish the collection, the publisher conceded the critics might have a point. Kathryn Rutz, then-vice president for editorial development at Haworth, said Rind's chapter “could be interpreted as advocating adult and adolescent sexuality.” Taylor & Francis, however, has been more vague about its reasoning, declining to answer specific questions and offering a broad statement instead.

“We appreciate the opportunity to consider the articles for publication, but chose not to proceed,” Kevin J. Bradley, president of U.S. Journals for the publisher, wrote in an e-mail to Inside Higher Ed. We did research on the origins of this special issue as well as the reaction to it in 2005, and those issues formed a part, but not all, of the decision-making process.”

Bradley did not elaborate, however, on any reasons beyond the previous controversy for not publishing the collection.

New Version Would Likely Draw Critics, Too

The flashpoint of the 2005 controversy was an abstract published on Haworth’s Web site, promoting a forthcoming chapter in the collection to be written by Rind, who had already become a lightning rod for his views. In 1998, he was co-author of a paper that suggested child sexual abuse might not be as harmful as is generally believed, prompting resolutions from the U.S. Congress that specifically condemned the findings.

As it turns out, it was only Rind’s work that Haworth worried about publishing. Indeed, in 2005 -- again with little fanfare -- Haworth published the collection Same-Sex Desire and Love in Greco-Roman Antiquity and in the Classical Tradition of the West, but left Rind’s work out of it. The thinking, however, was that Rind would revise and expand his work for another collection, which would also feature articles by other authors who would critique or challenge Rind’s assertions.

The new collection was submitted recently to Taylor & Francis under the title Sexual Intimacy Between Adult and Adolescent Males. Absent any allusions to antiquity -- and leaving little to the imagination -- Verstraete concedes it was a provocative title, particularly given the past controversy.

“We were quite ready to change the title and make it less suggestive or perhaps euphemistic,” he said.

While the themes of the two collections may have been similar, Verstraete assures that Rind made notable changes and expansions to his previous work. The unpublished piece, which Verstraete did not share with Inside Higher Ed, was careful to explore pederasty without advocating it, Verstraete said. To hear Verstraete’s description of the article, however, there’s some reason to think the same critics would pounce on the new collection.

“It looks at such relationships in a historical context -- looks at other cultures,” Verstraete said. “It also allows for the possibility -- and in fact these possibilities do exist -- that certain of these relationships may not be harmful to the boys. But that’s done within carefully construed parameters.”

Other pieces within the collection include a gay anthropologist’s first-person account of adolescent sexual experiences he had with a grown man.

“I think he was 13.… The relationship was not in any way traumatic for him, and he still thinks back with great affection to the man with whom he had the relationship,” Verstraete said. “There are other stories like that that are brought forward in the leading article by Bruce Rind.”

Rind could not be reached for comment.

Scholars in a Quandary

The hope of the collection was to find sincere rebuttals to Rind’s work, and Verstraete says he searched for scholars who would be particularly critical. While he was able to persuade a couple of such scholars to participate, many politely refused to be involved or simply never responded.

Even some of those who are concerned about Taylor & Francis’ decision are ambivalent about rallying too strongly to Rind’s defense. The leadership of the Lambda Classical Caucus, a self-described “coalition of queer classicists,” has sent a letter to the publisher asking for a broader explanation of its decision. But Kristina Milnor, co-chair of the caucus, concedes that for every member who is worried about censorship is another deeply worried about the implications of Rind’s scholarship.

“Among our membership there are certainly people who say [Rind’s position is a] perfectly reasonable position to adopt, but there are people who say essentially this man is advocating for child abuse,” said Milnor, an associate professor of classics at Barnard College.

The Lambda Classical Caucus is an affiliate of the American Philological Association, which describes itself as North America’s “principal learned society” for classics. While the association has not taken a formal position, some of its members have been particularly critical of Taylor & Francis’ decision.

Thomas K. Hubbard, a classics professor at the University of Texas at Austin, wrote a letter to the philological association's leaders, calling for the association to “threaten some kind of action” against the publisher. He suggested, for instance, that it would be “unfortunate” if an “ACT-UP style” protest were to break out at the association’s next annual meeting, where one of the publisher’s affiliates routinely rents a display booth.

“Such corporate censorship poses a threat to the most fundamental values of free inquiry and expression, which should be subject only to the quality-control of academic peer review and not to political meddling by outside pressure groups or weak-principled corporate managers who feel a need to kowtow to such pressure groups pre-emptively,” Hubbard wrote.

“The net effect is to discourage discussion or publication on certain topics deemed even potentially ‘controversial,’ ” he continued. “This creeping marginalization of edgy topics cannot be healthy for the free development of scholarly inquiry in our field or any other.”

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Comments on Et Tu, New Publisher?

  • Posted by Brian Mulligan on June 11, 2009 at 7:00am EDT
  • The editors might get over this by requiring rigorous levels of evidence to support any claims. However, if such criteria were to be too widely applied it might be a concern for much publications in the humanities and social sciences.

  • business decision
  • Posted by Marvella on June 11, 2009 at 12:15pm EDT
  • Like it or not, the publisher, as a private company, has every right to publish or not publish. Just as the business owner has a right to serve or not serve a customer so does a private publishing house have the same right. Until Obama takes over publishing as he is doing with banking and the auto industry, I think we should celebrate free enterprise even if it seems to hurt us personally in the short run.

  • More history to this story
  • Posted by Cranky Ol' Prof on June 11, 2009 at 12:15pm EDT
  • There is more history to this story than is presented in this article. Bruce Rind was also a co-author of a 1998 meta-analysis in the highly influential Psychological Bulletin that argued, among other things, that "Self-reported reactions to and effects from CSA [child sexual abuse] indicated that negative effects were neither pervasive nor typically intense, and than [sic] men reacted much less negatively than women." At the time, this article provoked a tremendous public controversy that reached all the ways to the halls of Congress. While we may wish that scholarly publishers were more courageous about these things, it is understandable (even if not justifiable) that other publishers would wish to evade taking such a political beating as the American Psychological Association (publisher of PB) took on that occasion.

    The full citation is:
    "A meta-analytic examination of assumed properties of child sexual abuse using college samples." Rind, Bruce; Tromovitch, Philip; Bauserman, Robert Psychological Bulletin. Vol 124(1), Jul 1998, 22-53.

  • Posted by barbara fister at Gustavus on June 11, 2009 at 1:30pm EDT
  • It's either the case that this research is not acceptable as valid scholarship, or it is research on a topic that has become a no-go area for research. If it's the latter, then this is cause for concern. The questions that scholars choose to pursue should not be dictated by popular opinion. Scholarly presses should also not cave to popular opinion.

    It has been a while since I read that Psychological Bulletin article, but it seemed entirely reasonable in its conclusion: that a number of research studies found that not all adolescents who have sex with people over 18 are traumatized by the experience and that there is a significant difference in the experiences of pre-pubescent children and older adolescents who have had sex with adults. Even if one doesn't like those results, burying them won't change them, nor will a congressional condemnation. It's not good if we can't even raise these questions anymore.

  • Posted by Michael Pyshnov on June 11, 2009 at 3:30pm EDT
  • We live in times when the question what is legitimate and what is not is applied to many acts that previously seemed to be decidedly illegitimate. Now, is torturing prisoners legitimate? In any case, my answer is always - a controversial paper must be published: in this way the public will know who is who.

  • Posted by Other Side on June 11, 2009 at 6:00pm EDT
  • For a very complete analysis of the "Rind" controversy,
    go to: http://www.leadershipcouncil.org/1/rind/1.html

  • A correction
  • Posted by Thomas K. Hubbard , Professor of Classics at University of Texas on June 13, 2009 at 6:45am EDT
  • The first quotation from my letter was out of context. I called on the APA "to take some kind of action" only after they first wrote Taylor & Francis a letter of inquiry and received the same kind of arrogant non-explanation that the reporter received from Mr. Bradley and that we have received from Ms. Rutz. My letter also made it clear that I myself did not condone any "ACT-UP style" action, although it has been threatened by others.

    As Marvella points out, private publishers do have discretion over what they choose to publish. However, the matter is different when a private publisher makes the decision to produce a regular academic journal supported by the subscriptions of academic libraries and professionals. Once that publisher has agreed to publish a journal in a given field and appointed an editor and editorial board for that journal, the publisher has ceded control of content to the qualified academic specialists who edit the journal and whom that editor has asked to review the articles. If the publisher feels it can no longer respect an editor's judgment, it should replace him. If Taylor & Francis is going to be so squeamish about publishing mainstream work on sexuality, it should divest itself of its various journals in the fields of sexuality and family counseling. Unlike most of the people quoted in this piece, I have actually read Rind's present essay in its entirety; it is absolutely mainstream and a first-rate work of scholarship. It does not advocate adult-adolescent sex, but does demonstrate that some ingrained assumptions about it are not empirically valid.

  • Let's not jump to conclusion
  • Posted by Andrew Calimach , Author on June 13, 2009 at 2:00pm EDT
  • It seems to be generally assumed in this discussion that what is being discussed are illegal relationships. This is not necessarily the case. Rather, in light of age of consent laws which usually (from an international perspective) emancipate youths of fifteen or sixteen, what is being discussed is a subset of legitimate homosexuality.

    One might add that the young people engaged in such lawful and legitimate relationships have needs and vulnerabilities different from those of adults engaged in such relationship. Thus, the obstruction and censorship of studies about this population cannot fail but negatively impact the welfare of these young people, and impede the necessary evolutionary process of integrating all aspects of legitimate homosexuality into modern culture.

  • Academic repression
  • Posted by B Rhodvensky , Educator on June 14, 2009 at 8:30am EDT
  • The case of Richard Yuill who completed his PhD on "Male Age-Discrepant Intergenerational Sexualities and Relationships" at the University of Glasgow in 2005 may be of interest here:
    http://www.williamapercy.com/wiki/index.php/Richard_Yuill

  • The right not to publish...
  • Posted by Sam Deakins on June 15, 2009 at 6:00am EDT
  • Is just as valid as the right to publish. If the authors want their "scholarly" research to be published then surely they can pay a publisher to do so. Perhaps publishers such as Playboy or Hustler would be open to this research..ya think?

  • Where is the Outrage?
  • Posted by Kirk Smith , Retired at US Army on June 15, 2009 at 10:00am EDT
  • It appears that the desire to publish a pro-gay/sex with boys historigraphy will go to the courts. Seems there is only one side to this story. Has anyone attempted to find a publication on the shelves of any university and college library, that is actually critical of the pathologies infecting all of diversity's perversities? I was unable too while researching the subject during the "don't ask, don't tell" era of the "Philanderer in Chief." The library's catalogue system purportedly had the books on the shelves but after discovering the actually publications were missing and most likely stolen. Seems the "homo-fascist thought police" removed and destroyed those books deemed destructive to the masses.

  • Another nonsensical taboo must be shattered
  • Posted by Mason on June 15, 2009 at 11:45am EDT
  • For too long publishers have held sway over the suppression of legitimate research and yes advocacy of topics that differ from the "received" wisdom. Intergenerational sex is just the tip of the iceberg. Even more censored is the topic of cannibalism. The general perception that cannibalism leads to health problems and neurological illness is nothing but propaganda rooted in a single cultural context. With the burgeoning population and the perils of global warming it's time to take off the blinders and reexamine a practice long followed by our forbears. Besides, the literature (that which has not been suppressed) indicates that children are delicious when prepared roasted with rosemary; especially litttle boys. I call for some sort of action against those who impose their tired old morality on the free exchange of rigorously developed research just because it doesn't fit their narrative.

  • There in no bar too low to stoop under ...
  • Posted by Atlas Collins on June 15, 2009 at 12:15pm EDT
  • ... for the sexually deviant in pursuit of their ultimate goal of cultural and societal affirmation of their aberrant sexual proclivities.

    It is obvious from the subject matter at hand -- AND from some of the responses in this commentary thread -- that there is no essential difference between what is termed "legitimate homosexuality" and NAMBLA-style perversion that revels in sodomizing young boys.

    Perversion is NOT a legitimate field of scholarly inquiry.

    Atlas Collins

  • Intellectual Pedophiles
  • Posted by Action Jackson , CEO at RightWingStuff.com on June 15, 2009 at 3:00pm EDT
  • Typical how the learned intellectuals show such a high and mighty smarter than thou attitude when it comes to this subject. What's next marriage of pedophiles...?

  • Posted by mark hussey , professor/english at pace university nyc on June 22, 2009 at 11:15am EDT
  • "Perversion is NOT a legitimate field of scholarly inquiry." Oh, that puts paid to Freud, then.

    Interesting that Taylor & Francis now publishes Index on Censorship!