Article two asks whether I "delivered a copy
of ***'s November 6, 1998 complaint to" various media. The qualified
answer is yes, I delivered a redacted copy of a letter of complaint, the
name of the alleged author and the section of the English class having
been removed to secure the complaining person' s identity. Since that identity
remains unknown, no privacy rights that I am aware of have been, or could
be, violated.
3. Article three
inquires as to whether I "will comply with the College's policy against
the use of profane, obscene, or vulgar language in the classroom, which
is not germane to course content." In the first place, all the language
I use in the classroom is germane to course content because everything
I say is relevant to the literature I teach, whether I am explicating the
text in the analytical mode, or recreating the text by dramatically representing
the characters or by emoting the themes identified therein. (Even the complaint
letter asseverates: "these comments stemmed from the English stories we
were reading for class.") Secondly, since I also teach language itself--the
histories of words, their derivations, denotations, and connotations--any
English terms are subject to scrutiny, including vernacular formulations.
Finally, I devote class time responding to queries from students, some
of which pertain to etymologies or usage of words. Therefore, I am unaware
of having deviated from any "germaneness" stipulation of the College's
speech policy. Since the College allegedly installed its policy to prevent
the generation of so-called "hostile environments," I further affirm and
attest that I create no such environments. One complaint out of 300 students
in all of 1998 clearly demonstrates the accuracy of my claim. As College
counsel wrote in 1992: "There is simply no way to 'shield' the sensitive
student from life and reality in the classroom."
4. The first "finding" of the College, which serves as the basis for its suspension of me, is a direct quote from a student named Brian Tyler who appeared before an "investigatory" panel on December 18, 1998. Mr. Tyler, who came forth as a friendly (to me) witness, was referring to my advice to my students on the first day of class that I deal with "adult" themes found in literature and that I employ the full range of the English language, language that could contain "adult" expressions which some people might find offensive. I never make it a practice "to swear in the classroom," though the words cited might well occur as quoted material, as items in themselves fit for further linguistic/etymological analysis, or as terms I might utilize in the process of explicating the text, or of dramatically representing a character or emoting a theme found therein.
5. The second article pertains to a classroom discussion of cognates to a Greek word for love: philia. After discussing the sense of such words as philosophy, Philadelphia, and pedophilia, the discussion, at the instance of a student, dealt with necrophilia. The expatiation included, as such devolutions often will, a historical illustration. I cited the case some fifteen years ago where an Indian village (a posh neighborhood in Detroit) gardener murdered his girlfriend, buried her body on the estate grounds, then dug it up two weeks later and had sex with it--because he was certain "she" must have gotten lonely. After a few students gasped or groaned, I attempted to lighten things up a bit by sharing a Sam Kinison skit about a corpse having pleasant thoughts over having fought the good fight, having earned his not so unpleasant rest, only to then be subjected to anal rape by the mortician Following Mr. Kinison's own typical diction, I utilized the construction "butt fucking," not imagining that anyone in the class would construe such an utterance as an essay to dehumanize or degrade him or her, it not having been specifically directed to an individual or minority grouping. My impression was that the majority of the students appreciated such a moment of comic relief," as indeed the four who appeared at the hearing on December 18 so testified. And comedic elements, it has always seemed to me, are highly valuable increments to the pedagogic presentation. Students who laugh, who find mirth as well as pathos admixed with information, become more involved, more committed, learners.
6. The third article charges me with having included the term "blow job" while discussing President Clinton's relationship with Monica Lewinsky. This topic was broached by a student who observed that, at the back of the classroom (F204--normally reserved for foreign language instruction), a framed cartoon of some French politician with his pants down and phallus exposed is prominently displayed. Apparently, this student said, Americans are not the only ones with compromised leadership. To the best of my recollection, the tenor of this class's mood ranged from the sarcastic/ironic to one of feigned (?) boredom, the nation then being in the ninth month of that bizarre ordeal. Again, employment of "blow job," with its conflation of the seamy and buffoonish, seemed precisely resonant with the French cartoon and an American Presidency under ribald scrutiny. To have insisted on the Latin term "fellatio" would have tended toward the inapropos, if not the absurd--particularly in a room filled with adults whose average age is twenty-six.
7. The fourth
article charges that I "remarked two or three times that 'tits on a nun
are as useful as balls on a priest.''' Actually, I said an approximation
of this only once, to wit: "The not unusual simile heard among many Roman
Catholics: 'as useless as tits on a nun,' is not counterbalanced by an
equivalent simile with regard to men of the cloth, such 'as useless as
balls on a priest, ' because of the prevalent (chauvinist) notion that
women are to be evaluated only on the basis of their sexual attractiveness
or reproductive function." I made this observation with reference to Joyce
Carol Oates' erotically and romantically thwarted nun in the story "In
the Region of Ice." The specific passage that triggers this analysis
flows thus: "This city was not her city; this world was not her world.
She felt no pride in knowing this, it was a fact. The little convent was
not like an island in the center of this noisy world, but rather a kind
of hole or crevice the world did not bother with, something of no interest."
"Hole or crevice, of course, constitutes yonic imagery, and author Oates
conjures it to remind the reader of Sister Irene1s conflicted sense of
her value as a woman as well as her value as a human being. I went on to
point out that, in fact, one might occasionally hear a Roman Catholic exclaim
about a priest:
"All man and all priest!" A man does not forfeit his social estimation
merely because he eschews sexuality. The irony in all this is that the
student who complained against me stopped
listening to what I was saying. The image "useless as tits on a nun,"
which I neither invented nor endorsed, stimulated a squeamishness in her
that cancelled the rest of the lesson, a lesson altogether opposed to the
dehumanization of womankind.
8. As for the concluding paragraph of the "Disciplinary
Suspension" memorandum, I must reiterate that all of my in-class utterances
are "germane to course content as measured by professional standards,"
and that none of the language I utilize is calculated to insult, to embarrass,
to patronize, or to harass any student. In fact, where the literature warrants
such treatment, my inclusion of the vernacular in any emotive evocations
of theme or character fosters an environment where a typical student can
feel safe to discover and discuss the richness that great literature affords
as well as the self-discovery that art induces.
9. That attorney Mark Cousens, the attorney
for the union has indicated he does not represent my interest and that
he only represents the union's interest. He has also accused me of creating
a hostile environment in my classroom. Furthermore, he and the union refused
to process my grievances or support my rights under the collective bargaining
agreement.
10. I firmly believe that the cause of
my current problem with Macomb Community College are the contortive efforts
of both the institution and Attorney Mark Cousens to destroy my teaching
career.
11. I believe my right to free speech
and association continues to be violated and I am concerned that I will
be damaged irreparably if the current disciplinary process continues as
scheduled for March 11, 1999, without the Court intervening to maintain
status quo pending resolution of these issues in a fair setting.
12. If the defendants are not temporarily restrained in this matter
I will be irreparably harmed in the following further particulars:
A.
My removal from all teaching duties causes a breakdown of my professional
relationship with my students on a daily basis.
B.
The insistence of defendant Cousens to represent me, against my will, materially
hampers my right to adequately defend myself in the administrative process.
C.
The "gag order" continuously interferes with my right to free speech and
my ability to freely disseminate my defense in any public forum.
D.
The prohibition of my right to meet with students or be present on college
property prevents me from pursuing my defense.
E
The continuation of the indefinite suspension hinders my career, simply
because a professor who cannot teach has no professional function.
F. All of the actions of the defendants, from which I ask immediate
relief, amount to a stigma, escalating with time, which brand me in public
and in the media as a purveyor of smut to students of the college.
FURTHER DEPONENT SAYETH NOT.
(signed)
PROFESSOR JOHN C. BONNELL
Subscribed and sworn to before
me this 10th day of March, 1999