¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½

Table of Contents

Amid death threats and harassment, University of Chicago professor reschedules ā€˜The Problem of Whitenessā€™ course

University of Chicago

A University of Chicago studentā€™s tweet criticizing a returning course has led to death threats and harassing messages toward the courseā€™s professor, resulting in the postponement of the course due to safety concerns. 

Last winter, professor Rebecca Journey, a teaching fellow in anthropology at UChicago, led a that ā€œexamines the problem of whiteness through an anthropological lens drawing from classic and contemporary works of critical race theory.ā€ The seminar was appropriately named ā€œThe Problem of Whiteness.ā€ Due to its success, the same seminar was added to the course offerings for the upcoming winter quarter. UChicago student Daniel Schmidt ā€” who has not taken the seminar ā€” publicly decried it. 

Schmidt took to Twitter to , calling it an example of the ā€œanti-white hateā€ he claims to be documenting on campus. Responses to Schmidtā€™s tweet were mixed: Some considered the seminar racist and expressed their dissatisfaction toward UChicago and Journey, while others called on Schmidt to take the seminar himself, telling him to see what itā€™s actually about before complaining. Just a few days later, Schmidt a screenshot indicating the seminar was canceled, calling this development ā€œa huge victory.ā€ 

But Schmidt was wrong. The seminar wasnā€™t canceled. Journey voluntarily rescheduled it to the upcoming spring term. 

FIRE is pleased to see that the seminar is not canceled permanently, as the cancellation of an already offered course could be a violation of a professorā€™s academic freedom. Nevertheless, we are still concerned that Journey felt the need to delay conducting the seminar. According to her communications with , Journey received over 80 harassing emails, including ā€œdeath threats, veiled threats, and threats of sexual assault, as well as all kinds of misogynistic, racist, and antisemitic languages [sic].ā€ Journey wanted to give UChicago ā€œmore time to implement appropriate safety measuresā€ for both herself and her students before the course begins. 

FIRE recognizes the right of individuals to criticize ā€œThe Problem of Whitenessā€ seminar ā€” or to express any opinion about it. However, threats and actual harassment cross the line into unprotected speech territory: And that, we cannot support. 

We applaud UChicago for keeping in tune with its academic freedom principles and making Journeyā€™s safety a priority, and we hope it remains vigilant in supporting its professor through teaching-related controversies in the future.

The UChicago Global Studies department, under which the course is taught, has since , and a university spokesperson to The Chicago Maroon that it ā€œwill continue to defend the right of faculty to establish curricula and courses.ā€ UChicago also took steps to protect Journeyā€™s digital identity and develop a personal safety plan. 

We applaud UChicago for keeping in tune with its academic freedom principles and making Journeyā€™s safety a priority, and we hope it remains vigilant in supporting its professor through teaching-related controversies in the future.  All universities ā€” even those that rank near the top of ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½ā€™s Free Speech Rankings ā€” can continue to uplift a culture of academic freedom. 

We hope to see a successful run of this course in the spring. 

Recent Articles

FIREā€™s award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

Share