As you can imagine, our response to the question we were given, "How progressive is The New School," was, well, nuanced. 'Progressive' meant different things at different times, and it's not clear what it means today, though it's the term we revert to over and over in describing our values, our pedagogy, as well as in our regular episodes of protest and critique: "Isn't The New School supposed to be a progressive place?" &c.
We've been asked a similar question before: "What does it mean to be a progressive university?" That was (egad) nine years ago, part of Staff Development Day, and it was fun to revisit what we said there and update it for 2025 and a different audience. Surveying The New School's first century we enumerated values articulated along our winding way, from commitment to the new to professionalization to pluralism to adult education to various kinds of liberalism and critique, and then opened the floor for a discussion of what our future might hold.
The future's too far away, though: the threats to our very existence as a university, not to mention a "progressive" one, are too present right now. Besides, the president was there, and people rightly wanted to hear from him how the university would protect its community against government attacks (and how to define that community), who its allies were in this work, what role it might have in being again, to borrow the name of the most recent book about The New School, a light in dark times.
It seemed like an inopportune time to bring in historical nuance and contingency. Wouldn't it be better if we could agree on what we're about, have been about, ought to be about? Was this really the time to complicate our sense of a clear identity, to puncture the myth that we've always been the same "progressive" thing? In less fraught times, people welcome the serendipity, the fragility, the sense that what we're about is something people have been challenging and refining all along. It also fits the president's sense that the unique space universities offer is precisely a space for research, debate, contestation and innovation. But right now?
As ever, I learned things from this new context and conversation. I was reminded by this audience that the university is the most international in the country (something easy to forget at my college, the least international part). As we try to articulate our values and protect our communities we should know that we have companions in universities not only all over the city and country but all around the world, many of whom know how to deal with interfering governments.
But revisiting our history I was also reminded that The New School was once a place committed broadly to the education of adults, within but also beyond its walls. As we push back against a regime based on cynical lies (including lies about universities), we might have a role to play promoting lifelong learning as a common good, a way to rebuild a divided nation, a way back to the joy of living in truth with others in a grand democratic experiment...