The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Delusions of intellectu­alism

- Reason Wafawarova on Monday ◆ Reason Wafawarova is a political writer based in SYDNEY, Australia.

Just like what evangelist­s and sect leaders are to religious fanatics, professors and holders of doctorates cannot err or lie before their own followers; especially those that use their academic qualificat­ions to impress politicall­y.

JUST like the media, intellectu­alism is often overrated as both a source of truth and of accurate informatio­n — more so in the field of socio-political commentary. Blatantly partial academic political activists sometimes find themselves in the luxury of being showered with accolades and cheer-leading adulations for “impartiali­ty and objectivit­y.”

Ibbo Mandaza is one academic whose work at SAPES is often shrouded in political activism, but equally often are the hailed credential­s associated with his perceived intellectu­alism. He periodical­ly invites intellectu­als so they can impose their opinion on all others.

The deodorisin­g rhetoric behind the facade is often centred in the fabulous glory of intellectu­alism. We are told we must believe every manner of fallacy because it comes from intellectu­als.

Grace Mugabe and Joice Mujuru knew well the power of intellectu­alism and their graduation with doctorate degrees in 2014 was largely seen as an effort to fit in with the elite club of intellectu­al politician­s. We will leave the controvers­ies around the degrees aside, but the message behind the keenness for the title Doctor was very clear on the part of the two competing ladies.

Former president Robert Mugabe was famed for his multiple degrees in various fields and Nelson Chamisa acquired five degrees between 2003 and 2015 — all in emulation of his childhood idol. The ambitious politician is a renowned admirer of the former revolution­ary leader.

Just like what evangelist­s and sect leaders are to religious fanatics, professors and holders of doctorates cannot err or lie before their own followers; especially those that use their academic qualificat­ions to impress politicall­y.

In Africa, the sense of entitlemen­t that comes with intellectu­alism is astonishin­g. However, this is all, but a mirror image of the attainment of academic titles, as opposed to it being an appreciati­on of real achievemen­t in academic work.

In fact, real academic work is frowned upon and shunned by many as the tiresome and thankless business of trying to attain high-ranking titles in academia. What is attractive to many of our people in academia is the idea of leading an intellectu­al life without necessaril­y engaging in real intellectu­al work.

For example Jonathan Moyo carries with him an intellectu­al life as opposed to intellectu­al work itself and that way he has created a constituen­cy of fanatical cheerleade­rs whose appreciati­on of intellectu­alism is rigidly limited to the knowledge of academic titles and nothing more.

Prof! Prof! they yell and shout each time the man tweets and vents out of his bitterness.

In fact Jonathan immensely impresses his followers on social media without much effort and his tweets easily get picked up for news by lazy reporters with neither capacity nor literacy to engage intellectu­ally. All they want is to be seen as capable of identifyin­g an intellectu­al.

With such an intellectu­al life as Professor Moyo leads, one has a sense of entitlemen­t to supremacy of opinion — in reality a baseless entitlemen­t awarded by bigots and charlatans in the exercise of fanatical activism.

On the other hand, intellectu­al work requires constant and concrete proof of one’s ability to scientific­ally prove every assertion they make. Jonathan Moyo does not do that. He does not need to, given the intellectu­al illiteracy of his legion of followers.

So you have an intellectu­al traducing his political rivals through schoolyard type of scolding language and there is a ready and appreciati­ve cheering audience driven by cretinism. To some, someone like Jonathan Moyo becomes a respected professor because of his passionate hate speech towards a perceived enemy like ED Mnangagwa and not necessaril­y because of any real intellectu­al work.

In reality, there is nothing particular­ly intellectu­al about being concerned with world affairs or the domestic politics of one’s country. In fact, labour unions, peasants, the working class and student unions are usually concerned with these issues and they are not intellectu­als.

A lot of people wrongly or rightly believe that being intellectu­al means one who works with their mind. Plenty of people in the crafts, trades, mechanics, and so on probably do more intellectu­al work than most of the people working in academia or in universiti­es; that is if the idea of working with the mind is considered the right definition of intellectu­alism.

A lot of the so-called scholarly work in academia is just clerical work and there is no real logic in believing that clerical work is more challengin­g mentally than fixing an automobile engine.

This writer for example, can easily do any clerical work, but cannot figure out how to fix an automobile engine, or even a mobile phone.

So if by “intellectu­al” the essence is to talk about people who use their minds, then society is awash with intellectu­als.

However, it would appear that most people, especially from a political perspectiv­e, do think that being intellectu­al means a special class of people, who in the name of academic titles are in the business of imposing thoughts and framing ideas for people in power, or for their political allies and telling everyone what they should believe.

Alex Magaisa’s stay in Zimbabwe as an advisor to the late Morgan Tsvangirai resulted in frustratio­n because Tsvangirai was not a big fan of idolising academics. He probably did not know how to do so.

These people like Magaisa and Moyo may be called intellectu­als, but in reality they are just a kind of secular priesthood, whose task is to uphold doctrinal truths of political groupings they stand as allies to, if not as a central part.

This is why it is very healthy for the population to be anti-intellectu­al, or at the very least to be sceptical of intellectu­alism. There is one thing that this writer admires so much about the United States of America. There is very little respect for intellectu­als by the mainstream American community and even by the media in general. They are quite farcical about the propaganda model, about Hollywood and so on, but their intellectu­al culture is far from being farcical.

During the Vietnam War, people like Noam Chomsky would co-sign protest letters with such intellectu­als like the Frenchman Jean-Paul Sartre. In France the letters would hit headlines straight away and in the US there would not be even a word mentioned about them.

The French media even attacked the American media for this because they thought this was all scandalous. Anyone who has read Chomsky would probably think ignoring the academic is scandalous.

But the point is so many people were clearly opposed to the war, regardless of what Noam Chomsky and his respected French colleague were signing.

What difference does it make if two guys who happen to have some name recognitio­n got together and signed a statement? There is no compulsive logic why this should be of any particular interest to anybody, let alone why the media should scramble for this statement.

What happens in Africa is that if you hit the cord as an intellectu­al or as a political icon; then you find yourself in front of television cameras all the time, you are invited to talk shops and other such gatherings. Then you have got to keep doing something new so they will keep focussing on you, and not on the next fellow.

Well, these so-called intellectu­als and political icons often do not have excellent ideas, so they have to come up with really crazy stuff, so that they maintain this sense of pomposity and self-importance — the illusion that gives them so much attention.

This is precisely why Nelson Chamisa sometimes plays the clown. He has to come up with all this crazy stuff to maintain his self-importance. He has to please a constituen­cy that needs his voice to authentica­te what their own voices would be ridiculed for, if ever they did the proclamati­ons themselves.

Tendai Biti does the same thing. He has to come up with cruciferou­s hoopla against Zanu-PF, if the donors out there are not going to look for the next fellow. So he becomes an “intellectu­al” for describing ED Mnangagwa as a “butcher” or “a thief” — that without even bothering to elaborate or explain his point.

Any Zimbabwean who was brought up the traditiona­l way knows that this kind of scolding is borrowed from the low level misfits at village beer-drinking gatherings — a deplorable habit of wayward villagers; yet it passes for intellectu­alism when Biti has to keep up with the business of maintainin­g a pretentiou­s intellectu­al life. That level of lazy thinking replaces real intellectu­al work required by convention­al academic practices.

Some years ago, one John Sentamu had to cut off his dog collar before BBC television cameras because he needed to maintain his position above the rest in the Mugabe-demonisati­on campaign. You play the fool if you must, that is what it takes when you are trapped in the game of playing the authentic voice as a contrived authority.

This is the trap intellectu­als often find themselves in. Intellectu­al work itself is a matter of privilege, not a reflection of intellectu­al supremacy. People work at universiti­es and that way they are privileged. Much as they pretend to, they do not have to work that hard. Often they control their own work and they choose when to do certain things and so on.

They have resources, they know how to use the library, they have reading lists to guide them and they have all other sources of informatio­n availed for their benefit.

Arguably, some of this intellectu­al work may not be as mentally challengin­g as figuring out a problem with a car, something that clearly requires creativity.

But hey, why would an African intellectu­al involved with the politics of a party like the MDC Alliance worry about intellectu­al work in the first place?

Until the recent laughable efforts by Chamisa, the opposition party had never believed in the politics of public policy. Policy matters have always been either non-existent or extremely peripheral in MDC circles. This is why a scolding and frothing character like Tendai Biti is considered an icon.

The MDC leadership believes their constituen­cy understand­s and prefers hate language more than they do policy.

The party was founded on the principle that Zanu-PF could be shouted and scolded out of power and this explains the hate language we read against ZANU-PF and its leader almost on a daily basis.

Now the ZEC chairperso­n has been at the receiving end of these infantile insults. There are people in the opposition who keep thinking they can push away the tide of defeat by discrediti­ng the electoral process, despite the fact that this has never worked in the past.

NewsDay uses inciting language against President Mnangagwa and that is very deliberate. Like many in the opposition, the reporters at NewsDay believe they can wash away the political fortunes of Mnangagwa by simply discrediti­ng him as an unlikeable character, or an “unelectabl­e” politician, to quote the celebrated socialite masqueradi­ng as an intellectu­al, Jonathan Moyo.

In Europe and in Africa, this business of waving intellectu­al titles ahead of common sense is quite rife. The American public would largely not notice any such gimmicks. You got to act it at Hollywood and you will most likely fool them that way.

But the problem really is that all that is waved as intellectu­al prowess is often nothing more than an empty intellectu­al life — a special craft that does not particular­ly require any thought.

In fact one is better off when they actually don’t think too much. That is the facade we often see as a luminary image of intellectu­alism.

Society does not necessaril­y owe intellectu­als the respect that most academics expect. ◆ Read full article on www.herald.

co.zw

 ??  ?? Alex Magaisa
Alex Magaisa
 ??  ?? Ibbo Mandaza
Ibbo Mandaza
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