Daniel Peterson wrote:I'm aware of that, and I regret it. It seems to have hardened into a kind of orthodoxy in certain quarters, such that some folks won't even look at what we publish -- a textbook instance, by the way, of the ad hominem fallacy of distraction.
I am sure there are those who do fall into the trap of blind prejudice against FARMS and the
Review. I don't doubt it. But there are also those who have formed their negative opinions based on actual reading experience. Just because some take their dislike of FARMS as an untested article of faith does not mean that all who share a similar view have not tested it.
Daniel Peterson wrote:Many people -- and perhaps an unusually high proportion of Latter-day Saints -- simply don't like even the slightest degree of rough and tumble debate or confrontation. They find it offensive or off-putting. I happen to have grown up outside of Mormondom, reading things like National Review, The American Spectator, and so forth, and I like wit and a polemical edge. I think that BYU Studies, for example, is solid but a bit bland. De gustibus non est disputandum.
I would agree on both accounts (confrontation-averse LDS and bland
BYU Studies).
Daniel Peterson wrote:Much of the image of FARMS as harshly polemical is undeserved. First of all, most of what FARMS has published isn't polemical at all. Most, even, of the FARMS Review isn't polemical. So it's unfair to generalize from a few examples in the Review to the entire Review, and even more unfair to generalize from those items to FARMS as a whole.
Speaking as a Classicist, I would say that the
Review has a saucier tone than I am accustomed to. I would also say that at times the quality dips lower than I am used to.
Daniel Peterson wrote:1) One or two people have complained to me that our reviews of Grant Palmer's book were nothing but strings of personal insults. Now, I think that this is altogether unjust even with regard to Louis Midgley and Davis Bitton's essays. But it's patently absurd when it's said about the responses by Mark Ashurst-McGee, Steven Harper, and James Allen.
"Nothing but a string of personal insults" would be hyperbole. "Not infrequently insulting" might be fair. The Ashurst-McGee review I reread recently. I thought that it
was a good review. Elsewhere the focus on the word "Insider" was overplayed and, to be blunt, silly.
Daniel Peterson wrote:3) A very gentle prominent retired Mormon academic, who has been a friend for roughly twenty years, actually took me out to lunch once, to continue trying to persuade me to take the Review in a gentler direction. Finally, though, he wrote a review for me of a rather controversial book. It was negative, but kindly in tone. Since then, he's been ripped into by a number of Church critics for his supposed viciousness. I think it's been a real eye-opener for him.
I imagine it was. And, of course, you can't please everyone. Still, I have had the experience, on more than one occasion, of reading a book, going to the
Review to see reactions there, and asking myself, "what book was that person reading? Did (s)he have a different edition than the one I read?" Then I ask around to see what others (not antis and exMos) thought of the book and of the review in the
FR. More than a few times they voiced similar reactions. While not a scientific study, I have not been inclined to dismiss this anecdotal evidence as utterly worthless.
In my field, it is now considered impolite if not unacceptable to act like a jerk when interacting with others' work. Naturally, this does not prevent all jerkish behavior from occurring, but I have been surprised at how politic and diplomatic people tend to be in reviews and conferences. Recently, I was taken to task a little by an eminent Hellenist for a piece of theory I was using, and yet she did it with such good humor that I was not bothered in the least, and I took something valuable from the criticism. By contrast I was once asked a bunch of empty questions by a graduate student who was looking to appear tough. Not only was this annoying, but it was a complete waste of my time.
This jerkish behavior of which I speak also includes what some people who write for the
Review seem to categorize as "all in good fun." Now, I don't consider myself to be a completely humorless prig, although many may disagree, and yet I do think that a professional and collegial tone, even used in reference to arguments with which we vehemently disagree, is not only preferable, but also more effective. But, as you say,
de gustibus non est disputandum. Still, I hope, for the sake of the cause you hold dear, that all of these high spirits don't cut the spirits of others off at the knees too frequently. Given the seriousness of your mission and responsibility, it would be more than a shame.
I am not suggesting that you have not considered these things. I simply respectfully disagree with where you have tended to draw the line. All the same, peace be with you.
“I was hooked from the start,” Snoop Dogg said. “We talked about the purpose of life, played Mousetrap, and ate brownies. The kids thought it was off the hook, for real.”