Wonderful article in The Chronicle, an excellent personal reflection from a professor with working class background. Here’s an excerpt:
I know that I don’t belong in the old neighborhood either. I made my choices long ago; or perhaps others made them for me. No one is awaiting my return. I think I can hear what they’d say: “You seem to like playing the working-class hero for rich people. Whatever. Do it if it works for you. You never belonged here anyway, even when you were a kid. If I could get out of here, I would. So get on with your life. We’ll be fine without you.”
Meanwhile, back on the job as a tenured professor — certifying the inherited status of his middle-class students — the self-proclaimed “academic class traitor” romanticizes his alienation and mocks his own naïve posturing. He realizes there are no people whom he can serve without some inner conflict.






Hey, Pat. It’s been a while since I last visited your blog. Thanks for keeping your thoughts out there. I particularly liked your post on sermon elitism. This is something I struggle w/ here. Yet God uses our pastor, who only finished high school, to speak to us, even when there are gaping holes in his exegetical work. Thanks be to God.
–Alan