Joshua Katz Explained

Joshua Katz
Discipline:Historical linguistics, Comparative linguistics, Classics
Education:Yale University (BA)
University of Oxford (MPhil)
Harvard University (PhD)
Workplaces:Princeton University (1998–2022)
Institute for Advanced Study (2002–2003)
École pratique des Hautes Études (2011)
University of Berlin (2015)
Doctoral Advisor:Calvert Watkins
Awards:Marshall Scholarship (1991)
Guggenheim Fellowship (2010)
Visiting Fellowship at All Souls College, Oxford (2010)
Birth Date:12 September 1969
Birth Place:New York, U.S.
Occupation:Former Professor at Princeton University
Thesis Title:Topics in Indo-European Personal Pronouns
Thesis Url:https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/Topics-in-Indo-European-personal-pronouns-Katz/63e19f7a70aeb77af85242e77ec7730b9e1973f5
Thesis Year:1998
Birth Name:Joshua Timothy Katz
Parents:Thomas J. Katz (father)

Joshua Timothy Katz (born September 12, 1969) is an American linguist and classicist who was the Cotsen Professor in the Humanities at Princeton University until May 2022.[1] He is a scholar on the languages, literatures, and cultures of ancient and medieval history. Currently, he is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.[2]

In 2020, Katz wrote an essay in Quillette which included criticisms of the Black Justice League at Princeton, leading to a backlash on the Princeton campus and the rescinding of a conference invitation by the American Council of Learned Societies.[3] Katz's contentions that his views were being suppressed attracted support from conservatives and some academic freedom advocates.

In 2021, The Daily Princetonian reported that Katz had been suspended in 2018 for engaging in a consensual sexual relationship with a student in violation of university policy. In May 2022, he was fired after a second investigation concluded that he had lied during the 2018 sexual misconduct investigation.

Early life and education

Katz was born in New York in 1969, the son of chemist Thomas J. Katz.[4] He attended the Dalton School in New York City before attending Yale University for his bachelor's degree in linguistics, graduating summa cum laude. After graduating from Yale, Katz attended the University of Oxford on a Marshall Scholarship and earned a master's degree in general linguistics and comparative philology in 1993. He completed a Ph.D. in linguistics at Harvard University in 1998.[5]

Academic career

Katz joined the faculty of Princeton University as a classics lecturer in 1998 and, by 2006, had received tenure as an associate professor. From September 2002 to August 2003, Katz was a member of the School of Historical Studies at the Institute for Advanced Study.[6] In 2008, he became full professor at Princeton. He has since held visiting professorships at the École Pratique des Hautes Études, Université Paris Diderot, and the University of Berlin.

Katz became a popular undergraduate teacher at Princeton and was awarded the President's Award for Distinguished Teaching in 2003, the Phi Beta Kappa Teaching Award in 2008, and the Sophie and L. Edward Cotsen Faculty Fellowship.[7] He was praised by the university for “the care he takes with students in and out of the classroom” and was recognized as one of four faculty members for outstanding teaching in 2003,[8] with a class of his making The Daily Beasts list of "hottest college courses" in 2011.[9] Katz was president of Princeton's Phi Beta Kappa society for two terms, department representative for the classics from 2003 to 2005, a member of the Faculty-Student Committee on Discipline,[10] and director of the Behrman Undergraduate Society of Fellows, which he founded in 2009.[11]

Katz chaired the selection committee of the Barry Scholarship at the University of Oxford.[12] As of 2023, the chair is Christian Sahner.[13] When plans for the University of Austin were announced in 2021, he joined its board of advisors.[14] [15] He is also a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.

Political controversy and sexual misconduct investigations

Katz was investigated by Princeton twice,[16] stemming from a relationship he had with a student around 2005. Before the second investigation, he wrote a controversial opinion piece about race on campus, near the peak of the 2020 George Floyd protests.[17] [18] The second investigation over his student relationship, which led to his termination, created its own controversy over possible free speech suppression, since it came on the heels of Katz's previous controversy.[18]

First investigation

A Princeton University investigation in 2018 found that during the mid-2000s, Katz had engaged in a multi-year consensual relationship with a female undergraduate student in the classics department in violation of university policy on faculty-student relationships.[19] [20] The investigation resulted in Katz taking a year of unpaid leave as a suspension. It was not made public until 2021.

July 2020 essay

Throughout 2020–2021, Katz wrote essays in The Wall Street Journal, The Spectator, Quillette, and National Review, among others, criticizing political correctness.[21] [22] On July 8, 2020, Katz wrote an essay in Quillette opposing faculty recommendations to address racist aspects of Princeton's history. He also criticized a former Princeton student group, the Black Justice League (BJL), describing it as "a small local terrorist organization that made life miserable for many (including the many black students) who did not agree with its members’ demands".

Katz's description of the BJL was criticized by faculty administrators of the Department of Classics, including department chair Michael Flower,[23] and Princeton University president Christopher L. Eisgruber, but the university did not put Katz under investigation for formal action. The editorial board of The Wall Street Journal and columnist Rod Dreher praised Katz for speaking out against cancel culture once the story reached national attention.[24] [25]

On July 27, Katz wrote an op-ed for the Wall Street Journal titled "I Survived Cancellation at Princeton" and noted that a message of condemnation on the Department of Classics' website had been taken down.[26] As a result of the controversy, the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) revoked an invitation for Katz to be a volunteer delegate for ALCS to the Union Académique Internationale conference in Paris. Katz sued the ACLS in February 2021 for viewpoint discrimination. A judge dismissed the lawsuit due to jurisdiction standards, but did not rule on the merits of Katz's claims.[27]

Second investigation and firing

In February 2021, The Daily Princetonian reported the university's 2018 misconduct investigation that had led to Katz's suspension. Katz acknowledged breaking the university's rules.[28] Princeton began a second investigation, which concluded in November 2021 that Katz had "misrepresented facts" in the 2018 inquiry and had discouraged the former student in the relationship from cooperating with it. Supporters of Katz, including the American Council of Trustees and Alumni (ACTA) and the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, criticized the university, alleging the investigation sought to suppress Katz's free speech rights.[29] [30] [31]

Princeton University president Christopher L. Eisgruber called for Katz's removal from the university on May 10, 2022, based on the new evidence from the second investigation. Katz was dismissed from the faculty, entirely, after a vote by the university's board of trustees on May 23, 2022.[32] [33] The Wall Street Journal published an opinion article by Katz soon after, in which he alleged that the university had fired him for political reasons and had misrepresented his positions to provoke dissent.[34]

Personal life

In July 2021, Katz married Solveig Gold, a doctoral candidate in classics at University of Cambridge, who graduated from Princeton in 2017 and is one of his former undergraduate students.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Joshua Katz . May 21, 2022 . Princeton Classics . en.
  2. Web site: Joshua T. Katz . American Enterprise Institute . July 10, 2022.
  3. Web site: Classics professor's lawsuit against academic society dismissed by New Jersey court . May 21, 2022 . The Princetonian.
  4. Web site: Joshua T. Katz. John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.
  5. Web site: February 4, 2021 . Alumni allege history of inappropriate conduct with female students by Princeton professor Joshua Katz . May 22, 2022 . The Princetonian.
  6. Web site: December 9, 2019 . Joshua Katz – Scholars Institute for Advanced Study . May 22, 2022 . www.ias.edu . en.
  7. Web site: Katz embraces dynamic approach to convey richness of languages . May 26, 2022 . Princeton University . en.
  8. Web site: Four faculty members recognized for outstanding teaching . May 22, 2022 . pr.princeton.edu.
  9. Web site: January 21, 2016 . Class on modern baseball a hit; makes 'hottest college course' list . May 22, 2022 . Princeton Alumni Weekly . en.
  10. Web site: Daily Princetonian 20 November 2006 — Princeton Periodicals . May 22, 2022 . theprince.princeton.edu.
  11. Web site: Daily Princetonian 2 March 2009 — Princeton Periodicals . May 22, 2022 . theprince.princeton.edu.
  12. Web site: July 7, 2020 . A Better Kind of Postgraduate Academic Prize . May 22, 2022 . National Review . en-US.
  13. Web site: Barry Scholarship . May 24, 2022 . Barry Scholarship . en-US.
  14. Web site: Pursue truth or fight cancel culture? The University of Austin must choose. . May 22, 2022 . The Princetonian.
  15. Web site: Board of Advisors . May 22, 2022 . UATX . en-US.
  16. Web site: Princeton president asks board to fire tenured professor after sexual misconduct probe, lawyer says . May 21, 2022 . NBC News . en.
  17. News: Hartocollis . Anemona . May 20, 2022 . After Campus Uproar, Princeton Proposes to Fire Tenured Professor . en-US . The New York Times . May 23, 2022 . 0362-4331.
  18. Web site: May 17, 2022 . Princeton Preparing to Fire Tenured Professor for Opposing Far-Left Activists . June 28, 2022 . National Review . en-US.
  19. Web site: Katz releases statement on misconduct allegations, acknowledging relationship with undergraduate student and past discipline . May 26, 2022 . The Princetonian.
  20. Web site: March 17, 2005 . Princeton University: Office of the Dean of the Faculty . May 22, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20050317010839/http://web.princeton.edu/sites/DOF/publs/rpfac94/fchap5.htm#chap5c . March 17, 2005 . dead.
  21. Web site: Editorial Archive Princetonians for Free Speech . May 26, 2022 . princetoniansforfreespeech.com.
  22. Web site: July 28, 2021 . Joshua Katz, Cancel Culture and its Discontents Transcript . May 21, 2022 . Bruce D. Benson Center for the Study of Western Civilization . en.
  23. Web site: July 14, 2020 . Classics chair calls professor's language on BJL 'absolutely abhorrent,' as Katz defends 'blunt speech' . May 22, 2022 . The Princetonian.
  24. News: The Editorial Board . July 14, 2020 . Opinion The Speech Police at Princeton . en-US . Wall Street Journal . May 22, 2022 . 0099-9660.
  25. Web site: Katz Showdown At Princeton . May 22, 2022 . The American Conservative . en-US.
  26. Web site: July 27, 2020 . Katz defends 'blunt words' in op-ed, as Department of Classics removes condemnation from website . May 25, 2022 . The Princetonian.
  27. Web site: Joshua Katz sues academic society, alleges 'viewpoint discrimination' . May 21, 2022 . The Princetonian.
  28. Web site: Heyboer . Kelly . May 12, 2021 . Rewrite Princeton's sexual misconduct rules, students say . May 27, 2022 . nj.com . en.
  29. News: Free Speech for Me, and Thee?. Michael Poliakoff, president of the American Council of Trustees and Alumni, for instance, wrote to Princeton to say that the university had put itself “in the position of violating its own rules by severely harassing a member of the academic community whose speech the president declared to be protected.”. inside Higher Ed.
  30. Web site: How Princeton Eviscerated Its Free Speech Rule and Covered It Up . May 22, 2022 . American Council of Trustees and Alumni . en-US.
  31. News: The Editorial Board . May 20, 2022 . Opinion Princeton Targets a Dissenting Professor . en-US . Wall Street Journal . May 23, 2022 . 0099-9660.
  32. Web site: Princeton dismisses professor Joshua Katz 'effective immediately' after U. investigation finds policy violations . May 24, 2022 . The Princetonian.
  33. News: Belkin . Melissa Korn and Douglas . May 23, 2022 . Princeton Board Fires Tenured Professor Joshua Katz, Backing President's Recommendation . en-US . Wall Street Journal . May 24, 2022 . 0099-9660.
  34. News: Katz . Joshua . May 24, 2022 . Opinion Princeton Fed Me to the Cancel Culture Mob . en-US . Wall Street Journal . May 24, 2022 . 0099-9660.