Diversity in the public space: a response to Stepp.

AuthorFrank, David A.
PositionResponse to Pamela Stepp in this issue, p. 176

Professor Stepp is right to begin her study with David Zarefsky's Speech Communication Association presidential address. This address should be required reading for forensics students and read remedially by forensic educators. Zarefsky's address, "The Postmodern Public: Revitalizing the Commitment to the Public Forum," envisioned the roles that the disciplines of Speech and Forensics could play in revitalizing public space. Two points drawn from Zarefsky's address place Stepp's study in perspective. First, Zarefsky notes:

The area of our field which most directly bears on public affairs, the study of argumentation and debate, we too often have treated as an intellectual backwater of programs staffed by paraprofessionals and undeserving of our support. And our colleagues in this area have defined their own professional concerns with such insularity that they deprive the rest of us their insight into the conduct of public controversy. (311)

If Zarefsky is right, and I think he is, the "intellectual backwater" of debate has little support from the speech profession, nor can we say that debate educators or students are interested in the mission of reinvigorating the public sphere.

Forensics and intercollegiate debate have become insulated activities, and Stepp's research describes one expression of this provincialism. While defenders of the debate status quo, who tend to be our younger colleagues, use representative anecdotes of successful women debaters to suggest that intercollegiate debate is a diverse culture, such claims crumble when juxtaposed with Stepp's careful longitudinal research of the debate system. Her research should put to rest any notion that intercollegiate debate is an open activity, for her study indicates that women and minorities are significantly underrepresented and face significant barriers to participation.

Zarefsky makes a second point that serves to frame a friendly quarrel I have with Stepp's analysis of what might be done to encourage diversity in intercollegiate debate. In addressing the complaint made by Nancy Fraser and others that argument and the public sphere are essentially male creations designed to perpetuate the patriarchy, Zarefsky observed:

The growing involvement of women in recent decades has brought once "private" issues into the public sphere, ranging from child care and pay equity to domestic violence and sexual harassment. These once were trivialized as "women's issues." No longer. We have far to...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT