海角大神

'True Gentlemen' analyzes the troubling co-dependence of colleges and fraternities

By further exposing the profound problems with fraternities, Bloomberg News writer John Hechinger has made a far more valuable contribution to American college life than any fraternity ever could.

True Gentlemen By John Hechinger PublicAffairs 320 pp.

Sigma Alpha Epsilon (SAE), one of the largest and wealthiest fraternities in this country, requires all its prospective members to memorize and recite its organizational creed, 鈥淭he True Gentleman.鈥 Such a man, in the words of this creed, is one 鈥渨hose conduct proceeds from good will and an acute sense of propriety, and whose self-control is equal to all emergencies ... who thinks of the rights and feelings of others, rather than his own.鈥澛

Undergraduate women at colleges across the country will tell you that SAE stands for 鈥淪exual Assault Expected.鈥 And understandably so. During the Halloween weekend of 2014, women reported having been raped at SAE parties in Georgia, Maryland, and California. After another woman reported her assault at a University of New Mexico SAE house in 2013, one member told investigators said it wasn鈥檛 rape because the victim had been 鈥済iving mixed signals.鈥澛 The general attitude toward women at many SAE houses can be summed up by a joke told at a Stanford chapter party: 鈥淲hat do you tell a woman with two black eyes? Nothing: you already told her twice.鈥

SAE is hardly unique among college fraternities. A study of sexual violence at Indiana University found that while only 12% of undergraduate men belong to fraternities, their houses are the sites of 23% of reported rapes. But in True Gentleman: The Broken Pledge of America鈥檚 Fraternities, Bloomberg News reporter John Hechinger focuses on SAE not only for the sake of narrative focus, but also for the fraternity鈥檚 notoriety.聽The SAE chapter at Dartmouth College inspired a fraternity house depicted in the movie "Animal House." [Editor's note: This review originally misstated the relationship between Dartmouth's SAE chapter and the movie "Animal House."] University administrators have shut down 30 SAE chapters and disciplined 130 others.

The problem with fraternities isn鈥檛 limited to rape culture. Applicants for fraternity membership are hazed mercilessly. New York Times columnist Charles Blow, who was a member of Kappa Alpha Psi, has written about developing what was called 鈥減ledge ass鈥 during his hazing:聽 pads of damaged tissue and nerves from repeated beatings with 2-by-fours. Pledges at many fraternities are forced to play drinking games (often with hard liquor) until they pass out. Some of them don鈥檛 wake up. Other hazing rites are a testament to a warped creativity: John Buford, a 2010 pledge to SAE鈥檚 Princeton chapter, recalls drinking a 20-ounce bottle of tobacco spit, getting whipped at a strip club, and swimming naked in a frozen pond.聽

Yet these same incubators of rape culture and general sadism are remembered with love by many of their former members. Many successful businessmen, lawyers, and politicians seem to honestly consider the day they joined their fraternity to be one of the most important days of their lives. It鈥檚 easy to see why: On large college campuses, a fraternity can provide a close-knit community where members learn leadership skills and make lifelong friendships. Furthermore, fraternity membership provides entr茅e into a network of contacts that can prove invaluable to a career.聽

But Hechinger is quick to point out the very fact that fraternities can provide such advantages indicates another reason they are problematic institutions. Most fraternal organizations鈥 memberships skew white and upper-class. Annual membership dues can be as high as $7,000 a year and are out of the reach of many undergraduates. Furthermore, successful pledges are often children of members or attended the same high schools as members of the chapter they pledged. Even if a minority student could afford the membership fees and had the right contacts, it鈥檚 unlikely they would feel welcome at organizations such as SAE, which holds theme parties that celebrate the antebellum South.

Despite the criminal behavior and class privilege fraternities enable, most of them aren鈥檛 going anywhere. Hechinger succinctly analyzes the troubling co-dependence of colleges and fraternal organizations. Members of fraternities such as SAE often go on to quite聽 lucrative careers 鈥 and become generous donors to their former colleges. Furthermore, fraternities provide housing to thousands of students, sparing many universities the cost of building additional dormitories.

Hechinger has written a damning indictment of the institutions that profoundly damage the lives of young men and women across the country. Yet implicit in "True Gentlemen" is the assumption that at one time, fraternities were better. Hechinger almost seems to believe the late-middle aged alums who, when confronted with evidence of brutal behavior at frat chapters, protest, 鈥淏ut that鈥檚 not what we were about.鈥 The more likely explanation for such reactions is not that Greek life enjoyed some more virtuous past, but that rape culture, sadism, and institutional racism have been part of our national life so long they were largely invisible to previous generations. By further exposing these profound problems, Hechinger has made a far more valuable to contribution to American college life than any fraternity ever could.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to 'True Gentlemen' analyzes the troubling co-dependence of colleges and fraternities
Read this article in
/Books/Book-Reviews/2017/0926/True-Gentlemen-analyzes-the-troubling-co-dependence-of-colleges-and-fraternities
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe