Walcott smears shame our intellectual standards

Poet's decision not to stand for professor of poetry at Oxford is not a victory for feminism, but reveals the petty-minded nature of higher education

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This is a shameful day for intellectual life in this country. One of the world's greatest living poets has withdrawn from the election for Oxford professor of poetry because of a nasty, nefarious smear campaign.

It is a shabby affair. The delight that the Nobel laureate Derek Walcott had entered the race to become the Oxford professor of poetry turned to dismay after what Professor Hermione Lee, who supported Walcott in the election race, described as a 'campaign of vilification'. A dossier detailing sexual harassment claims from a student about Walcott when he taught at Harvard in the 1980s was anonymously sent a week ago to staff and graduates eligible to vote in next Saturday’s elections. This week Walcott thought enough is enough and threw in the towel. I don’t blame him. The whole saga is indicative of the petty-minded, down-graded nature of higher education and intellectual life in the UK today.

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is communications director at the Institute of Ideas and directs the satellites programme for the Institute's Battle of Ideas festival. She blogs regularly for Guardian Unlimited and researched the reception history of William Blake’s works for her PhD, publishing several books and studies on the subject.