
The Grievance Studies Affair (Sokal Squared): Fake Dog Park Papers, Peer Review, and the Academic Hoax That Shook Universities
pplpod · pplpod
Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (content.rss.com) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.
Show Notes
In this episode of pplpod, we take a deep dive into the Grievance Studies Affair (also known as “Sokal Squared”) — the 2018 academic hoax in which three authors submitted fake papers to peer-reviewed journals in fields such as gender studies, fat studies, and queer theory.
Yes, this is the one with the infamous dog park paper.
Over 10 months, James A. Lindsay, Peter Boghossian, and Helen Pluckrose wrote 20 intentionally absurd papers designed to test whether certain academic fields would publish ideologically flattering nonsense. Several papers were accepted or published before the project was exposed, triggering a firestorm across academia, media, and politics.
In this episode, we unpack the full story and the fallout, including:
- what the Grievance Studies Affair was and why it was called Sokal Squared
- who Lindsay, Boghossian, and Pluckrose were, and what they claimed they were trying to prove
- the idea of “grievance studies” and the trio’s critique of applied postmodernism
- how the hoaxers learned the language of academic theory and used it to craft fake papers
- the now-famous dog park paper and how it got published
- the major rebuttals from scholars, including the lack of a proper control group argument
- the fallout for Peter Boghossian at Portland State University
- and the bigger question: How do we tell the difference between rigorous scholarship and jargon-driven ideology?
This episode is a nuanced, research-based breakdown of one of the most controversial academic stings in modern history — and why it still matters for universities, media, public policy, and anyone trying to make sense of “expert” knowledge in 2026.
If you’re interested in academic publishing, peer review, higher education, critical theory, research ethics, free speech on campus, ideological bias, and the politics of knowledge, this episode is for you.