August 10, 2012

The Humanities and Common Sense

In this post, academics and university faculty will be criticized. Railing against college professors has become a common pastime, one practiced almost exclusively by those who have been taught and mentored by those who are now being criticized. It is thus only fair to say upfront that college education in the United States is, in spite of its myriad flaws, still of incredible value and meaning to tens if not hundreds of thousands of students every year.

That said, too much of what our faculties teach is neither interesting nor wanted by our students. This is a point that Jacques Berlinerblau makes in a recent essay in the Chronicle of Higher Education:

Observers of gentrification like to draw a distinction between needs and wants. Residents in an emerging neighborhood need dry cleaners, but it’s wine bars they really want. The application of that insight to the humanities leads me to an unhappy conclusion: Our students, and the educated public at large, neither want us nor need us.

What is amazing is that not only do our students not want what we offer, but neither do our colleagues. It is an amazing and staggering truth that much of what academics write and publish is rarely, if ever, read. And if you want to really experience the problem, attend an academic conference some day, where you will see panels of scholars presenting their work, sometimes to one or two audience members. According to Berlinerblau, the average audience at academic conference panels is 14 persons.

The standard response to such realizations is that scholarship is timeless. Its value may not be discovered for decades or even centuries until someone, somewhere, pulls down a dusty volume and reads something that changes the world. There is truth in such claims. When one goes digging in archives, there are pearls of wisdom to be found. What is more, the scholarly process consists of the accumulation of information and insight over generations. In other words, academic research is like basic scientific research, useless but useful in itself.

The problem with this argument is that such really original scholarship is rare and getting ever more rare. While there are exceptions, little original research is left to do in most fields of the humanities. Few important books are published each year. The vast majority are as derivative as they are unnecessary. We would all do well to read and think about the few important books (obviously there will be some disagreement and divergent schools) than to spend our time trying to establish our expertise by commenting on some small part of those books.

The result of the academic imperative of publish or perish is the increasing specialization that leads to the knowing more and more about less and less. This is the source of the irrelevance of much of humanities scholarship today.

As Hannah Arendt wrote 50 years ago in her essay On Violence, humanities scholars today are better served by being learned and erudite than by seeking to do original research by uncovering some new or forgotten scrap. While such finds can be interesting, they are exceedingly rare and largely insignificant.

As a result—and it is hard to hear for many in the scholarly community—we simply don’t need 200 medieval scholars in the United States or 300 Rawlsians or 400 Biblical scholars. It is important that Chaucer and Nietzsche are taught to university students, but the idea that every college and university needs a Chaucer and a Nietzsche scholar to teach Chaucer and Nietzsche is simply wrong. We should, of course, continue to support scholars, those whose work is to some extent scholarly innovative. But more needed are well-read and thoughtful teachers who can teach widely and write for a general audience.

To say that excessively specialized humanities scholarship today is irrelevant is not to say that the humanities are irrelevant. The humanities are that space in the university system where power does not have the last word, where truth and beauty as well as insight and eccentricity reign supreme and where young people come into contact with the great traditions, writing, and thinking that have made us whom we are today. The humanities introduce us to our ancestors and our forebears and acculturate students into their common heritage. It is in the humanities that we learn to judge the good from the bad and thus where we first encounter the basic moral facility for making judgments. It is because the humanities teach taste and judgment that they are absolutely essential to politics. It is even likely that the decline of politics today is profoundly connected to the corruption of the humanities.

Hannah Arendt argues precisely for this connection between the humanities and politics in her essay The Crisis in Culture. Part Two of the essay addresses the political significance of culture, which she relates to humanism—both of which are said to be of Roman origin. The Romans, she writes, knew how to care for and cultivate the grandiose political and artistic creations of the Greeks. And it is a line from Pericles that forms the center of Arendt’s reflections.

The Periclean citation is translated (in part) by Arendt to say: “We love beauty within the limits of political judgment.” The judgment of beauty, of culture, and of art is, Pericles says, limited by the political judgment of the people. There is, in other words, an intimate connection between culture and politics. In culture, we make judgments of taste and thus learn the faculty of judgment so necessary for politics. And political judgment, in turn, limits and guides our cultural judgments.

What unites culture and politics is that they are “both phenomena of the public world.” Judgment, the primary faculty of politics, is discovered, nurtured, and practiced in the world of culture and the judgment of taste. What the study of culture through the humanities offers, therefore, is an orientation towards a common world that is known and understood through a common sense.  The humanities, Arendt argues, are crucial for the development and preservation of common sense—something that is unfortunately all-too-lacking in much humanities scholarship today.

What this means is that teaching the humanities is absolutely essential for politics—and as long as that is the case, there will be a rationale for residential colleges and universities. The mania for distance learning today is understandable. Education is, in many cases, too expensive. Much could be done more cheaply and efficiently at colleges. And this will happen. Colleges will, increasingly, bring computers and the internet into their curricula. But as powerful as the internet is, and as useful as it is as a replacement for passive learning in large lectures, it is not yet a substitute for face-to-face learning that takes place at a college or university. The learning that takes place in the hallways, offices, and dining halls when students live, eat, and breathe their coursework over four years is simply fundamentally different from taking a course online in one’s free time. As exciting as technology is, it is important to remember that education is, at its best, not about transmitting information but about inspiring thinking.

Berlinerblau thinks that what will save the humanities is better training in pedagogy. He writes:

As for the tools, let’s look at it this way. Much as we try to foist “critical thinking skills” on undergraduates, I suggest we impart critical communication skills to our master’s and doctoral students. That means teaching them how to teach, how to write, how to speak in public. It also means equipping them with an understanding that scholarly knowledge is no longer locked up in journals and class lectures. Spry and free, it now travels digitally, where it may intersect with an infinitely larger and more diverse audience.  The communicative competences I extoll are only infrequently part of our genetic endowment. They don’t come naturally to many people—which is precisely what sets the true humanist apart from the many. She or he is someone you always want to speak with, listen to, and read, someone who always teaches you something, blows your mind, singes your feathers. To render complexity with clarity and style—that is our heroism.

The focus on pedagogy is a mistake and comes from the basic flawed assumption that the problem with the humanities is that the professors aren’t good communicators. It may be true that professors communicate poorly, but the real problem is deeper. If generations of secondary school teachers trained in pedagogy have taught us anything, it is that pedagogical teaching is not useful. Authority in the classroom comes from knowledge and insight, not from pedagogical techniques or theories.

The pressing issue is less pedagogy than the fact that what most professors know is so specialized as to be irrelevant. What is needed is not better pedagogical training, but a more broad and erudite training, one that focuses less on original research and academic publishing and instead demands reading widely and writing for an educated yet popular audience. What we need, in other words, are academics who read widely with excitement and inspiration and speak to the interested public.

More professors should be blogging and writing in public-interest journals. They should be reviewing literature rather than each other’s books and, shockingly, they should be writing fewer academic monographs.

To say that the humanities should engage the world does not mean that the humanities should be politicized. The politicization of the humanities has shorn them of their authority and their claim to being true or beautiful. Humanities scholarship can only serve as a incubator for judgment when it is independent from social and political interests. But political independence is not the same as political sterility. Humanities scholarship can, and must, teach us to see and know our world as it is.

[Image provided by Shutterstock.]

Posted in Blue Social Model, Education, Essays
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  • http://inthisdimension.com alex scipio

    I graduated in 1977 from Cal State Univ, Los Angeles, having been appinted to, attended, and withdrawing after a year from USAFA in 1973 when the “peace” was signed.

    After a two years pursuing a Chem degree, one pursuing Business, and one in PolicSci (ultimately minored), I sat down to decide the point. The POINT was to become educated – not trained. Only the Humanties EDUCATE one. I weighed English v. History, decided one could not learn English in the absence of History (the obverse not being true), so majored in English. My theory was that I would become educated in college, and someone would hire and train me. IBM hired me, trained me, and I have been successful in the tech world since.

    But – BUT – would I recommend to my children now in HS to study the Humanities today, with its far-Left worldview, complete rejection of the culture and history that made us who we are, created Western Civ, the greatest culture and civilization in the known universe? No.

    And my children will be the worse for it – but they will not become corrupted by the Left, the enemy of all that is right and good in the world.

  • Andrew Allison

    “What we need, in other words, are academics who read widely with excitement and inspiration and speak to the interested public.”
    I can’t wait for Prof. Mead, who not only understands, but addresses this need, to return!

  • http://web-logos.blogspot.fr/ James C Brown

    though it is well nurtured at colleges & universities, the humanities can survive such institutions of higher education, should they ever disappear.

  • http://fmpait.blogspot.com/ Felipe Pait

    The case for requiring deep study of the humanities has been made here:

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/nicholas-warner/in-defense-of-algebra_1_b_1756545.html?ncid=edlinkusaolp00000008

    Actually the article gives the definitive 1-page argument for teaching algebra. If are not able to learn algebra, the 2nd best alternative are the classical humanities. That is the only way to acquire the ability of abstract and complex thought. The quest for immediate relevance to practical problems is, well, irrelevant.

  • John Barker

    “. . .academics who read widely with excitement and inspiration and speak to the interested public.”

    I agree. My shelves are lined with books by history professors who are producing some of the finest writing of the day. This work can be an inspiration for others in literature and philosophy.

  • JAC

    Arendt mistranslates Thucydides and abuses Pericles. The line from Thucydides (2.40) says, “philokaloumen met’ euteleias,” that is, “we love beauty with thrift.”

  • http://www.david-prentiss.com Dave Prentiss

    Many excellent points here, especially about broad reading and being able to write for educated-popular audiences. But what is also needed is consideration of what is read and how it is read and why it should be read, as well as understanding why it is important to be able to write for an educated-popular audience, and how to do so. The starting point to answer all these questions is the recapturing of the essence of the humanities: the careful and honest study of the fundamental alternative views of human nature and purpose. Recapturing this essence and making it explicit in how the humanities are taught and communicated instantly makes the humanities interesting, relevant and even exhilarating to people, especially young people.

  • John

    A thoughtful and insightful article, Roger–thank you.

  • http://fat-city-usa.blogspot.com/ Walter Sobchak

    This is empty nostalgia. I attended the University of Chicago in the mid 1960s. I saw Hannah Arendt walking around campus. She was not the only one. Leo Strauss was there. So was Hans Morgenthau. There were dozens of others, less famous, but equally learned. These ancient scholars had learned Latin and Greek, and German, French and English, at their gymnasia. They read Pericles in Greek, and Cicero in Latin. And they are all dead and gone.

    They had fled the Nazis and the Russians and had settled here, thankful for safety and freedom. They had students here, but face it, the American educational system has never been very good. Their students were not as learned as they were. These students were my teachers. Their admiration for the older generation was open and frank. Sadly, they have vanished from the scene too.

    My generation, the justly derided Boomers, were poor students of the Humanist refugee’s students. We assumed we knew everything, we were poorly educated when we got to college, and refused to learn anything while we there. The number who know the Ancient Languages would not be a corporal’s guard. But we did pioneer the university study of pop culture and queer studies.

    But wait, it gets worse. The Boomers are beginning to retire, and they will be replaced by their students, who know nothing, nothing, nothing.

    And I have seen this up close. My son graduated from college two years ago. I was heart broken that he had gotten through one of the nation’s most highly regarded universities, at the cost of a nice three bedroom house in our town, without more than a smattering of humanistic study. He did learn something, mostly math that could make my eyeballs bleed, and does have a good job. But learning, he has none.

    My niece just completed an advanced degree in Art History at an Ivy League university. What did she read? Derrida and Foucault, in translation of course. I bit my tongue.

    Every art, every form of learning, has a time and a place. We can read Shakespeare’s plays, and perform them as well, but there are no Elizabethan Dramatists in our playhouses. We can listen to Bach and Mozart, but our composers cannot do what they did. So it is with the Humanities. It is over, bid them adieu and move on. Some day and somewhere, somebody will start something new that will delight and astound us, just not here and not now.

  • Retail Lawyer

    The problem here is with academic humanities. Postmodernism, deconstruction, conference panels claiming that grammar is a construct of the white patriarchy to keep native ebonics speakers down. This is what a literature major gets for 4 years of opportunity cost and $150K: Repeat after me: there is no truth. everything is relative. white people are bad, especially the men.

    What do the professors expect? My paraphrase of above is, “Since there is no truth, I have nothing to offer. If I had any decency, I would get a real job, but what could I do? And I got tenure. Just remember, “white male privilege”. Say it often! .”

    Does that not get boring well before graduation?

  • Gregory Koster

    Dear Mr. Berkowitz: I don’t agree with you. The humanities have been hijacked by zealots who care not a dam for “truth is beauty” but for a vision of Utopia that gives them power over others. You need only look at the career of William Ayers. A terrorist who escaped conviction for his crimes not through being innocent, but because the prosecution was incompetent, he is unrepentant. Nor is he shunned for this unrepentance. He is admired for it. Even those in the academy who do not admire him keep silent for the most part. They know the retribution that waits those who speak out. The recent study showing the liberal bigotry that flourishes in the social psychology field is also instructive. Today humanities consists of such quackeries as Critical Race Theory or Queer Theory, all of which can be boiled down to sticking a finger in the eye of the despised middle classes by those for which it is always 1968. Remember the joyous howling in 2003-04, when the professoriate deluded itself into thinking that the glory days of The Mobe were about to return? Or the orgasmic joy that such revolting films as DEATH OF A PRESIDENT, starring the assassination of Geo. W. caused?

    No, academic humanities are best abandoned, and their proprietors heaved overboard. They talk to no one but themselves, and their message “Spit in the old man’s eye!” is tiresome.

    This is a gloomy prospect. So was being an abolitionist in 1858. That didn’t turn out so badly, did it?

    Sincerely yours,
    Gregory Koster

  • hepzeeba

    @9 Walter Sobchak:
    These ancient scholars had learned Latin and Greek, and German, French and English, at their gymnasia. They read Pericles in Greek, and Cicero in Latin. And they are all dead and gone.

    Yes, they are. They were indeed admirable. There also weren’t that many of them, relative to their age peers at the time.

    What was notable about these figures wasn’t only their learnedness but what they did with it—namely, they took it out of academia and into the real world, where it matters and can make a difference.

    Our host is a learned individual doing the same thing. Surely he can’t be the only one.

    It doesn’t take very many people to turn things around. Mostly, they need the courage to speak up.

  • dearieme

    I have much sympathy with the writer’s views, but offer one word of caution. I have read about modern American middle class child-rearing habits, with children ferried from one self-improvement activity to another, with Mom “helping” with homework and Dad “helping” with Science Fair projects, and I wonder when children get the space and time to form themselves. Are such children remotely fit to be released into a proper university at all?

  • Eurydice

    I agree. What is now called “multi-disciplinary studies” used to be known as “being well-educated”. And I whole-heartedly agree that the humanities should move outward from academia to the world in general. I think education needs to be seen as a life-long endeavor rather than a finished product that’s received after a certain number of payments.

  • lhf

    My experience mirrors Mr. Sobchaks. Both my children graduated from highly regarded Virginia public universities without acquiring any real knowledge. Courses in the humanities (can’t speak for science and math) were the “lite” versions and because students can pick from a menu of areas of study, about which they know virtually nothing, they get only a smattering of this and a smattering of that. Both went to a private high school and admit that it was more challenging than the courses they took in college. Sad.

  • bob sykes

    When people praise the humanities what they have in mind is the pre-1950 version, maybe even the pre-1850 version. The modern substitute for the humanities is a bad joke, and it produces students and faculty who are functionally illiterate.

    What the faculty needs is not more pedagogy or technology or even more personal research.

    They need the traditional core curriculum (ca 1900?), even more so than the students. The students could not care less or understand less about the differences between the traditional core. Most modern faculty don’t either. But the faculty needs the discipline of the core to guide their daily teaching and to organize their work.

  • Eurydice

    @Walter #9 – Not to presume, but it seems too early to despair about your son. If he could learn eye-bleeding math and has been able to get a good job, then he can also continue learning other things during the course of his life.

    And I don’t see the point in consigning Shakespeare. Mozart, Bach, etc. to languish in their historical niches – to me they’re part of the entirety of human thought. Sure, we don’t have a Mozart now, but neither did the ancient Greeks, and the ancient Greeks and the Elizabethans didn’t have Proust and Picasso. Today, our artistry and genius is directed toward the sciences and technology, but what’s come before still underlies and informs that. I guess my point is that to “bid them adieu” is to succumb to cultural amnesia.

  • Michael K

    The question one must ask is it worth $5,000 to take a Humanities class at an elite university. I would say no. You can buy a lifetime supply of books, audio courses, etc for that amount.

  • http://philoofalexandria.wordpress.com Philo

    Well said. I’m a humanities professor, and I’ve devoted my career to studying broadly, as did many of my very distinguished teachers. Readings for my courses this fall include Plato and Aristotle, Confucius and Kant, Churchill and Borges, Fitzgerald and Kipling, Camus and Yeats, and many others. But things have changed dramatically in the past forty years. Being a “generalist” is not only rare; it’s a ticket to professional irrelevance. The way to succeed in academia is indeed to find some narrow area of specialization and become one of the key people in that area. If you’re not considered a “player” in a particular area, no one invites you to conferences or reads what you write.

    There’s plenty of blame to go around for this state of affairs. But the real victims are our students, and, for that part, I blame Deans and Department Chairs who let the faculty teach whatever they want rather than what students need. Putting a course schedule together, in most departments, consists of gathering up faculty requests, straightening out a few conflicts, and finding time slots. That’s an abdication of responsibility. Deans, Chairs, and curriculum committees should start from a template of what students at various levels ought to be taught, and then seek to fit faculty into that template. In this as in other respects, colleges and universities tend to be run for the benefit of those in charge, not for the benefit of the students.

  • Bruce Long

    Roger said:

    “The humanities are that space in the university system where power does not have the last word, where truth and beauty as well as insight and eccentricity reign supreme ….”

    I must presume you have never attended a faculty meeting.

  • Matt

    I spent a substantial chunk of my youth (and a lesser chunk of my later years) reading Greek and Latin. I have no excuse to offer for this aberrant behavior, other than to say that I enjoyed it immensely. My regret about the near-death of the classics is mainly that so few of our young folks will experience the sheer joy I felt when I was first able to fumble through a few lines of Homer.

    But Random Lawyers has it right. If you’re going to be fully postmodern, what’s the point of making any serious effort to read people who believed who believed in right and wrong?

  • Vader

    Why is this surprising? The university was originally and preeminently a training center for theologians, and humanities meant the study of the nature of Man and his relationship to God.

    God has been eliminated from the University in all but a very few places, and with Him has gone the light. It’s been a very slow process, because it takes a long time to go through that much intellectual capital (perhaps centuries), but the capital is now running out.

  • Neo

    My son recently pointed out the the search for “Common Sense” has become like Diogenes search for a honest man. His point, Common Sense has been polluted. Finding it is no longer a useful goal.
    It’s now better to look for “Good Sense.”

  • Peter Dale

    Is it not interesting to note how many of those whose writings constitute the backbone of the humanities had nothing to do with getting or giving a university education?

  • ynohtna

    Effectively delivered Humanities instruction, at any level, informs thoughtful interpretation and facilitates the general task of instructors/professors to make sense out of the established order (in whatever epoch) if that is possible; thus being well-read, literate, and reflective ought to presuppose basic functional delivery of humanities scholarship. Most broadly to distill from thrust of essay, interpretive humanities give structure/framwork to society’s values and therein lies its inherent vitality.

    I take from essay that Humanities well taught leave the student, learner, reader, etc. with basic issues and chief viewpoints of past and present interpretations regarding the social dynamism of men – thereby equipping student/learner to adequately face problems of the future with increased understanding and effectiveness.

  • fred17

    I graduated from RPI in 1950. The liberal arts area of this engineering school was poorly regarded by the overwhelmingly number of returning war veterans. I recall one fascinating philosophy course. The big difference back then was the high quality of my high school education. When I consider what my grandchildren (and my children somewhat) did not receive, I weep. Our public education system is a disaster.

  • Taeyoung

    I think the problem is that the humanities haven’t tried to sell their strength, which is that humanities scholars collect and organise and analyse and preserve detailed information on a variety of topics people are interested in, whether that’s the history and uses of Roman-era locks, or rhoticism in department store clerks, or female beat poets or whatever. Too many humanities scholars try to sell their weaknesses — their political judgement and their efforts at social engagement and “relevance.” You don’t need to shell out tens of thousand of dollars for that. You can just go talk to some hobos or read a blog. Of course few people are buying.

    The underlying work that many humanities scholars do — or rather, that their training has prepared them to do (I don’t know what they actually spend their time on) — is often work that people outside of academia would actually be interested in. People like poems, and history, and learning about regional variations in peoples’ customs, and funny accents. That’s why our ancestors began studying them in the first place, back when it was just dilettantes writing monographs about stuff that interested them, before the modern university system. There’s probably all kinds of academic projects that could get funding through kickstarter if they were presented in an appealing way.

  • Laka

    Walter Sobchak: A remnant shall return. Even during the dark ages, souls needed to be filled, and thus it shall be as our own age ends. The learning of the ancients will eventually be rediscovered after the Post-Colonial Literature syllabi have crumbled to dust. Enlightenment is a human need that cannot forever be misled.

  • Taeyoung

    What did she read? Derrida and Foucault, in translation of course.

    There is a real, and sad, irony in the “in translation” bit there.

  • Anthony

    “The humanities are that space in the university system where power does not have the last word”

    This is *exactly* wrong. The place in the University where power does not have the last word is in the physical sciences and engineering. In those places, *truth* has the last word. Everyone has theories, but those theories are *tested*, every day, by Nature, who doesn’t care whether you made Department Chair or Dean or got elected to Congress.

    We can learn a lot from our history, but what is taught in history in our colleges is, *at best*, a series of narrative arcs where the professors (or textbook writer) have chrery-picked facts to support their own personal ideologies, and the student only has some hope of independent understanding because the professors’ ideologies don’t all agree with each other.

    The humanities are at least in better shape than the “social” sciences, as there’s so much source material in the humanities that it can’t all be presented, and professors rarely need to outright lie to support their beliefs; while the social scientists need to deny reality to avoid admitting that they’re wrong about so much.

  • Micha Elyi

    The terminal degree in the humanities should be the masters, not a Prussian-style research doctorate as is the case today.

  • FC

    “college education in the United States is, in spite of its myriad flaws, still of incredible value and meaning”

    Yeah, literally incredible. I did not see any value or meaning, so I dropped out.

  • http://fat-city-usa.blogspot.com/ Walter Sobchak

    15 lhf: “Courses in the humanities (can’t speak for science and math) were the “lite” versions and because students can pick from a menu of areas of study.”

    Fortunately, math is still math, and real science is still rooted in the real world. One of my son’s advanced math courses was geometry. They did Euclid’s Elements in a couple of weeks and then moved on to the hard stuff with more than 3 dimensions and curved spaces. My FSiL just finished his PHD in biology. His research was on the genetics of muscular dystrophy in mice. Very difficult material. Nothing PoMo about either course.

    17 Eurydice … it seems too early to despair about your son. … he can also continue learning other things during the course of his life.

    He is a brilliant, beautiful, and engaging young man, I have no doubt that you are right about that. But, we spent about $200,000 on his college education. He had one lit course, Slavic Lit, where he read the Brothers K and Anna K with great enthusiasm. Sadly, when it came time to take lit course #2, he ignored his mother’s instruction to take Shakespeare, and acceded to the request of one of his gf’s that he take “Media Contexts” in Radio, TV, & Film department. He hated the course.

    The sadness is that the time and a boatload of money are gone, having been squandered. Part of the blame is ours, part is his, and part is the College’s, which over charged, and which allowed such bilge in its curriculum.

    #19 Philo: You are absolutely correct.

    #20 Bruce Long: That is going to leave a mark.

    #22 Vader: “It’s been a very slow process, because it takes a long time to go through that much intellectual capital (perhaps centuries)”

    Not that long, really. The European suicide was 1914 — 1945. What we had in post-war America was a failure of the transplant to take.

    However, the statement of your claim belongs to Julien Benda’s “La Trahison des Clercs” (1927). By the beginning of the 20th century, intellectuals across Europe had decided that their enemy was the Liberal Bourgeoisie, and that they should sing hymms to “revolutionaries” (i.e. tyrants and murders) while strewing rose pedals in their path. Boy, did they get that one wrong, and they are still unable to confess their errors.

  • http://fat-city-usa.blogspot.com/ Walter Sobchak

    27 Taeyoung: This stuff is trivial, hobby stuff. Not a requirement for education, and not anything that needs to be taught to the next generation. Yes, by all means, crowd fund it. But, it is not stuff that our taxpayer dollars should subsidize.

    28 Laka: “Enlightenment is a human need that cannot forever be misled.”

    Yes, but we are in a very deep and dark hole. We won’t climb out soon, and it may not be here, or us.

  • Jules Bernard

    Excellent essay; excellent point. Thank you.
    Please let me recommend Prof. Chauncey Brewster Tinker’s little book “Essays in Retrospect.” Prof. Tinker (known to all as “Tink”) was the leading light of the Yale English Dept in the 1930′s, and a graceful and gentle man. He pretty much embodied the professorial ideal you have described.
    You will find the book a delight. You may even find it useful when you are defending your views in other times and places.

  • Eli

    I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: Nearly every humanities-oriented course I took at a certain Ivy League university had the following bedrock, organizing principles:

    1) If something is longer than it is wide, it represents a penis.
    2) If something is concave, it is a vagina.
    3) If something is convex, it represents the enslavement of women through pregnancy.
    4) All authors are homosexual or have homosexual urges, whether the author admits to them or not. (Spend weeks in class finding everything in a work that is longer than it is wide – or convex or concave – to “prove” the point.)
    5) Aside from the previous four points, nothing is really knowable with certainty.

    I didn’t mention racism, since racism involves subjugation, so it is probably related to the sexual nature of the patriarchal oppressor class.

    If you attended class and could wrap those five points into any Ivy League humanities exam or essay, you were guaranteed at least a B+, and quite possibly an A-, despite not reading any of the assigned texts.

    (The only humanities courses that didn’t fit the pattern were military history courses, though there were attempts to inject some of the above analysis into discussions of militarism in general and Hiroshima specifically. The mushroom cloud is the ultimate phallus, don’cha know.)

  • Palinurus

    The folly of this post is its preposterous assumption that the humanities are not simply “useful” but “useful” for cultivating judgment in a democratic society. This is the sort of anodyne college brochure-speak whereby the giants of history kindly agree to elevate upon their shoulders any dwarf that comes asking. As if Plato or Proust were an elephant ride for the kiddies at the circus. That they’re made to play that sort of role, or an even more demeaning one, in college classrooms or the New Yorker articles you read in the bathroom or blog posts shows you what sort of racket this “humanities” business is.

    Say what you will about post-modernists and their ilk, but at least they acknowledged that there was a dangerous fierceness to these works, one which had to be attacked before it devoured you. And the danger lay in the fact that they cultivated harmful, corrupting, undemocratic tastes. Senile Victorians thought Socrates was a nice, Christian gentleman; the Greeks he lived with gave him a Hemlock smoothie and threw Thales in a well. The greatest threat to the humanities is posed, not by those who want to bury them, but the doting decrepits who presume to be their stewards.

  • Russ

    Tremendous difference between ability to teach and ability to research. Some (few) have both, most are much worse at one or the other than they think they are.

    Nice thing about a classical education (and yes, there are still a few places out there with a humanities core curriculum), is that you can continue to learn outside of academia, and though institutionally harder (access can be difficult), you don’t need to work in academia to be a researcher, either. I don’t have a monograph to my name — but every one of my research articles was written while happily and *productively* employed in the private sector.

  • JKB

    The problem is students today do not learn enough so that at graduation they realize they are an ignoramus. This is especially true in the modern humanities where judgement is not taught and truth is not really true. In the a past professor and student both strived a lifetime to overcome the realization of their ignorance. Today it is a badge of honor hidden in a bouquet of mindless facts.

    “The senior on his graduation day is not an educated man; he is an ignoramus. However, if he has learned enough to know that he is an ignoramus, some day he will probably attain something like culture, have enough knowledge to be called educated–as education in this world goes. ”
    Marks, Percy, “Under Glass”, Scribner’s Magazine Vol 73, 1923, p 47

  • http://tinatrent.com Tina Trent

    Now that they have salted the earth, humanities professors aren’t going to let loose of their private parts and go back to teaching Chaucer.

    When I’m speaking to a political gathering and am introduced as “doctor,” my impulse is to apologize. I don’t, because people outside academia still respect the institution of higher education, and many of them made enormous sacrifices to attend college or send their children. The desire to see one’s children receive college degrees was the primary aspiration of the middle classes for forty years.

    That’s what makes the situation particularly perverse. Oh yes, that and also the pathetic self-aggrandizement of those who imagine they are post-modernistically grappling with the “dangerous fierceness” of Proust while the bourgeois dolts fail to even try to get past first base.

  • http://fat-city-usa.blogspot.com/ Walter Sobchak

    #40. Tina: That, too, is going to leave a mark, and a nasty one at that.

    #37 Palinurus : Sorry, Dude. Do you need any help in picking up your viscera?

  • Elena

    Excellent article! I’ve often wondered how things would change if children were once again required to learn Latin in elementary school and to study (broadly) the humanities in high school. Learning Latin requires that the student learn to organize his thoughts in a way that modern languages don’t and this ability renders the broad study of the humanities so much more useful in looking at the world. It’s hard to feed someone a load of nonsense when they have the ability to think critically.

  • Willis

    I agree that less time should be devoted to more books about ancient history. Unless you have a time machine, your source of knowledge about ancient history is books already written about ancient history. They aren’t making any more ancient history.

    For the gentleman bragging about his son covering all known math in a fortnight, I’m sure he developed a lifetime of appreciation for its elegance and beauty in that time. He would make a good father Garducci.

  • http://fmpait.blogspot.com/ Felipe Pait

    For those who are worried about a perceived liberal bias of academic humanities, check out the politics of hard scientists. They are every bit as liberal, although arguably more firmly grounded – part of the reality-based community for sure. Atoms, cells, and numbers above all; they all have a liberal bias.

  • Mr. Alazar

    (1) You urge academics to something they are manifestly reluctant to do. Those with tenure don’t have to; the rest want tenure and this won’t help them get it. It will not happen.

    (2) Whence comes your confidence that they will be any be any better at writing meaningful, usable posts than meaningful, usable papers?

    (3) “Judgment, the primary faculty of politics, is discovered, nurtured, and practiced in the world of culture and the judgment of taste.”

    You must be thinking of some other bunch of humanists than teach at our universities.

    (4) “The humanities are that space in the university system where power does not have the last word.”

    Actually, power counts for nothing in science and engineering, and for less every year in the of the “social sciences” (of which the “harder” ones are beginning to resemble young sciences); but counts for *more* every year in the humanities. By now, almost nothing else counts.

    Unless you are thinking of a university with which I am not familiar.

  • Eurydice

    @Palinurus #37 – I only have personal experience to draw on – but, in my 20+ years on Wall Street, I found that my reading of literature and history and my study of languages were much more useful and profitable than my degrees in economics. Reading Russian literature will explain a whole lot more about how Russians make their economic decisions than any number of statistical models.

    For me, this kind of study is a window into how people think (not to mention being enjoyable). I also think it’s necessary to consider the po-mo studies on race, gender, pop culture, and so forth. I don’t think people should have to spend $200,000 and years of their lives on these subjects, but it’s important to understand these influences on our culture.

  • http://fat-city-usa.blogspot.com/ Walter Sobchak

    #44 Felipe Pait: Of course they are all liberal, they are living on Federal largesse and they want more of it.

  • Kenneth Gauck

    There was a time when rhetoric was a core part of the humanities. You seem to be saying its time to bring it back.

    Quoting Berlinerblau, “I suggest we impart critical communication skills to our master’s and doctoral students. That means teaching them how to teach, how to write, how to speak in public.”

  • http://fmpait.blogspot.com/ Felipe Pait

    Walter Sobchak #47, I guess the price one has to pay for the conveniences of modern science, engineering, and medicine is putting up with scientists and the reality-based community.

  • dr kill

    What Anthony said.

  • http://wwrtc.blogspot.com Art Deco

    1. A great deal of labor is wasted in the contemporary academy fulfilling distribution requirements, fulfilling global credit requirements, and being stuck in holding patterns of additional semesters in order to be able to take courses crucial for graduation.

    2. The foregoing is derived from the maintenance of the baccalaureate degree as a goal but in absence of any serious core curriculum.

    3. It follows one ought to abolish the baccalaureate degree.

    4. At the liberal arts college with which I am best acquainted, the distribution of humanities majors was (during a recent period covering 16 graduating classes) as follows:

    40 % English literature
    18 % Foreign languages and literatures
    16 % Philosophy
    10 % Art or Art History
    8 % Comparative religion
    3.5% Classics (translated, Greek, & Latin)
    2.5% Theater
    2 % Music

    At that particular institution, I think you will find the faculty remain interested in literature and not theorrhoea. There were six foreign languages offered. Only the French and Spanish faculties have enough students to justify the continued maintenance of their department. Comparative religion is an odd subject, and their students have a bad reputation among others in the faculty. The work product of the studio art students is embarrassing (and I am not sure their professors’ is much better).

    5. Much of the foregoing from other posters appears a complaint about the English and Comparative literature faculties. Perhaps the policy ought to be to shut those faculties down and allow interested students to take 1, 2, 3, or 4 year degrees studying foreign languages and literatures?

  • RedWell

    Recently encountered this proposal to reorganize higher ed–offers the virtues of less cost and a focus on the faculty-student relationship. The basic idea is to treat academis as independent professionals like lawyers or MDs. There are drawbacks, but I think such a system would avoid some of the distorted curriculum, research and learning incentives the currently afflict colleges and universities.

    https://sites.google.com/site/professionalsocietyofacademics/

  • Jim.

    Humanities scholarship and instruction needs to be reborn from the ashes of the Boomer generation’s rejection, neglect, and tastelessness.

    The Boomers disrupted the succession of scholarly authority… they’re paying the price, both in terms of a jaded and cynical student body, and in terms of a mass of useless blind-alley intellectual twaddle they attempted to put in place of Western Civ… twaddle that students know they neither want nor need.

    The Classics, the Western Canon, will be rediscovered. The judgements of history will be rediscovered. The usefulness of profound cultural touchstones– not the cheap trash that our current “intelligentsia” tries to raise in its place — will be remembered.

    Perhaps new classics from the world’s great cultures will be included alongside Shakespeare and Plutarch; “The Water Margin” “Journey into the West” and “Three Kingdoms” will probably be read more widely in American universities, to allow us to gain familiarity with the Eastern point of view as well as on their own merits as a sampling of the human condition.

    My only regret is that the current crop of “intellectuals” won’t spring from the old seminary stock that previous generatons did. The familiarity with the languages, stories, and faith of the Bible was a wealth of cultural assets that can’t be easily rebuilt.

    Well, we can always hope that people will notice what they are lacking and start to seek it for themselves and demand it of their teachers, or find new teachers via new paths (like the Internet… it may only take a few, rising above the noise) who can show them the wisdom that the Boomers wasted and forgot.

  • Langenbahn

    My take is that we do not have universities, and haven’t had them for some time. We have Academic Theme Parks. And really expensive theme parks, too. Maybe 35% of college students really belong there. I’m not really sure how to change it, or if it can be changed.

    It pains me to say it, but it seems the soundest advice you can give an ordinary young person right now is: “Drop out of high school as soon as you legally can (14, I think), and go to work. Increase your earning potential by picking up only the skills you really need at a community or tech college. Don’t get too hung up on what you “want” to do. Be willing to go into the fields (and cities) where there is work.

    Get married, and stick it out. Two heads are better than one. (Kids, while great, are economically problematic but you can afford them if you’re careful.) Live within your means, save, save, save, and invest wisely. Do all that right, and you can retire a millionaire at fifty. If, at that point, you still want to learn about Goethe, Shakespeare, or Mozart hire someone to tutor you.”

  • http://www.reticulator.com The Reticulator

    “Authority in the classroom comes from knowledge and insight, not from pedagogical techniques or theories.”

    The choir responds, “Amen!”

  • Lavaux

    I wasted at six years of my life learning stuff at university that had zero career value. My undergrad degree prepared me for trivia competitions and little else. Law school should have been 18 months, max. Yet the “system” required me to invest 7 years “prostrate to the higher mind” to sit for the bar exam. Why do allow this waste of valuable life-time like this?

  • CJK

    What little hope remains:

    http://www.stjohnscollege.edu/

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