It is not all negative. In some respects, literature and history have been liberated from the academy, and have gotten back to being a part of the regular culture. The quality may not be as good, but it is free again.
Who would you rather have, Coleridge, DeQuincy, and Carlyle, or Geoffrey Hartman, Harold Bloom, and J Hillis Miller?
Oh, the Humanities!
(*due apologies to the late Herb Morrison)
I am glad the Duke Lacross players were acquitted but hopefully they learned a lesson about their choices in entertainment
Earth without Art is just “Eh”
THAT Souter?
To graduate in ‘77 with an engineering degree I needed (as I recall) 15 hours of “art and humanities” which was not allowed to be of “any practical value.” I could not substitute biology or labs instead. When I went to the college dean and asked why he told me, “The college of liberal arts will extract their pound of flesh from every other college.” Otherwise, they would not have been able to pay those teachers an astounding $40,000-$50,000 per year when the top engineers in their field were earning $30,000.
I ended up taking, among other courses, “The history of film” where we watched such classics as “The Maltese Falcon.” The art students were stoned out of their minds. All you had to do was answer questions about who stared and what the plot was and they were always panicked by tests. The teacher would tell them, “Come by my office later and bring one of your friends; Jim Beam or Johnnie Walker. I read 20 years later that he’d been fired for accepting bribes of liquor, drugs and sex. Another of the art teachers was fired for having sex with his students as well. It was obvious when I was in class that he was hitting on girls. (And, I do mean “girls.”)
I have not regretted taking those liberal arts courses, much as I hated them at the time. But then, that was 60 years ago, before "liberal arts" were betrayed by the cultural Marxists. It's worth knowing something of Shakespeare, and Milton, and economics, and history, and how to write a coherent paragraph.
My high school English teacher used to tell us college-bound students, "A technical education teaches you how to make a living. A liberal education teaches you how to live." She was right. I'm sorry that the liberal education available in most schools today no longer does that.
When I read the headline, I thought of Aristotle’s Ethics. It used to be radical Liberal Arts was Walt Whitman. That must seem so prosaic now...