[lit-ideas] Back to the future?
- From: Robert Paul <rpaul@xxxxxxxx>
- To: lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Wed, 26 Sep 2007 12:24:41 -0700
Sept. 26
Elevating the Great Books Anew
In his new book, Anthony T. Kronman argues that the American college
curriculum is seriously flawed for not giving students a true
grounding in the classics that explore the human condition.
Education?s End: Why Our Colleges and Universities Have Given Up on
the Meaning of Life (Yale University Press) mixes Kronman?s assessment
of the problems in academe with a set of proposed solutions. Kronman,
the Sterling Professor of Law at Yale University, responded to
questions about the book.
Q: Why have our our colleges and universities ?given up on the meaning
of life"?
A: Those who teach in our colleges and universities are nearly all
graduates of Ph.D. programs, in which they learn to measure success in
higher education by the standards of the research ideal. From the
vantage point of that ideal, the question of life?s meaning ? of what
I should care about, and why ? is too large, too sprawling, too
personal to be a subject than any specialized scholar feels
comfortable tackling. The research ideal has squeezed this question
from the field of respectable topics, especially in the humanities,
the disciplines with the oldest and deepest connection to it. The
humanities today seek to compete with the natural and social sciences
on the ground of the research ideal. But this is a competition they
can never win. In the process, they have distanced themselves from the
one question which they, of all the disciplines, are best equipped to
address.
Q: You note that there are places, like Columbia University, which
have maintained requirements based on the ?great books? traditions.
Are there other programs of this sort that you respect? Would you like
to see colleges go as far as St. John?s College?
A: Yes, a number: Reed College has a required year-long humanities
course for freshmen, who prepare for their freshman year by reading
the Iliad the summer before. Carleton College has a similar program,
and the Directed Studies Program at Yale, in which I teach, is another
example. Directed Studies is an elective program that takes 120
students each year. They study philosophy, literature, history and
politics in a common curriculum that begins with Homer, Herodotus and
Plato and ends with T.S. Eliot, Wittgenstein and Hannah Arendt. While
I admire St. John?s immensely, and believe that its program serves as
an admirable counterweight to the directionlessness that prevails at
most colleges and universities, I do not think it necessary to go as
far as St. John?s does. My proposal is a modest one: let?s make some
space in the curriculum for the organized study of great works of
philosophical and literary imagination, recognizing that students (and
faculty!) have many other worthwhile things to do as well.
Q: Many say that the era when more people had a common program of
great thinkers was also an era when the student body was more
homogeneous, wealthier, etc. Would you apply your ideas in different
ways at Yale and at an urban, open admissions public university?
A: Even our most elite colleges and universities have become vastly
more diverse than they were a half century ago. That is a wonderful
thing. But the works of the great thinkers are our common heritage.
They belong to us all. It is wonderful to throw open the doors of our
colleges and universities ? but terribly sad then to deprive those who
were excluded in the past of the chance to become friends with Plato
and Tolstoy and Jane Austen and Descartes. The great books program at
Columbia was instituted in 1919 precisely to insure that the
university?s increasingly diverse student body had a shared
educational experience, and the opportunity together to explore the
perennial questions of life?s meaning. That should be our aim today,
not just at places like Yale, but in all our colleges and
universities. Indeed, I believe the appetite for such a venture may
very well be greater at our country?s less elite schools.
Q: You write critically of the diversity movement. What?s wrong with it?
A: Diversity, per se, is not a bad thing. Indeed, it?s a very good
thing. Everyone benefits from the experience of going to school with
others unlike themselves. But the idea that one?s experience and
values are deeply shaped by gender and race ? facts about oneself that
can never be changed ? encourages the view that our power to reflect
critically on our values and to change them is severely limited. And
that idea strikes at the heart of the liberating promise of all
liberal education. Students who accept this view will not see
themselves as standing on the common ground of their humanity, but be
inclined, instead, to think that others who do not have the same
defining, and unchangeable, characteristics must approach the question
of life?s meaning in fundamentally different ways. That undermines the
spirit of shared engagement on which any authentic and enlightening
approach to the question depends.
Q: If a college president read your book and called you and said, ?I?m
impressed ? what are three things I can do right away?? what would you
say?
A: First, consider creating an elective program modeled on the
humanities course at Reed, or Yale?s Directed Studies Program. Second,
give the faculty who teach in the program special recognition for
doing so (perhaps in the form of some additional leave time to insure
that they don?t feel torn between research and their commitment to the
program). Third, require students to read three books that deal with
the question of life?s meaning during the summers before each of their
four colleges years. Fourth, make the subject an issue in your own
talks, especially your talks to parents, and try, whenever possible,
to damp down student and parental anxiety about the need to prepare
for a career.
? Scott Jaschik
The original story and user comments can be viewed online at
http://insidehighered.com/news/2007/09/26/kronman.
© Copyright 2007 Inside Higher Ed
---------------------------------
Robert Paul
reed.edu
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- [lit-ideas] Re: Back to the future?
- From: Ursula Stange
- [lit-ideas] Re: Test
- From: David Ritchie
- [lit-ideas] Re: Liberal Education, Socrates and Practices
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- [lit-ideas] Defining the enemy
- From: Lawrence Helm