This post originally appeared on Stephen Ramsay’s blog. It is reposted with permission on 4Humanities. A suspected Chinese organ trafficker gouged out the eyes of a 6-year-old boy to steal the corneas for the black market. The boy was playing outside his home in Shanxi province last week when a women kidnapped and drugged him. […]
Humanities, Plain & Simple
Christine Henseler, “Why Study the Arts & Humanities?”
« A Humanities, Plain & Simple Post » Spanish translation of post The question: “Why study the arts and humanities” haunts our disciplines every day. This is not an easy question to answer because the language and the outcomes of fields such as classics, philosophy, ethics, literature, art history or theater are often broad, abstract, […]
Shannon Brennan, “To My Friends Who Love Books, Too, But Who Are Skeptical Nevertheless”
« A Humanities, Plain & Simple Post » I am a Ph.D. candidate in English. To most people – to my family, to my childhood friends, to the strangers who work in business that I meet at rowdy cocktail parties or staid dinner gatherings – this means that I love books. It’s true, of course. […]
Susan Frost, “Thinking Through the Humanities”
« A Humanities, Plain & Simple Post » When my Humanities students tell me they are business majors, I advocate for adding The Humanities as a minor. Why would that be of any use to them, you may ask. Are these two disciplines not totally unrelated? Are they not at the opposite end of the […]
Extract from “Chancellor Martin’s Remarks at Humanities Grant Announcement” from Dec. 20, 2010 (Reprinted with Permission)
« A Humanities, Plain & Simple Post » Some understand the importance of education in the humanities, but do not see the significance of research. Let me put its importance in simple terms. Think of it this way — what if you, as an individual, had no memory? No record of your own history. What […]
Brett Foster, Two Poems for the Humanities
« A Humanities, Plain & Simple Post » Artes Liberales “The miserable servitude of the spirit” is not exactly how one wants to hear it: that’s just plain rude. Yet Augustine, I suppose, knew a thing or two of everything one must do to grow out of requisite imbroglios, to grow out of your own […]
Gregory F. Tague, “The Scientific Case for the Humanities”
« A Humanities, Plain & Simple Post » Some years ago, I planned and executed an event at St. Francis College (funded by a grant from the New York Council for the Humanities and the National Endowment for the Humanities) entitled: Humanities in Action. As part of the program (which included various speakers and presentations, […]