Category: Blog Post

total effect and freshman comp

A notable excerpt from a recent interview with Bryan Caplan, an economist at George Mason, about his new book The Case Against Education over at The Chronicle of Higher Education:

[Education] needs to be either useful or enjoyable. And for most students, these subjects are neither, unfortunately. There is an enormous gap between the education that people receive and what they actually use in most of the jobs they have. I mean, there may be some small amount that they’re able to glean from it. But most of the stuff, right after the final exam, they’ll never need to know again. And if these are required classes that the student was not interested in, and they just took those classes to get the diploma, then that seems wasteful from almost any point of view.

Reading against the backdrop of my own (granted, idealistic and humane) view of university education, I find this passage to be a pretty cynical take on undergraduate learning—one driven by mere preparation for a particular job, characterized by acquisition of a fleeting collection of facts and not by cultivation of assiduous, liberal habits. The interview even veers into callous psychologizing: “Most kids are philistines—they are that way deep in their souls.” Yikes.

I could lay out my own arguments against weaponizing student boredom for the elimination of arts and humanities requirements, but in lieu of my own prose, I’ll simply turn to the closing paragraphs of Flannery O’Connor’s “Total Effect and the Eighth Grade,” an essay published in Mystery and Manners:

The high-school English teacher will be fulfilling his responsibility if he furnishes the student a guided opportunity, through the best writing of the past, to come, in time, to an understanding of the best writing of the present. He will teach literature, not social studies or little lessons in democracy or the customs of many lands. And if the student finds that this is not to his taste? Well, that is regrettable. Most regrettable. His taste should not be consulted; it is being formed.

I won’t deny that there are real problems in higher education, including required classes that “students typically … come to view as impositions to “get out of the way”” and “the failure of leaders in higher education to champion the liberal-arts ideal — that college should challenge, develop, and transform students’ minds and hearts so they can lead good, flourishing, and socially productive lives — and their stampeding into the “practical” enterprise of producing specialized workers to feed The Economy.” The impulse to calibrate a curriculum around what students “actually use in most of the jobs they have” seems misguided, as does a case against education grounded in eighteen-year-old antipathies. Our task isn’t to consult these antipathies; it’s to reform them.

secret’s out at miller

One of my favorite albums of 2016 was Real Enemies by Darcy James Argue’s Secret Society, an ambitious, big jazz record that takes American conspiratorial thinking as its motivating theme. (It’s true: we’ll make up our secret societies if we have to.) It has held up really well, and it’s worth hunting down a copy.

Argue’s group performed this weekend at Columbia’s Miller Theater, and although they didn’t play music from that release, they played some material that builds upon its rich harmonic toolkit. In the first half of the show, Argue explained that he had written “All In” for the late Laurie Frink, who played with the Secret Society on their first album. Fittingly, it featured trumpeter Nadje Noordhuis (whose note-bending is really something) and captures a lot of the enigmatic, almost tenebrous sound of Real Enemies.

A Puckish narrator, Argue noted that the song “Codebreaker” was written to honor the decisive contributions of Alan Turing and that “Transit” was inspired by the now-defunct Fung Wah Bus, the beloved Boston-New York Chinatown shuttle that was a staple of Boston-area undergraduate life. (Speaking not just for myself here, I take it!)

The show’s second half was entirely taken up by an Ellington-inspired forty-minute piece “Tensile Curves.” Lots of great clarinet work by Sam Sadigursky and drumming by Jon Wikan. I was especially captured by the last few minutes—the slow tempo and harmonic material reminded me of, say, a dark take on Bill Evans.

Secret’s out: these guys are good. Catch them if you can.

rss feeds for new research in classics and philosophy

Following up on my previous post, I’ve pulled together just a few RSS feeds from some sites in classics and philosophy that help me stay on top of newly published research. To fetch these feeds, I use Newsblur, easily the best RSS reader I’ve found since Google Reader got axed.1

Two important subscriptions for book reviews:

There are regular updates to the feeds for Bryn Mawr Classical Review (feed) and Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews (feed). These two outlets publish lots and lots of reviews of new monographs, and I find it pretty essential to use RSS to stay on top of the steady deluge of postings.

Easy feeds from open-access outlets:

Some open-access journals like Philosophers’ Imprint (feed) and Informal Logic (feed) and Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies (feed) provide RSS feeds for their latest issues, including links to PDF versions of full articles. Journals don’t publish as often as the above book review sites, but when a new issue comes out, you’ll know right away.

Traditional (i.e., not open-access) journals are far less likely to publish feeds for their new articles, I imagine largely on account of paywalls found at the majority of academic publishers. After a quick peek at, say, Classical Quarterly or Arion, I can’t find feeds to stay on top of their latest articles. A real bummer.

A couple semi-solutions for journals without feeds:

Philosophy as a discipline seems to be much savvier as far as distributing new research on-line. Brian Leiter, to take one example, recently linked to a new service called “Philosophy Paperboy” which bills itself as a “newspaper for philophers.” It pulls from a huge variety of journals and posts a list each day of newly published material.

I find the Paperboy site to be a great resource, if a bit overwhelming—I’d like to have some granular control over how many journals I receive updates from. And Philosophy Paperboy unfortunately doesn’t publish its own RSS feed of updates, so you need to visit the site every day to check for publications.

Instead of Paperboy, I use PhilPapers, the discipline-wide and (as far as I can tell) widely used site for finding and archiving philosophy research. (It’s a little bit like arxiv, but for philosophy.) In addition to hosting copies of new research, PhilPapers also allows users to create custom RSS feeds to receive notifications of new research from specific journals. Although it doesn’t seem to create RSS feeds for individual journals (e.g., Mind), you can nevertheless set up a feed for a collection of your favorite journals—one that might be a little more manageable than the firehose over at Philosophy Paperboy.

While logged into PhilPapers, you can open their list of “New Journal Articles”, where you’ll find in the right sidebar a section for a “Custom Filter.” In that sidebar, you’ll want to click on “edit” next to “My journals.”:

CustomFilterPhilPapers

You’ll then find a (very long) list of all the journals that PhilPapers monitors, and you can check which ones you’d like to receive updates on. Once you save your journals, you can return to the “New Journal Articles” page and look again in the right sidebar for the feed to monitor your custom list of publications:

MonitorPhilPapers

What about classics journals?

As I mentioned above, philosophy as a discipline seems to have a lot more technological infrastructure for keeping up with research—I find PhilPapers really impressive and helpful. But less philosophically inclined classicists can piggyback on some of these resources. Because of significant disciplinary overlap, you’ll find several classics-related journals at PhilPapers, and you can add them to your custom RSS feed. In that long list of journals that PhilPapers monitors, you’ll find Classical Quarterly and Arion, yes, as well as Classical World, the American Journal of Philology, and several others. A lot of the really big classics journals, however, aren’t there—no TAPA, no Arethusa, no Gnomon.


  1. There are still feeds for pretty much all major news outlets for your non-academic ticker tape, and Dave Winer has compiled a big list of them if you’d like a quick way to follow those sites, too.