A Look Back at the Great Books

(noon. – promoted by ek hornbeck)

My mother was one of those one million Americans that bought the Great Books (and let me tell you, she had to do without a lot to scrape together the $$$). I wouldn’t have survived my high school years without them; they were my friends. It’s a sad commentary on the postmodern dumbing-down of America (the entire West, for that matter) that no one can talk about the Great Books without putting those infuriating “air quotes” around the word “Great”. The fact is, they are great, and they’ll be great long after “Desperate Housewives” and Eminem (see below) have stopped being the kind of sad, degrading memories that makes you feel just a little bit soiled knowing that you ever devoted a single brain cell to thinking about them. Kant, Hume, Aristotle, Marcus Aurelius, and even that annoying and consistently wrong Athenian elitist named Plato, whose Great Books volume still has a place of honor on my bookshelf, where I take it down every year or two to write yet another screed attacking yet another aspect of Plato’s wrong-wrong-wronnnnnnggggggg  thought.  (my personal feeling about Plato is this: if Plato doesn’t infuriate you to the point where you stand up and kick furniture, then you really haven’t understood him …).

http://online.wsj.com/article/…

  Molly Rothenberg, a student at St. John’s in Annapolis, Md., told Mr. Beam of comparing notes when she was a sophomore with  a fellow graduate of the public high school in Cambridge, Mass. St. John’s sophomores study works by such authors as Aristotle,  Tacitus and Shakespeare. Her friend was attending Bates College in Maine. “She told me they were studying Rhetoric,” Ms. Rothenberg said, “and they would be watching episodes of ‘Desperate Housewives’ and listening to Eminem. They were going to analyze it. I just laughed. What could I say?”

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    • RiaD on November 11, 2008 at 15:53

    our family had some version of these…a set. my dad called them ‘the classics set’. we had a set of Encyclopedia Britannica also.

    this is where we (the net folk/bloggers) should focus. on education. on taking it back. on teaching the truth & critical thinking.

    thank you for this.

    ♥~

    • Temmoku on November 11, 2008 at 15:57

    the Great Ideas and the Great Persons….is irredeemable.

    Put Education back into Education!!!!

    • Edger on November 11, 2008 at 15:59

    I would have printed it and carried with me for testimonial as I sold Britannica and the Great Books thorough the 80’s, till that business pretty much collapsed with the rise of the Internet.

  1. …to reading more than a few neglected classics via project gutenberg.  

    I agree the current generation are feckless, adrift, lacking both fundamental tools and awareness of history.  Though perhaps my only real regret is that they are so smart regardless, damn them.

  2. From a class handout on the basic rubric for grading papers.  This was not given to me as a joke.

    “Though you are providing numerous drafts, the work should be the written quality of the final paper, (spelling, grammar, punctuation) though missing certain elaborative and additional research material.  The drafts if found to be sloppy, this is not a draft but just sloppy, and will be sent back under the resubmission context of the rubric.”

     (I hope I am allowed to quote this small portion of the handout for educational purposes.)

    At the end of this paper, the author, an academic that I hope is not English Dept. faculty, gave instructions for submitting the final bounded copy.  No, that’s not a mistake.  “Bounded” was used three times in two sentences. No reader could possibly write this way, and I hope the students who received this instructive handout were smart enough to be confused.

  3. . . . but they did buy The Harvard Classics, the Childcraft Books, The Encyclopedia of Popular Science and all its annual supplements, and The Encyclopedia Americana and all its annual supplements.  The Americana arrived in the house on the day before Thanksgiving in the year I turned three, and its arrival is one of my earliest memories.  Thanks to the endless fascination these and other reference works held for me throughout my childhood, I became an A student without even trying.  

    I can’t tell you how nostalgic this proud “elitist” is for that postwar era in which Americans valued “self-improvement,” and “self-improvement” mainly meant making yourself smarter and better informed.

    • pico on November 13, 2008 at 06:50

    I wrote an essay back in October debating this notion of “the Canon” – it dovetails nicely with some of the arguments you’ve laid out here.  (There’s more extensive discussion over at dkos that might interest you, too)

    I’m Great Books biased; I even taught a course by that name.  

    Agreed completely on Plato, by the way.  I still have to teach him because of the enormous influence he had on our mindset, but it always grates.

    • Temmoku on November 13, 2008 at 19:37

    teaching…but the great poetry and Art, science and ideas….all the things that make up this wonderful world that makes up our various cultures. Without knowing them, do we know ourselves?

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