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Title: | Humanities — To Be or Not To Be, That Is the Question |
Authors: | Albrecht Classen |
Keywords: | To Be Not To Be |
Issue Date: | 16-Sep-2011 |
Publisher: | www.mdpi.com/journal/humanities |
Citation: | The relevant research literature on this topic is immense; see, for instance, Sarah Curtis, Space, Place and Mental Health. Geographies of Health (Farnham, Surrey, England; Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2010); Walter M Bortz, Next Medicine: The Science and Civics of Health (New York: Oxford University Press, 2011); Available online: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Mens_sana_in_corpore_sano (accessed on 7 September 2011).` |
Series/Report no.: | 1;54-61 |
Abstract: | Let us carry some proverbial owls to Athens or coals to Newcastle, that is, revisit issues that have
been discussed and examined by so many different voices in the past and the present. However, those
issues by themselves are so powerful and important, so urgent and difficult that we must never tire of
examining them always anew because they pertain centrally to our own human existence and prove to
be the defining factors for our survival as a species. Why do we need the humanities as an academic
discipline in the university, or in our educational system at large? What role do the humanities play
both inside and outside the academy? Most universities in this world somehow acknowledge the
importance of languages, literatures, music, art history, philosophy, religion, and education. But when
it comes to basic financial issues, the humanities tend to be the first victims of budget cuts, if we
disregard specifically liberal arts colleges that focus on the humanities above all or exclusively. |
Description: | Let us carry some proverbial owls to Athens or coals to Newcastle, that is, revisit issues that have
been discussed and examined by so many different voices in the past and the present. However, those
issues by themselves are so powerful and important, so urgent and difficult that we must never tire of
examining them always anew because they pertain centrally to our own human existence and prove to
be the defining factors for our survival as a species. Why do we need the humanities as an academic
discipline in the university, or in our educational system at large? What role do the humanities play
both inside and outside the academy? Most universities in this world somehow acknowledge the
importance of languages, literatures, music, art history, philosophy, religion, and education. But when
it comes to basic financial issues, the humanities tend to be the first victims of budget cuts, if we
disregard specifically liberal arts colleges that focus on the humanities above all or exclusively. |
URI: | http://repository.fuoye.edu.ng/handle/123456789/144 |
ISSN: | 2076-0787 |
Appears in Collections: | Department of English and Literary Studies Journal Publication
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