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News
about the PHI:
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"Entertainment
Value" Conference
May 3-4, 2002, McCune Room (6020 HSSB), UCSB
(admission free to public; directions)
A unique
conference that brings together scholars, artists,
critics, designers, screenwriters, producers,
architects, programmers, and business leaders
to share their view of contemporary entertainment
and its future. Presented by the UC Santa Barbara
Public Humanities Initiative and organized by
a group of scholars from several humanities
departments, "Entertainment Value"
includes panels on leisure
and violence, gaming
culture, entertainment
and built environments, and the way certain
audience-groups
intervene in, alter, or "hack" mass
entertainment. There are also two special
events designed to allow for extended conversation
with leading figures in public
entertainment or architecture.
The intended audience of the conference is not
only the academic community but members of industry,
the Santa Barbara community,and general public.
Admission is free.
Sponsors
include the UCSB Center
for Information Technology and Society,
the UCSB College of Letters & Science, Sun
Microsystems, Inc., the UCSB Interdisciplinary
Humanities Center, the UCSB Digital Media Lecture
Series (Media Arts & Technology Program),
and the following UCSB departments: Art History;
Communications; Comparative Literature; English;
and Germanic, Slavic, and Semitic Studies.
PHI co-director
L. O. Aranye Fradenburg has written an essay
that sets out the full idea of "entertainment
value" and situates it within the broader
horizon of a "public humanities" (full
text of essay).
See the conference
web site for a conceptual
statement, schedule,
information on speakers
and organizers,
and directions.
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Fradenburg's Summer Term 2001 course on "Practical
Criticism" introduces students to "perceptions
of language and the arts and humanities current
in popular U.S. culture." Aranye Fradenburg,
who co-directs the PHI, is teaching her undergraduate
course this summer in a way that brings the concerns
of the PHI into the curriculum. As she says in
her course description, students "leave the
course with a greater awareness of the connections
between the work they do as humanities majors
and the work performed by the arts and humanities
in other national domains." (syllabus) |
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The chief concern of the Public
Humanities Initiative (PHI) is to explore and influence the
highly diverse roles played by the humanities in contemporary
culture. If the humanities were ever locked up in the proverbial
ivory tower, they are no more. The "culture wars" of recent
decades alone indicate how strongly Americans from all walks
of life feel about their cultural inheritance and its future.
Moreover, these passions can't
be fitted into neat categories of race, region, gender, "street"
or "mainstream," "high" or "low" cultures. No one writes more
movingly about Homer than Toni Morrison; Vanessa Mae's breathtaking
video of Scottish airs is one of the most popular classical
recordings of all time. Academic knowledge can be found in
the most unexpected places; when Barbie and Ken are garbed
as "King Arthur and Queen Guinevere of Camelot," their costumes
are as meticulously researched as any period drama on film.
Shakespeare is more popular than ever; academics study hip-hop;
corporate culture uses the findings of organizational psychologists
and sociologists to develop management strategies.
The borders that divide academic
from popular culture, sciences from humanities, policy-making
and the needs of the classroom, are crossed all the time,
every day in every way. Yet contemporary U.S. cultureand
funding agencies of all sorts!often seem to feel otherwise.
Why is the fruitfulness of humanities research and teaching
for our national creativity such a well-kept secret? How can
we continue to break down unnecessary obstacles between different
cultural scenes and practices while respecting their differences?
How can we continue to think most richly about the fact that
culture is what humans do?and thereby help into
being a future of vigorous experimentation in humanistic activities
of all kinds?
Research
When the English Department developed its most recent self-statement,
we identified the Public Humanities as one of our three chief
arenas of research. Several members of our faculty (Giles
Gunn, Paul Hernadi, Alan Liu, Aranye Fradenburg, Christopher
Newfield, among others) write on the topic of the humanities.
Some of us explore the role of the humanities in contemporary
corporate, academic, and popular culture; others explore the
ethical role of humanities education; still others study the
roles of pleasure, beauty, and representation in the learning
process. One of our chief goals is to develop working groups
that will foster our research, bringing our varied interests
together into new visions of the future of the humanities.
Graduate Education
The PHI also hopes to develop expertise in humanities education
as an aspect of our graduate program. Several of our faculty
have held important posts in humanities administration (Mark
Rose, former Director of the University of California Humanities
Research Institute; Paul Hernadi, former Director of the UCSB
Interdisciplinary Humanities Center; David Marshall, current
Dean of the Humanities; E. Cook, current Associate Dean of
the Humanities; Porter Abbott, Acting Director of the UCSB
Interdisciplinary Humanities Center). Together with our strong
profile in research on the topic of the humanities, this distinctively
rich accumulation of experience simply begs to be passed on
to our students. We would like our Ph.D.'s to leave the English
Department not only with a strong specialization and a broad
literary education, but also with an understanding of the
history of the humanities and the kinds of policy challenges
we face in today's world. We are developing ways to build
graduate participation into our mini-conferences, by inviting
our students to speak on the panels which typically respond
to our lecturers' presentations, and by more informal, social
means. In the future, we may also consider finding ways to
give course credit for student participation in colloquia.
Undergraduate Education
The English Department also recently had the opportunity to
restructure its undergraduate major. One important feature
of this restructuring is the idea of the "specialization";
in addition to fulfulling broad requirements for the major,
students will now be able to elect a series of courses that
focus on particular topics or periodsTechnology and
Literature, for example, or Creative Writing. These specializations
will land us and our students right in the thick of discussions
about cultural literacy and diversity, and we hope to expand
the role of the English
Club (an association of English majors) in considering
these topics. Our goal is to foster in our undergraduate program
a greater awareness of what an English major might mean in
today's world and a sense, however diversely it might be expressed,
of a common mission.
Community Outreach
A very important aspect of PIH is bringing the "outside world"
into the academy and bringing the academy into the "outside
world." This year, we have actively pursued the question of
how best to accomplish this goal in our own planning meetings
and in our Open Forums. We began last spring with two speakers
who have been nationally prominent in directing humanities
centers, policy-making, and promoting discussion of the role
of the humanities in contemporary culture. This fall we are
inviting one speaker who is well-known as a commentator on
the "culture wars" of previous decades, and another speaker,
one of Dartmouth College's top development officers, who fundraises
for nonprofits concerned with fostering the arts and humanities
in underprivileged populations.
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"The professionalization of
knowledge has thus narrowed the grasp of the individual
professor; the means of his success further this trend;
and in the social studies and the humanities, the
attempt to imitate exact science narrows the mind
to microscopic fields of inquiry, rather than expanding
it to embrace man and society as a whole."
C. Wright Mills,
White Collar, 1951
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"Occupational majors . . . fail
to demonstrate that they're better preparation than
the liberal arts and sciences for their associated
occupations and professions. Medical schools do not
prefer particular majors, not even biology, as long
as basic pre-med courses are taken successfully. The
Association of American Law Schools recommends courses
that stress reading, writing, speaking, critical and
logical thinking. Law schools report that by yardsticks
of law review and grades, their top students come
from math, the classics, and literature--with political
science, economics, 'pre-law' and 'legal studies'
ranking lower."
James Engell
and Anthony Dangerfield, "The Market-Model University:
Humanities in the Age of Money," Harvard Magazine,
1998 (full
article)
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