Liberal Arts RDB

 

When I came to the University of Texas in 2006, I wasnÕt completely sure of my major. I had been torn between English and nursing, and had settled on the idea of transferring to nursing after IÕd been at UT for a while. At some point along the way that first semester, I resolved to stick with English but quickly decided after some feelings of embarrassment and futility in my E 314L class to make a change for real this time to Linguistics. Indeed, I am not an English major as my mother had hoped and my father feared. But now I am worse off; I have traveled into uncharted territory that they have never been exposed to, and my talk of morphemes, the IPA, and phrase structure trees has them a bit concerned. See, my parents had their majors picked out in elementary school. They set out on their freshman years for engineering and English, and by golly, thatÕs what they graduated with. The fact that I didnÕt know what I wanted to do when I came to UT was appalling, and my continued search for a lucrative future career has them frazzled.

Fortunately, Giametti has my back on this one. ÒWhat I wish you to avoid, as you continue your journey, is the desire to try to arrange all of the future nowÓ (321). I donÕt have to know what IÕm doing yet. IÕm only 19.

I know I am not the only one feeling this urgency. It seems as though our culture contradicts itself all over the place in telling us how to do things. WeÕre pressured by family and friends to get jobs before weÕre out of high school, and yet more experience as you get older makes you harder to hire (you have to be paid more for your schooling and efforts). Even UT itself does this. We get the vibe that we are supposed to love learning and take our time to develop ourselves as civil and well-educated human beings, yet we get tuition rebates (money) if we graduate Òon timeÓ.

Once we leave the University, our bubble disappears. As Giametti says, ÒWe strive for a civil society through the consideration of people on their merit and through the free, open, and frank exchange of ideasÓ (321). We are told to be open minded, but the fact of the matter is, in the real world you arenÕt considered valuable by many if you donÕt have the right car, house, job, physical appearance, personality, or friends.

 People are closed minded. Maybe this is a result of what Palaima says is happening, ÒStudents who leave the Forty Acres, as many do now, without knowing themselves, without testing what they can best do for themselves and for other peopleÉwithout developing cultural passions, have not gotten the education they should have been givenÓ (324). But I would argue that we can be coddled into thinking that the University will make us grow up without considering that we have to learn to deal with a world that hasnÕt gleaned from the University experience what they should have (in addition to other people who havenÕt had this experience).

Bate would say that the people who view all of this and make others aware are the poets, those who, Ò[have] no characterÉno identity,Ó that [they] [are] ÒannihilatedÓ in the characters of others and [concern] [themselves] solely with revealing their essential naturesÉÓ (339B). He would probably argue that the Liberal Arts education would equip the poets thus. And I would agree. We need more people to analyze, well, people, not just computers or numbers or businesses. (Though these all involve many people in principle). I couldnÕt be happier that we are trending toward the value of right brain faculties according to Pink. We need more business students in Victorian Literature. Hopefully theyÕll wander over here someday.