
‘One
day when I was twenty-three or twenty-four this sentence seemed to form
in my head, without my willing it, much as sentences form when we are
half-asleep, ‘Hammer your thoughts into unity’.
For days I could think of nothing else and for years I tested all I did
by that sentence [...]” William Butler Yeats (cited in Frank Tuohy, Yeats <,
1976, p.51 )
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- “to create a sense of place” for students (Carnegie), esp. the campus
as an alma mater, a second home.
- expand our sense of place as querencia, inscape,
instress, genius loci, etc.
- personal sense of place: road map
- sense of place in nature
- home as sense of place
- school as sense of place
- university as a sense of place:
comparing U.T. to Oxford and Cambridge
- sense of place in geography and
culture: Austin, Texas, USA, as compared to Europe
- sense of place in history: Hellenism
vs. Hebraism, pastoral vs. urban, Greco-Roman vs. Gothic, modernism vs.
antimodernism
- sense of infinite space
- one’s ideal place
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- to focus on time as embodied in place (fossils in Waller Creek, griffins
in Littlefield House), to expand our consciousness of time to the origins
of the planet and life on the planet, to integrate the meaning of the end
of time for the body (death) and for a species (extinction) and to explore
alternatives to consciousness of linear time
- ---------
- to focus on personal presence (ghosts, genius loci) as embodied in
our place (for example, such genius loc of Waller Creek as Joe Jones,
Frank Dobie, and the students of 1969) ; and all the ghosts inhabiting the
Harry Ransom Center; i.e. to give some sense of the social as well as environmental
history of this campus
- ---------
- to define our college experience, especially by comparing it to that of
others unlike ourselves
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- to explore multiple intelligences, the right as well as the left side of
the brain, experiential or discovery learning (as in science experiments
and the Moore method in math and the Baird Freshman English course in the
humanities ) via guided imagery, sympathetic imagination (extended even to
animals and plants) vs. vocational training
- -------------
- to improve writing: motivation (fear vs. love), creativity (vs. writer’s
block), planning, concentration, polishing vs. procrastination; learning
the new “writing” of multimedia and the internet, learning the relation of
writing to drawing and the visual arts; understanding writing as the product
of collaboration as well as isolation
- ---------------
- to explore the relation of the verbal to the visual arts and rhetorics--
to architecture, landscape architecture, sculpture, murals, paintings, drawings
– and to music, especially popular music: Van Morrison, John Denver, Kate
Bush, Pat Benatar, Pink Floyd, Jefferson Airplane, etc.
- -------------
- to improve reading: expand sense of reading to whole world as text (semiotics),
develop reader response journals integrating right as well as left brain
- ---------------
- to improve speaking in discussion and before groups, presentations and acting
- ---------------
- to improve listening, concentration, and the sympathetic imagination
- -------
- to know oneself, one’s strengths and weaknesses in learning, writing, reading,
speaking, listening
- places to explore on campus and in the rest of the world:
- Campus: the Main building, Battle Hall, Sutton Hall, the Littlefield House,
electronic classrooms, campus classroom buildings, Waller Creek, the Biology
Ponds (Tower Garden), Dobie’s house, Texas Memorial Museum, the Alumni Center,
Texas Union, University Christian Church, the Catholic Center, University
Baptist Church, University Methodist Church, All Saints Church, the Story
of Texas museum
- Austin: Treaty Oak, Taniguchi Oriental Garden, Hartman Prehistoric Garden,
Austin Nature Center, Philosopher’s Rock, Barton Springs, Umlauf Sculpture
Garden, Town Lake, the state Capitol building, St. Mary’s cathedral, the
Driskill Hotel
- Via the internet: Galveston, Westminster Abbey, the Palace
of Westminster, Yorkshire and York cathedral, Oxford, Kelmscott Manor, Amiens
cathedral, Mt. St. Michel, Chartres, Notre Dame, Barcelona
- loci classici? to get to know some of the famous “places” in world literature
(see our reading schedules)
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