Having
ventured into depth psychology and other treacherous realms in search of a
defense of the Humanities, I shall now return to the quotidian struggle for jobs
and paychecks. Today, I wish to talk for
a bit about what is happening to Humanities departments in universities. My comments will be anecdotal, and restricted
by and large to this country, simply because of the limitations of my knowledge
and experience. I invite my readers from
other countries to tell us what is happening there.
The assault on the Humanities is almost entirely budgetary. Wealthy schools [particularly, in America, well-endowed private colleges and universities] are content to leave their Humanities departments in place, and even to underwrite their expansion and multiplication. But the budget crises that periodically afflict public institutions seem almost always to take the heaviest toll on the Humanities. The experimental sciences have for many decades now relied on government and corporate funding for most of their research, and a combination of capitalist self-interest and national defense anxiety has sufficed to keep their money pouring in.
Many of the
readers of this blog will understand quite fully how all of this works, but for
those of you who do not hold faculty positions at tertiary institutions, permit
me a few words of explanation. A grant
proposal emanating from a university-based research scientist routinely includes
money for research assistants, which is to say doctoral students, who will form
part of the team working in the "Principal Investigator's" laboratory. Science these days is virtually always carried
on by teams, in sharp contrast to the research of Humanist scholars. [Compare the publications of the two
groups. The science papers always have
multiple authors, with the grant-getter's name appearing first. Only rarely do humanists publish
jointly.] The grant proposal also
routinely includes money for phones, travel, "research materials," and other
expenses that Humanists rely on their Deans to
provide.
In addition
-- and this is profoundly important in the finances of a university -- funders
such as the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes for Health
permit grant applicants to include a very large overhead allowance -- a standard
percentage of the dollar amount of the grant application -- ostensibly to
compensate the home institution for the expenses incurred by hosting the
research team. At most universities, this
overhead, which can be as much as 40% added onto the total grant, is then
divided up, by a standard formula, among the Principal Investigator [PI], the
home department, the Dean of the Science Faculty, and the Provost or central
office. The money going to the PI and to
the home department funds graduate students, travel, phones, equipment, and all
the other amenities of academic life.
In return
for this largesse, as I have already noted, the grant applicants must search the
existing databases of funders for money available to underwrite the research
they wish to carry out, while creatively shaping their research proposals to fit
the announced priorities of the funders.
If there is money to fund a search for a vaccine for AIDS, but little or
no money to fund a study of previously undiscovered flora and fauna in the
Amazon rainforest, then the challenge is to persuade funders that potential
breakthroughs in AIDS vaccine development lie waiting in the canopy of the
Amazon jungles. A mathematician
interested in the topology of connected tree-structures will shape her proposal
so that it appears to promise a solution to traffic jams in big cities. And so forth.
Research
scientists will tell you that they spend a great deal of their time writing
grant proposals, and departments in the sciences weigh a candidate's success in
securing grants very heavily when making tenure and promotion
decisions.
By and
large, humanists know nothing of this world of external funding, and many of
them resist as a matter of principal shaping their research to fit the funding
priorities of foundations, corporations, and government agencies. There is much less money available for
humanistic research, and virtually none for teaching in the humanities. Over time, a class structure has evolved in
the American academic world. Science
doctoral students are routinely fully funded;
doctoral students in the Humanities scrounge for funding, making do with
partial teaching assistantships, back-breaking assignments in Freshman
Composition, and jobs in fast food emporia.
Science departments have travel budgets, research budgets, conference
budgets, travel budgets, and multiple phone lines. Humanities Departments pay by the sheet for
Xeroxing.
During the
Golden Age of American higher education -- the 60's, 70's, and 80's of the last century,
which is to say during a time coterminous with my own career -- the number and
size of tertiary institutions expanded rapidly.
First in response to the demand from returning World War II GI's funded
by the GI Bill, then as a National Security response to the Cold War and the
Soviet Union's early successes in space exploration. money poured into higher
education. State Colleges were jumped up
to campuses of the State University, and Community Colleges promoted to State
College branches, all needing Humanities Departments to justify their new
status. The available jobs so far
exceeded the supply of scholars holding doctorates in the Humanities that
graduate students were being offered full time positions even before having
passed their qualifying exams. Thanks to
the multiplication of campuses and money from the National Defense Education
Act, some of which inevitably trickled down into university library budgets,
publishers found that they could at least break even on virtually any academic
title they published. A scholar in the
Humanities willing and able to crank out manuscripts could get contracts and
advances simply on the basis of an idea and a one page rationale. "Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive/But to
be young was very heaven."
Well,
Thermidor comes to all revolutions, and pretty soon the money started to dry
up. At first expansion stopped. Then travel money and research assistance
disappeared. Funding for graduate
students dwindled, and Deans desperate to avoid firing faculty removed
professorial phone lines. These cheese
parings served for a while, but as we entered the new millennium, serious cuts
replaced these trimmings. Poorly paid
part time faculty began to replace tenure track faculty, and when that was not
enough, Universities required by law to declare "financial exigency" before
contemplating the firing of tenured faculty ventured into that previously
forbidden territory. Doctoral programs
were summarily terminated as "too expensive," and teaching loads were
raised.
One of the
most bizarre of the many budget cutting moves has been the merging into one of
previously distinct departments of language and literature. Apparently, the corporate managers who have
found soft berths for themselves as university chancellors look at the array of
language departments in the Humanities faculties -- Germanic Languages and
Literature, Classical Studies, Slavic Languages and Literatures, Spanish and
Portuguese, and all the rest -- and decide that since they aren't English, they
all belong together. This maneuver always
reminds me of one of my favorite passages in the novels of Mark Twain, the
famous argument between Huck and Jim about whether the Duke and the Dauphin
really speak something called French.
Here it is, verbatim, from Chapter 14 of THE ADVENTURES OF HUCKLEBERRY
FINN. I hope you will not mind my quoting
the entire passage. Huck is narrating, of
course:
"I told
about Louis Sixteenth that got his head cut off in France long time ago; and
about his little boy the dolphin, that would a been a king, but they took and
shut him up in jail, and some say he died there.
"Po' little
chap."
"But some
says he got out and got away, and come to America."
"Dat's
good! But he'll be pooty lonesome—dey ain' no kings here, is dey, Huck?"
"No."
"Den he
cain't git no situation. What he gwyne to do?"
"Well, I
don't know. Some of them gets on the police, and some of them learns people how
to talk French."
"Why, Huck,
doan' de French people talk de same way we does?"
"NO, Jim;
you couldn't understand a word they said—not a single word."
"Well, now,
I be ding-busted! How do dat come?"
"I don't
know; but it's so. I got some of their jabber out of a book. S'pose a man was to
come to you and say Polly-voo-franzy—what would you think?"
"I wouldn'
think nuff'n; I'd take en bust him over de head—dat is, if he warn't white. I
wouldn't 'low no nigger to call me dat."
"Shucks, it
ain't calling you anything. It's only saying, do you know how to talk French?"
"Well, den,
why couldn't he SAY it?"
"Why, he IS
a-saying it. That's a Frenchman's WAY of saying it."
"Well, it's
a blame ridicklous way, en I doan' want to hear no mo' 'bout it. Dey ain' no
sense in it."
"Looky
here, Jim; does a cat talk like we do?"
"No, a cat
don't."
"Well, does
a cow?"
"No, a cow
don't, nuther."
"Does a cat
talk like a cow, or a cow talk like a cat?"
"No, dey
don't."
"It's
natural and right for 'em to talk different from each other, ain't it?"
"Course."
"And ain't
it natural and right for a cat and a cow to talk different from US?"
"Why, mos'
sholy it is."
"Well,
then, why ain't it natural and right for a FRENCHMAN to talk different from us?
You answer me that."
"Is a cat a
man, Huck?"
"No."
"Well, den,
dey ain't no sense in a cat talkin' like a man. Is a cow a man?—er is a cow a
cat?"
"No, she
ain't either of them."
"Well, den,
she ain't got no business to talk like either one er the yuther of 'em. Is a
Frenchman a man?"
"Yes."
"WELL, den!
Dad blame it, why doan' he TALK like a man? You answer me DAT!"
I see it
warn't no use wasting words—you can't learn a nigger to argue. So I
quit."
1 comment:
Great post. This has been on my mind lately because of the lack of emphasis on the Humanities, and the lack of comparative funding for such departments, like the English Department at my State University, whose funding is next to nothing compared to more "fruitful" ones. Perhaps one day administrators will look beyond the dollar signs and see the lasting importance and relevance of the Humanities.
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