News, Views and Careers for All of Higher Education
Oct. 31, 2007
The editors of the cultural magazine.N+1 are publishing a booklet called What We Should Have Known: Two Discussions that they have prepared for undergraduates. Copies have only just come back from the printer, it seems, but I’ve had a look at a prepublication PDF and now feel a certain evangelizing fervor for the whole project.
Its topic, in brief, is the relationship between education and regret – how each one creates the conditions for the other. The books you read at a certain age can put you on the wrong path, even though you don’t recognize it at the time. You are too naively ambitious to get much out of them — or too naive, perhaps, not that it makes much difference either way. And by the time you realize what you should have read, it’s too late. You would understand things differently, and probably better, had you made different choices. You would be a different person. Instead, you wasted a lot of time. (I know I did. There are nights when I recall all the time spent on the literary criticism of J. Hillis Miller and weep softly to myself.)
The booklet consists of transcripts of two meetings of N+1 contributors (a mixture of writers and academics, most in their 20’s and 30’s) as they discuss what they regret about their educations. Each contributor also submits a list of eight “Books That Changed My Life.”
The structure here seem to involve a rather intricate bit of irony. There is an explicit address to smart people in their teens, or barely out of them, offering suggestions on what to read, and how. It can be taken as a guide to how to avoid regret. The reflections and checklists are all well-considered. You could do a lot worse for an advice manual.
But the task is impossible. Avoiding regret is not an option, whether in your formal education or your love life; and it’s the price of the ticket that you must learn this the hard way. There are no shortcuts between naivete and sophistication. Or rather, there are a lot of shortcuts – but all of them will lead you astray.
Among the approaches tried and found wanting by participants in the discussion are:
Whichever path you follow, then, is bound to involve the risk of ending up someplace you might have qualms about, later. You just have to strike out and take your chances anyway. Regret will come, and you’ll have to learn from it, too.
This candor is remarkable. And so is the hard edge of respect for the intellectual seriousness of young people. It reminded me, at several points, of a wonderful passage in an essay by Adorno:
“The naivete of the student who finds difficult and formidable things good enough for him has more wisdom in it than a grown-up pedantry that shakes its finger at thought, warning it that it should understand the simple things before it tackles the complex ones, which, however, are the only ones that tempt it. Postponing knowledge in this way only obstructs it.”
This booklet is a reflection on the difference between education and Bildung. That is, between the experience of moving through a given social institution, on the one hand, and the process of being inwardly “formed” by what you’ve learned, on the other.
It’s not an attempt to recast the curriculum, then. Or a polemic in the culture wars. Or a blueprint for reforming the vast multi-billion dollar research-and-entertainment complex known as “higher ed.” In some respects, it is much broader in focus than that; in others, it addresses the particularity of individual experience.
The emphasis falls on how books can influence a reader in ways having little to do with career, and everything to do with a sense of life. (Not that the participants are terribly solemn about this. One of them says, deadpan: “It’s like after I read Crime and Punishment in high school, I wanted to kill an old lady.”)
But there is also an undercurrent of disappointment with the university running throughout the discussion. “Our educations take place in institutions that are divided up in these ways that may not bear idealistic close inspection,” says Meghan Falvey, a graduate student in sociology at New York University. “You can really end up studying the wrong thing, sitting around a table with the wrong people, whose concerns are not your own. Almost inevitably it seems like you won’t know what your concerns are until you’re older or better read or something.”
Perhaps that is inevitable – a human problem, rather than the failing of any pedagogical arrangement that could be reformed. But other comments in What We Should Have Known suggest deep reservations about the university as an institution.
“I realized, the further I went on,” says Marco Roth, a doctoral candidate in literature at Yale, “that almost everyone in academia feels like an outsider, nobody knows what’s going on. Academia’s an empty vessel, but the ones who don’t realize it end up going all the way and end up in charge....They believe in the system. That there’s something they can conform to and master. And the proof is that they’ve stuck it out while so many others drop by the wayside into ‘obscurity.’”
An empty vessel is not worthless, of course. (It has its uses.) The complaint here, rather, is about the routinized and often rather vacuous cult of “professionalization” in the humanities. William James worried about this more than a century ago. But really, he could never have imagined how far things would go. In the more inane extremities of the process, any expression of doubt about the effects of professionalization will now immediately be denounced as “anti-intellectual” — a tendency reflecting an incredibly impoverished conception of the life of the mind.
The participants in the discussions presented in What We Should Have Known are smart enough to know better; and none of them sounds timid enough to give a damn. The combination of seriousness and playfulness here is inspiring. My only regret is that I did not read this pamphlet a long time ago.
(Information about ordering What We Should Have Known is available here.)
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I believe it was Kierkegaard who said, “Life can only be understood looking backwards, but it must be lived forwards.”
Vige Barrie, Hamilton College, at 9:33 am EDT on October 31, 2007
I can understand the frustration coming from the article. To get a PhD in English (my field as an example) one more or less has to decide on their program focus or dissertation topic while working on the M.A. level. That was simply too restrictive for me. My interests are so general that it would have been detrimental to my education.
Fortunately, despite the “errors” of education as a young adult, there is always opportunity for growth and learning.
Ben, at 7:55 pm EDT on October 31, 2007
Scott, I have so many friends who say, “If I had it all to do over again, I would not change a single thing” I simultaneously do not believe them, am disgusted by them, and feel remarkably superior to them. I regret so much of my past it’s next to unbelievable. That said, I will tell you about only one of my regrets.
But first, about those books that changed people’s lives. I can’t say anything I have ever read actually “changed” my life, but I will list twelve books that were very important to me. They are ...
“Holy Bible,” mostly whispered by God into the ears of obedient authors.
“Physicae Auscultationes” by Aristotle
“The Emile” by Jean-Jacques Rousseau
“The Origin of the Species” by Charles Darwin
“Leaves of Grass” by Walt Whitman
“I and Thou” by Martin Buber
“The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” by Mark Twain
“The Sound and the Fury” by William Faulkner
“Calculus and Analytical Geometry” (1st edition) by George B. Thomas
“Symbolic Logic” (1st edition) by Irving M. Copi
“Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance” Robert M. Pirsig
“Compulsory Mis-education and The Community of Scholars” by Paul Goodman
“Holy Bible,” much of it written by a bunch of second and third century snake oil salesmen.
There are so many other things I have read that are important to me I simply don’t know how I arrived at the list above. I love Shakespeare ... and Walt Kelly ... and Bill Watterson.
It is noteworthy that the second time I read the Bible I was a very conservative, Christian, college student who thought he was preparing for the Presbyterian ministry. The third time I read it was as a post-80s guy who was flirting with atheism ... and after the reading could not possibly imagine who that naive teen-ager was that I knew back in the 50s.
Now for my primary regret ... I wish I had decided very early on to be a writer, and I wish I had prepared myself for that adventure. I would not be satisfied to be a writer like John Grisham, Stephen King, or even John Updike. If I couldn’t be in a class with Mark Twain, Earnest Hemingway, John Steinbeck – I’d even step down to F. Scott Fitzgerald — then I suppose the point would have been to have best sellers and make lots of money. That wouldn’t work for me.
So if I wanted to prepare myself to be a WRITER, what would the collegiate experience have had to offer? Bennington, Goddard, Hollins, Iowa, Kenyon, Michigan, Middlebury, Northwestern, Princeton, Sarah Lawrence, Vassar, Wellesley. What am I to do?
I can tell you Scott – and this is my greatest regret in life – if you want to write, you should take Twain, Hemingway, Steinbeck (who was almost ruined by Stanford), and Faulkner – and maybe I should include Tennessee Williams (who actually graduated from college) and Truman Capote — as your examples. Eschew colleges and their writing programs. Learn about the world ... and on your own. Whatever you do, don’t count on a bunch of academics to teach you to write. Let your experiences and subsequent knowledge of the world be you guide. I wish someone had told me when I was 20-years-old and struggling with the faith-logic problem that it was experience that made the writer, not “education” and training.
That’s my regret of all regrets. And you young people had better believe me ... there are plenty of academic true believers who will tell you it’s never too late. Bullshit! If you’re thinking about a career in writing, separate yourself from formal training just as soon as you possibly can. Being a riverboat pilot will be waaaay more important to you than taking a couple of courses in American literature of English composition,
Frizbane Manley, at 3:50 am EDT on November 1, 2007
This whole notion of therapeutic reading strikes me as nastily coercive. Like good Christian moms and dads orienting their kids’ reading toward “good” books and away from Harry Potter, the Brothers Grimm, and other dangerous stuff. Does anybody here imagine it’s possible to draw a straight line between what students read and how their lives turn out? So far as I can tell there is no bad reading. But then, after my mother got too busy to read fairy tales to me, I raised myself on a diet of comic books, Albert Peyson Terhune dog stories, Hardy Boys, science fiction, H.G. Wells, Hemingway, Joyce, Virgil, Dante, Faulkner, Jane Austen, Proust, Mann, Sartre, Genet, then moved outside the canon. Who knows where I went off the track. Probably right after science fiction.
Bill M., at 10:10 am EDT on November 1, 2007
Scott:
I shared your essay and the comments with one of my friends, a retired political scientist who currently resides in Paradise. He responded:
“My education as an underprivileged, mostly French, white boy with an inborn attitude and a brain to go with it was ...
‘Lad: a Dog’ and others by Al Terhune
‘The William Tell Overture’ which I asked my uncle and aunt to get me for Christmas when I was about seven because it had the Lone Ranger’s theme song. It inadvertently turned me on to timeless music. The storm movement was like a psycho-active drug for me.
‘The Confessions of St Augustine’ which my mother had annotated and which I thought was ridiculous.
Arthur Koestler’s ‘Darkness at Noon.’
Cantor’s ‘Andersonville’ which haunts me fifty years later every time I see or eat green peas.
‘The Republic’
‘The Iliad’
‘Anna Karenina’
‘Crime and Punishment’
‘Grapes of Wrath’
‘Animal Farm’ and ‘Brave New World’
‘Fahrenheit 451’
Edward Shils ‘Epistemology’ which proved to me that we can never solve the conundrum of how we learn and made me content with doing the best I could and ignore all formulaic educate by numbers nonsense.
Ayn Rand’s ‘We the Living,’ her first novel written before her fall into oversimplified ideological pap.
Ultimately anything written by David Hume.
I quit. There is much more so maybe I am just too impressionable.”
Although his is different from my list, I could almost have written it myself. My point is that maybe there is something to this “analysis.” How about a data-based paper titled, “Life-changing Words On The Page: Literature That Was Compelling to Four Post-WW II Generations.”
Frizbane Manley, at 9:05 am EDT on November 2, 2007
One of the best things I ever did was wait three years between graduating high school and beginning college (unplanned, but necessary). I read everything I could get my hands on and watched many classic films as well. I think this type of untrained exploration is incredibly important...but finding the time is what’s tricky. It would probably help many students to know that college isn’t something that has to be rushed into. But U.S. societal pressure tends to work against this.
amcorrea, at 9:00 pm EST on November 4, 2007
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Generational Regrets
It sounds like an interesting project, though I admit that I have my doubts as to whether undergraduates will appreciate its direction as much as the participants enjoyed giving it.
I would be more interested, I think, if it weren’t described as the work of people mostly in their “20s and 30s": I fall into the latter category, for a few more months, but I’d be more interested to see the spread of regrets from our longer-lived colleagues and interlocutors.
Jonathan Dresner, at 6:35 am EDT on October 31, 2007