A scholar has called on those working in the humanities to be far more proactive in responding to âassaultsâ on their disciplines.
Today, claims Iain Hay, Matthew Flinders distinguished professor of geography at Flinders University in Australia, there are âmany frontsâ on which âthe humanities are under attackâ.
His paper, recently published in the Journal of Higher Education Policy, points to everything from âstudent enrolment decisionsâ to âpolitical pronouncementsâ such as a Japanese education minister calling in 2015 for the countryâs national universities to ensure social science and humanities departments âserve areas that better meet societyâs needsâ. Professor Hay even mentions the comments âscrawled on toilet walls (e.g. graffiti above the paper dispenser saying âBA â please takeâ)â.
This climate, he goes on in âDefending letters: a pragmatic response to assaults on the humanitiesâ, has had the effect of âsilenc[ing] humanities advocatesâ or encouraging them to âreframe their public pronouncementsâ.
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Yet in reality the humanities offer students and society a number of invaluable benefits.
Their âlanguage-based work on interpersonal and intercultural understandingâ, suggests Professor Hay, gives us the âopportunity to develop more highly tuned skills of empathy, learning better how to regard the world as others do, countenancing the possibility that others may see something we have failed to see, or may indeed see it more âaccuratelyââ.
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They âoffer understandings of the contexts within which science takes significance and from which it draws its power (and liabilities)â. Even many scientists now recognise that âthe humanities help make better scientists, engineers and medical practitioners (and vice versa)â, for example by âhelp[ing] to recalibrate power imbalances between patients and providers in healthcareâ.
Furthermore, Professor Hay cites evidence pointing to âthe technological, employment and commercial skills of humanities graduatesâ, such as the fact that 34 per cent of FTSE 100 companiesâ chief executives have degrees in arts, social sciences and humanities, compared with only 31 per cent in science and technology.
Since the humanities have been central to the life of universities for hundreds of years, their continuing presence also âlend[s] intellectual authority to those institutions that present themselves publicly as universities and which might otherwise struggle to distinguish themselves from technical institutes or collegesâ.
Given the vast gulf between what the humanities actually deliver and what they are perceived to deliver, Professor Hay ends his paper with a call for humanists to respond to all âthe utilitarian and ideological assaultsâ on them with âmore hard-nosed actionâŠfor their defenceâ.
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They need to âwork to rebuild self-belief and ensure âpositive messagingâ about the humanities in our everyday conversations, in our communications with students and in our dialogues with colleaguesâ and fight back against âuniversity policies and proceduresâ that implicitly take science subjects as the model.
Above all, they must overcome any âhigh-minded reluctanceâ, realise no one else would do it for them and add âthe very defence of the humanitiesâ to their core professional activities.
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