What We Talk About When We Talk About Humanities

24human



A couple days ago, the New York Times ran a piece with the self-explanatory title, “In Tough Times, the Humanities Must Justify Their Worth.”



Though throughout my life I’ve been told that the study of humanities was in trouble, during my college time (late 80s-early 90s), I had the feeling that here was an overabundance of people, like me, earning seemingly useless (in a purely career-practical sense) humanities degrees. But a graphic in the article shows that I was wrong. These were just the kind of people I met through my sequence of restaurant jobs, where an English, Acting or Fine Arts degree is almost de rigueur.



Any regular visitors to this blog probably don’t need to be argued into the virtues of a good humanities education, but it’s interesting to see from the chart just how far it’s fallen since the late sixties. But those numbers themselves don’t actually bother me so much; something else does.



Back in the day (and I’m not sure how far back I’m talking about here), a humanities education indicated a broad and very deep education in culture: history, philosophy, literature, and the visual and performing arts. But what does it mean now? Does it mean the same thing? I’m not so sure it does, and I worry about that far more than the funding of humanities departments.



I’ll use myself as an example. While as an undergrad I studied English and minored in philosophy, then for my master’s studied creative writing, I don’t think I’ve ever sat down to read a Greek play all the way through. Though I took enough courses to get that philosophy minor, I only have a very glancing knowledge of the history of philosophy. All I know would probably just fill a few pages. My theatrical knowledge comes mostly from high school, where I acted (poorly) in productions, but learned just how good Shakespeare was—but again, how many of his plays have I actually read? Only a few. And don’t get me started on the tiny number of books I’ve read—though I have a few impressive reads under my belt, the fact is that I’m sorely unfamiliar with the bulk of important authors who preceded me.



Speculating on why this is so would probably be a useless task, though I first have to blame myself. Were I not so lazy, I would have studied more deeply, beyond the requirements of class credits. But the question remains: Why didn’t class credits require me to read more, and more deeply? I suspect it’s one result of the democratization of higher education. When something becomes available to all, it can slowly lose its rigor. I’d be foolish to complain too much about this democratization, though, because without it I probably wouldn’t have gotten my education, such as it is.



I’ve probably overstated my point already, but when I read about the lack of students enrolling in (and by effect, funding) humanities programs, I start to wonder what is really being lost. I never went to an ivy league school, so I can’t lay judgment on their programs, but I know from my state education (PA & TX, then a private grad school in Boston) that what we talk about when we talk about humanities education is not always the same thing. Ask the people of John Updike’s generation what a humanities education is, and you’re bound to get an entirely different answer than if you ask someone from mine.

(Originally posted at the Contemporary Nomad)

Beach Reading

Though there’s still a week or so to go until The Tourist comes out, I ran across this excellent endorsement in the Boston Globe’s blog, Off the Shelf, from the owner of Brattleboro’s Mystery on Main Street, David Lampe-Wilson. He was (I infer from the title of the post) answering the question, “What’s your pick of the first beach read of the summer?”

With ‘The Tourist,’ Olen Steinhauer should discover he suddenly has a burgeoning fan base. Known for his literary, European-based novels driven by complex, intelligent characters, Steinhauer’s latest hits the ground running and this dark tale of deceit and betrayal never lets up.


over here

Heard It Through The Vine™

vineAs I’ve been waiting, like, forever for the release of The Tourist on March 3, a surprising thing has happened. Over at Amazon, the book has received more customer reviews—by a long shot—than any of my previous books. How’s that possible? It’s possible through the Vine™ program:

Amazon Vine™ is a program that enables a select group of Amazon customers to post opinions about new and pre-release items to help their fellow customers make educated purchase decisions. Customers are invited to become Amazon Vine™ Voices based on the trust they have earned in the Amazon community for writing accurate and insightful reviews. Amazon provides Amazon Vine™ members with free copies of products that have been submitted to the program by vendors. Amazon does not influence the opinions of Amazon Vine™ members, nor do we modify or edit their reviews.










The Touristto Amazon to check it out





The Caloric Overcompensation of Writing

asked students to engage in three different activities. First they simply sat and relaxed. Then they completed a series of memory and attention tests. Finally, they were told to read and summarize a text. After forty five minutes performing each of these tasks, the students were offered an all-you-can eat buffet.



The actual caloric expenditure of performing any of these tasks was minimal. Intellectual work burns only three more calories an hour than merely sitting and relaxing. But when these students used their noggins (Activities 2 and 3) they later consumed 200 - 250 more calories than the students who had merely sat and relaxed.



Blood samples drawn before, during, and after the activities offer a possible explanation. Intellectual activities cause wide fluctuations in glucose and insulin levels, and may trigger hunger — resulting in the students eating far more than they actually expended in the activity. The researchers called it “caloric overcompensation” — in other words, after using their brains, they ate too much. They concluded that jobs involving intellectual tasks, combined with the sedentary nature of that work, could contribute to our society’s currently problem with obesity.


Read her entire post here.



The Old Tourism





Over at Flickr, someone named “dov” posted some wonderful French Ministry of Tourism PR shots.

From 1934 towards the end of the sixties, the French Ministry for Tourism employed full-time PR photographers to snap “celebrities” traveling by Air France. I’ve found a pack of these press photos at the flea market of Clignancourt, and bought them for 1 euro each.


Vintage French Tourism PR photos





Time

[caption id=”attachment_809” align=”alignright” width=”186” caption=”image from sexyfoodtherapy.blogspot.com”]screaming_baby[/caption]



As I’m nearing the end of the first full draft of my next book, I’ve been thinking a lot about work habits. Veteran novelists sometimes obsess over this as much as newbies, and while I’m not so interested in whether or not other novelists write longhand or with computer, I am curious about how other novelists find the time to write.



Now, time is always a challenge. Before I earned my living from this job, I learned how to focus and block out the world, so that you could find me writing (longhand) in restaurants (when I was a customer), in the smoking area beside the dumpsters (when I was an employee), and at my desk at 6 am when I worked in a skyscraper in Manhattan, writing The Bridge of Sighs.



I got an overwhelming thrill when I was awarded the Fulbright to do research for a year in Romania. More than the travel and the research, I was stunned by the prospect of an entire year devoted solely to writing. Then, later, when I quit my day job I realized that, for the rest of my life, I could spend as much time as I wanted just writing. I could sink into my natural impulse and not make excuses to anybody for it.



But it’s never that simple. Up through The Tourist I largely had control of my time, but with Margo’s birth I decided on a 3-month break. That would allow me to focus on those first crucial months of my daughter’s life, and Slavica and I could establish a schedule around which I could return to writing three or more hours a day. Little did I realize that with a baby—and without a nanny, or grandparents living in town—this prediction was entirely unrealistic.



Still, I tried. I caught an hour here and there, and now, a year later, I’m nearly done with the book. But it’s felt like a yearlong struggle with the outside world to get this thing written. And—more worrying—I fear that my fragmented work schedule might have adverse effects on the book. With long works of fiction, you need extended periods just to dwell on the text, so that the final story flows as a cohesive whole.



But these are things I’ll have to deal with in a few weeks, after I’ve let the book sit. But even then, I’m going to need 5-to-8-hour days to really make it work. The question is whether or not Margo will let me have those.



So I put it to the writers out there, particularly those with children or other live-in distractions: How do you find the end-on-end hours to write a book, when the rest of your life is crying for attention?

(Originally posted at the Contemporary Nomad)

More History Next to You

Image from B92 Image from B92


this story about Aribert HeimSimon Wiesenthal Center

WIESENTHAL CENTER URGES HUNGARIANS TO PROSECUTE AN ORGANIZER OF THE NOVI SAD MASSACRE OF JANURY 1942 AT ANNUAL MEMORIAL FOR VICTIMS



The Simon Wiesenthal Center today called upon the Hungarian authorities to prosecute Dr. Sandor Kepiro, one of the Hungarian officers who organized the mass murder of hundreds of Jews, Serbs, and Gypsies in the Serbian city of Novi Sad (then under Hungarian occupation) on January 23, 1942. Kepiro, who escaped after World War II to Argentina, was discovered living in Budapest by the Wiesenthal Center’s chief Nazi-hunter Dr. Efraim Zuroff in the summer of 2006.



In an impassioned speech at the annual memorial for the victims, Zuroff called upon the Hungarians to bring Kepiro to justice while it is still possible.



In his words: 



“If there is anything that we must remember and internalize, it is that the crimes of the Nazis and their collaborators were carried out by human beings, who must bear full responsibility for their crimes… This is a sad truth that many governments would prefer to forget or ignore, because the practical implication of this basic fact is that a serious effort be made to bring the killers to justice. How else is it possible that Dr. Sandor Kepiro, one of the Hungarian officers who organized the Razzia, who was responsible for the roundups in the area of the streets Cara Dušana, Nikola Tesla, Futoška, and Jevrejski streets is still living in Budapest unprosecuted and unpunished… So let the demand for justice be issued from this place, not only in the name of the victims but by, and on behalf of, the living, and for future generations.



IT IS NEVER TOO LATE TO HOLD THE KILLERS ACCOUNTABLE. 

BRING KEPIRO TO JUSTICE NOW WHILE IT IS STILL POSSIBLE!!!”



For more information call 00-972-50-7214156


(The title of this post references an earlier story.)



How Not To Write

“Unpublished novelists understand that there is more to a character than the interesting stuff.”

- from How Not to Write a Novel by Sandra Newman and Howard Mittelmark




Kirkus & IndieNext & Birthdays

As I mentioned before, those trade reviews are coming in, and the last one finally came my way, from Kirkus. It’s not a “starred” review, but as my editor keeps reminding me, three out of four really isn’t bad. Still, the reviewer clearly enjoyed the book and gave us the oh so quotable final line: “Only le Carré can make a spy as interesting.” (review below)



Also, the book has been chosen as a March 2009 “IndieNext” pick—what used to be called the BookSense pick list. As many of you know, this is a wonderful thing as it gets the independent bookstores’ marketing behind the book, gaining it extra display space and notice in the many wonderful independent bookstores throughout the States. So thank you, American Booksellers Association, for your support!



Of course, the real news around here is Margo’s first birthday, which we’re going to celebrate here in Novi Sad with her cousin, Lana, one year her senior. Margo’s on the cusp of a lot of things—almost walking unaided, almost speaking so that we can understand, almost able to feed herself without forcing us to bring in professional cleaners afterwards. In her first year, she’s survived multiple international trips, a fall on the head, and the irritation of living with a novelist, but not once has she complained about her difficult life…okay, maybe a few times, but not as often as she could have. Which makes her far more amenable to life’s troubles than her parents.

[review below]