Minutes of Open Planning Forum at "Thinking
Public" Event, May 12, 2000 (Summary)
(external consultants: David
Simpson, U. California, Davis, and Kathleen
Woodward, U. Wisconsin, Milwaukee)
At this inaugural event of the Public Humanities Initiative,
members of the U. California, Santa Barbara, English Dept.
(faculty and graduate students) met with David
Simpson and Kathleen
Woodward to discuss long-range and immediate planning
issues. The conversation proved to be very lively, and turned
upon the following topics:
- Defining the Parameters of a "Public Humanities"
Initiative. The planning group recognized that building
a useful public humanities agenda requires thinking about
the following basic issues:
- Terminology. Much is at stake in the very rhetoric
by which a "public humanities" initiative
is conceived (and announced). What actually is the contemporary
"humanities," for example, and is that understood
by the general public, or even the university? Would
it be better to name a public humanities initiative
"public language," "public words,"
or "public discourse" (thus changing the focus
from the disciplinary formations of the humanities to
their point of contact with society and culture)?
- Scope. Is the purpose of
a public humanities initiative best served by expanding
the focus to include the interaction of the academic
humanities at large with society at large or, alternatively,
concentrating the focus on the relation of a particular
discipline or instance of the humanities (e.g., literature)
to particular aspects of the public? (See also Strategies
below)
- Audience. How can a public humanities initiative
in a research-level university engage members of the
following publics in a genuine way: its students (including
undergraduates), the educational community at other
levels (community colleges and state universities),
the "town" (both community leaders involved
in university events and other classes and groups),
and professionals in other sectors? One symptomatic
issue: should public humanities events be held on or
off campus? If they are situated off-campus, should
they be in a patronized space (e.g., the house of a
sponsor), a neutral space, or some combination?
- Formats. Why should every event in the academic
humanities choose its formats from the following limited
palette: lecture, question-and-answer period, colloquium?
What about using alternative formats to involve the
public: e.g., debate, interview, memoir, field trip
(e.g., to local businesses and governments), online
"chat," TV or radio talk show, etc.? And should
events in the public humanities initiative have a public
"outcome" in the form of a publication, proposal,
or other dissemination to both the academy and the public?
- Media. How can a public humanities initiative
make good use of existing and new media to publicize
itself? How, that is, can the very concept of "publicity"
or "public relations"often dismissed
by rote in the academybe enriched in the context
of new goals and new media to link the university to
the public? While contemporary English departments,
for instance, often think creatively about traditional
media in the context of popular culture and the "society
of spectacle," few use such media creatively (e.g.,
advertisements in local or national newspapers to solicit
public input). Similarly, almost no academic humanities
departments now use the new media of the Internet and
Web to do more than broadcast their program descriptions,
requirements, faculty, etc. This is despite the fact
that the one-to-many "broadcast" model of
communication is particularly suspect in the contemporary
humanities and is even now rapidly being superseded
by leveling, many-to-many models of communication (both
legal and illegal) among undergraduates. How might the
Web, MP3, and other new media be used creatively by
the humanities?
- Topics. The following topics
for public humanities events were suggested. It was also
argued that a particularly interesting way to involve the
"pubic" from the get-go would be to solicit feedback
from various social sectors on which of these topics is
most compelling:
- "Guilt: Comparative Legitimation Crises."
An event that assembles people from the academy, business,
medicine, law, and other professions to discuss, as
David Simpson phrased the question, "Why isn't
what we are doing enough?" That is, why do each
of the above-mentioned areas now feel the need to develop
a public initiative (e.g., business, medical, or legal
ethics; the new philanthropy of information-technology
firms) that reaches out to a "public" beyond
the public such areas already serve (e.g., the customer,
the student)?
- "Pleasure: Entertainment and the Humanities."
Have the contemporary humanities, especially in its
persona as "critique," too prematurely given
up its franchise on pleasure and enjoyment? According
to the Horatian dictim, for example, literature was
once that which presumed both to "instruct"
and to "delight." What is the relation between
the humanities and the great entertainment industries
of our times that now lay claim to delight (and often,
as in Steven Speilberg's history-pieces, also to instruction)?
An event on this theme would convene humanists in the
academy with professionals from the entertainment industries
in Los Angeles and Santa Barbara.
- "Suffering: The Humanities and Advocacy."
What is the future for the tradition of "critique"
in the academic humanities and creative arts? How is
that tradition being inflected by current political,
social, economic, environmental, and other activist
movements (as emblematized by the protests in Seattle
and elsewhere against the World Trade Organization)?
Or is the whole paradigm of critique obsolete in an
age when business-as-usual believes in the built-in
critique of capitalistic "creative
destruction" (as Joseph Schumpeter put it),
according to which each "new" innovation and
each new dot.com IPO represents a radical critique of
established power?
- "Work: The Agon of Contemporary Knowledge
Work." An increasingly large proportion of
people are now employed in "knowledge work,"
and the proportion of such work bulks even larger when
measured in stock-market valuations. The very concept
of "knowledge work," of course, suggests a
conflictual zone of overlap between the academy and
the commercial sector. How do each of the above-mentioned
topicsguilt, pleasure, suffering (and critique)play
out in the context of the contemporary meaning of "work"?
An event on this theme would convene academics with
professionals in other social sectors to discuss the
twin themes of "knowledge" and "work."
- "Santa Barbara Writers." Designed
as a local instance of the public humanities, this event
would convene a set of intersecting "publics"
(students, community members) around such local best-selling
authors as T.C. Boyle, Ross MacDonald, and Sue Grafton.
- Strategies. The planning
group was equally attracted by the following two scenarios
for implementing a pubic humanities initiative (see also
Scope above):
- A broad agenda with multiple events focused on the above
topics.
- A "one little project" strategy
by which members of the U. California, Santa Barbara,
English Department would volunteer time and resources
to a particular pubic service project (e.g., a literacy
program). "One little project" would be a demonstration
of the public humanities in action.
- Conclusions. After discussion of the above issues,
the following rough plan for a public humanities initiative
was suggested:
- Survey the resources and programs at U. California,
Santa Barbara, that already contribute to "public
humanities" under various titles.
- Continue in Fall 2000 to think through the problem
of "public humanities" at the scholarly level.
Planned events: talk by John Guillory of New York U.
and an in-house colloquium involving faculty at UCSB.
- Mount in Spring 2000 a first, high-visibility event
involving the public (see Topics
above).
- Create one event that investigates the possibility
of adopting "one little project"
(see above).
- A further option: a reading group series.
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