ursula: Sheep knitting, from the Alice books (sheep)
[personal profile] ursula
Tim Burke has some comments (on a New York Times article I have avoided reading) about the way liberal-arts schools sell choice which seem remarkably aware of the ways in which the liberal arts are genuinely elite.

My roommate for a summer Research Experience for Undergraduates several years ago was Hoa. At some point not very far into our acquaintance, she asked me, "There aren't very many Asian kids at your school, are there?" at which point I said, "Huh?" and she explained, "You seem to have trouble understanding my accent."

My small-elite-liberal-arts-college was full of Asian-American students; but it didn't have many students like Hoa, who had been in the U.S. all of two years, and had switched her major from teaching (in Vietnam) to mathematics (at a large East Coast state university). Hoa seemed to conclude that my school was horribly expensive; but of course it was too well-endowed to ask anything at all from someone like Hoa. The issue was more that nobody like her would have considered attending an institution focussed on writing and reading and being a better person. She was going to college-- and participating in a competitive math REU-- so she could get a good job when she was done.

That was the true luxury of Swarthmore: the luxury of getting an education, rather than a career. It was a class distinction, but not the distinction of pricetag; and I think that elitism was invisible to most of us.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-09-26 12:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bloodorange.livejournal.com
Career-wise? Yep. Maybe I don't need a higher degree to do the work I want to do, but it'd help (say, if I wanted to teach a class here and there, or if I just wanted better credentials). This would, of course, not really be the case had I gone to art school, but art school is basically technical school anyway.

Jessica Todd Harper, naive WASPy Bryn Mawr rich girl at thirty, once told our photography class that the purpose of our education was to make our minds interesting places to spend the rest of our lives. I like this explanation.

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