What follows is lighter fare than you'll usually find on this blog, probably a welcome relief. The American Scholar has a regular section in their on-line publication called "Teaching Lessons." [Here] The section offers brief reflections, anecdotes, or lessons learned about teaching. The one below, "Scrutinize Everything," is drawn from my first year in graduate school, and, whew, did I ever get schooled.
***
“Aristotle
is in serious difficulty!” Professor Cohen exclaimed as he leaned forward,
gripping the podium with his right hand and pounding on it with his left. I was
in my first year of graduate school, taking the eminent literary theorist Ralph
Cohen’s course on English Romantic literature, burning every ounce of
intellectual oil I had to keep up with his argument dismantling a claim
Aristotle makes in his Poetics. Week by
week, Cohen mercilessly took down other giants in the Western literary canon,
as well.
I
was a late bloomer who hadn’t even planned for college until my senior high
school English teacher got me fired up about books and ideas. Through four
years at a small liberal arts college, I expanded my reading considerably,
questioning philosophical claims and literary interpretations while also trying
my hand at writing them. Cohen upped the ante, demonstrating that you can go to
the very foundation of a system of thought and find it wanting. Even venerable,
old Aristotle was in a tight spot.
Anyone
and anything are open to scrutiny—I took that lesson with me into my own
teaching. One of the first jobs I got after graduate school was in a program to
help Vietnam Veterans prepare for college. I built a writing course on the
kinds of readings the vets would likely encounter during their freshman year:
short stories and poems, sociological observations on American life, passages
from science textbooks like a discussion of the Big Bang. We read carefully,
closely, and then wrote. Read and wrote. Somewhere in all this, I told them the
Ralph Cohen story, both for comic effect and also to push them toward more
critical reading. At the end of the semester, my students gave me a leather
portfolio. Across the bottom it read in gold script: Aristotle is in serious difficulty.
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