Hey, I went to Frostburg for my MBA and it’s opened a ton of doors - previously had been stalled in my career. I’ve nearly tripled my salary in the last four years since getting the degree. That said, I have a lot of personal qualities that I know help me, and I just don’t think people on this board think holistically: yes, what’s on paper matters, but the person behind the paper is what will tip the scales. |
If there are two humanities fields that are majority male (history and philosophy), and one is 'woke' but the other is not, that gives some pretty good evidence that the general under-representation of men in the humanities has little or perhaps nothing to do with 'woke'-ness. One could perhaps argue that history would be even more male-dominated if it were less 'woke' (I'm going to persist with the scare-quotes, since I'm quoting people I disagree with), yielding more men in the humanities generally, but the question isn't how to maximize that figure. Or one could argue that Swarthmore is in the 'woke' vanguard, and that other history departments are keeping their male enrollment numbers up by resisting this trend. I don't know if that's true, but I suspect it isn't, since the trend is decades-old and less elite history departments are stocked with PhDs from the same rather narrow range of graduate programs as Swarthmore's is. I think the moral is: high percentages of men will major in a 'woke' humanities field and in an un-'woke' humanities field. If men are being repelled from other humanities fields, it isn't simply because they are 'woke.' |
English major from above: there is of course a lot of noise and the “humanities” isn’t a monolithic thing. My sense is that philosophy tends to be a more intellectually rigorous major than many others. I also wasn’t trying to get into the merits of “woke,” although I suppose that was kind of inevitable. Whether you think the “woke” are correct, incorrect, or that this is an ill-defined category that doesn’t really exist, the point I was trying to make is that the current intellectual fashion just a different way of looking at texts—sociological, historical, often explicitly political—and that this kind of methodology may just not be very interesting to the kinds of young men who might otherwise be inclined towards the humanities because they loved King Lear or whatever. Further, the critical theorists have done their work too well: if you presume that every interpretation of every text is equally valid—which i heard all the time in classes even in the 90s—and that given the nature of language all texts necessarily always say both “A” and “not A,” it kind of all nets out to zero. So why bother? Get an engineering degree and a job. |
Same here. My parents were not immigrants, but they were instead the first generation out of poverty. They raised me and my brother the same way, with a strong focus on hard work, financial literacy (saving/investing), and prioritizing independent financial security. We’re both extremely grateful and are passing these values and skills on to our kids. AND … we majored in psychology (my brother) and political science (me). He went on to a lucrative career in business and I did the same in law. |
| It may be different for boys from wealthy families. I have NEVER seen a FGLI boy majoring in humanities. |
bolded is the important part. Most people with just an undergrad in humanities need a masters to get paid well. |
? cite source. |
Yeah...I'm not sure it's fair to say that most STEM majors don't work in their field. At UPenn they say 34% of engineering grads don't work directly in their field (with many going into finance/fin tech/consulting etc.). However, a CS kid may go work for a hedge fund writing trading algorithms...which is still fairly related to their major. In any event, 34% is many, but obviously not most. |
Yes, & in that 34% they include engineers who go on to med school. Still stem, and more and more engineering undergraduate training is very relevant to medical careers (procedure based fields, interventional rads, cards, ortho.). More tech added to med school and residency training every year) |
+1 It’s this. For poor boys, it’s CS/Engineering/Pre-med that is being pushed. Their parents don’t respect the humanities. I was this boy a decade ago and I think my parents would have fainted if I told them I wanted to major in a humanities field. I ended up majoring in Engineering (because my parents forced me to) and minoring in English (because I liked it). Fast forward some years, I realized I hated Engineering and couldn’t see myself doing it for the rest of my life. I’m now a high school english teacher and love it. Humanities at heart, baby! |
This 100% Girls can focus on what they like without worrying about earnings potential. How many humanities girls do you know marrying humanities boys? |
Sorry, I know it's somewhat off-topic, but I have to point out that if your profs said this then they were deconstructionists or some other type of postmodernist (or poststructuralist), not proponents of critical theory. Deconstruction and postmodernism certainly were fads in the 1970s through the 1990s, but (a) actual critical theorists criticized those movements, and (b) 21st-century movements like the 1619 Project (mentioned by someone on the previous page) are not postmodern -- at least, not in the way your professors (who sound like deconstructionists) were. The 1619 Project is about getting history right, not about revealing the absence of a 'transcendental signified' or any such gibberish. To tie it back to the theme of this discussion, if a young man is curious about the possibility that historical evidence actually falsifies some of the historical narratives he grew up with -- a matter of intellectual rigor, on any plausible definition -- many of those Swarthmore history courses may be just his thing. |
I’ve often seen deconstruction referred to as a type of critical theory. But there’s no need to debate the taxonomy. If you’d rather use postmodernism or poststructualism that’s fine too. The larger point is that the academic climate in the humanities is generally off-putting to those who are interested in understanding the western intellectual tradition as such, as opposed to those who are interested in deconstructing it or subjecting it to a race- and gender-based political reappraisal. Not that that is an illegitimate kind of intellectual inquiry, of course, it’s just not appealing to a lot of young men. In theory, critical theories, deconstructionist theories, and more traditional approaches to literature could all exist in the academy; as a practical matter, however, they seem not to. And I think you are entirely incorrect about the goal of critical theory—it’s not about getting history “right,” because it believes “right” is a meaningless concept. It attempts to replace the dominant narrative with another narrative that centers marginalized groups. “Right” has nothing to do with it. |
so you had to shell out more money to get a law degree after your humanities undergrad degree. |
I know I'm going to lose this debate, because current usage of these terms is strongly influenced by people who don't understand the actual theoretical frameworks (I don't mean you but ideologues in rightwing think-tanks, the politicians they influence, and journalists trying to report what these politicians do), to an extent that the terms, thus used, don't really refer to anything at all. But in the interest of doing justice to what people are actually doing in the classroom, I have to insist that current forms of critical theory, including critical race theory, are in the business of displacing dominant narratives in a broadly evidence-based way because they're interested in the truth. The move of 'centering marginalized groups' isn't done because 'truth' or 'right' is a meaningless concept but because the truth about these groups has been distorted or suppressed by traditional (e.g. liberal) historians. The 'critical' part marks an orientation that's fundamentally modern, not postmodern, insofar as it echoes Kant's critique of the empiricism of his day (in the 18th century). I'm putting this as if I agree with the critical theorists in these debates. I don't. I think mainstream liberal or conservative historians often have good replies. But the challenges are nonetheless illuminating because they ask how best to pursue an evidence-based approach to history. Debates between critical theorists and postmodernists were the comfort food of my undergraduate education in the 1990s (in English, comp lit, and philosophy). Again, these positions are, or at least were, opposed. See, for example, Habermas's mid-80s Philosophical Discourse of Modernity, a marked-up copy of which I still have on my shelf. Habermas was a critical theorist, and as such he was trying to show that postmodernists like Derrida and Foucault are wrong. I used to carry the book around to help me refute my PoMo classmates back in the day. Critical theory is the enemy of postmodernism. That's too simple, of course. Some of the rhetorical tics of postmodernism persist, and there's no reason why an individual scholar or teacher can't learn from both movements. But the movement you're referring to -- the idea that a 'radical' stance toward dominant narratives must question the very idea of 'truth' or 'right' -- is pretty much dead. That was the movement that I used critical theory texts to help me counter when my peers lapsed into navel-gazing worries about the 'phallogocentrism of truth' or 'the very idea of a metanarrative' 30+ years ago, and I think it's fair to say that my side -- the side of enlightenment and reason -- won, though not in the way envisioned in righwing think-tanks. Sure, politicians like Ron DeSantis think all these ideas smell like 'critical theory' -- 'critical theory' being, in their mouths, just the name of a particularly stupid form of relativism or reverse-racist leftism or whatever. (Let's just call all the bad stuff 'critical theory' -- thanks, Chris Rufo!) If you want to talk like that, I can't stop you. |