The Humanities: What Future?

Author:

Pike Deborah1

Affiliation:

1. School of Arts and Sciences, University of Notre Dame Australia, Sydney, NSW 2007, Australia

Abstract

Higher education in Australia is in a period of crisis and transition. While COVID-related events and their impacts have made it difficult for all areas of university academic endeavour, among the hardest hit have been humanities. Drawing on live interviews with professors in a range of humanities disciplines, the paper elucidates various elements of the crisis, which includes a summary of the impacts of the last three decades’ rise in neoliberalist imperatives within the university sector. The paper then argues that a robust defence of the humanities needs to be made and uses literary studies as its focus. Today, we are more in need of the humanities than ever. But this is a complex undertaking as research in higher education and live interviews reveal; the dictates of measurement, accountability, and questions of value within the humanities remain vexed; and while the aims and requirements of humanities studies may be at odds with neoliberalist demands and corporatisation, the humanities themselves may also be contributing to their own demise. Therefore, I offer future directions: I argue for the urgent need for the humanities to reinvigorate their ethical and critical functions, the need to demonstrate the connections between the humanities and wellbeing, the imperative to slow down and to eradicate the over-casualisation of academia, and the necessity for the humanities to articulate more clearly their connections with employment outcomes for a dynamic and evolving future.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference75 articles.

1. A New Approach (2021, December 09). The Big Picture: Public Expenditure on Artistic, Cultural and Creativity in Australia. Available online: https://newapproach.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/1-ANA-InsightReportOne-FullReport-1.pdf.

2. Allahar, Anton, and Côté, James (2011). Lowering Higher Education: The Rise of Corporate Universities and the Fall of Liberal Education, Toronto UP.

3. Arnold, Matthew (1994). Culture and Anarchy: An Essay in Political and Social Criticism, Yale UP. First published 1889.

4. Australian Academy of the Humanities (2021, December 09). Mapping the Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences in Australia. Available online: https://humanities.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/AAH-Mapping-HASS-2014.pdf.

5. Australian Government Department of Education, Skills and Employment (2021, December 09). Job-Ready Graduates Discussion Paper, Available online: https://www.dese.gov.au/job-ready/resources/job-ready-graduated-discussion-paper.

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