Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Losing faith in the humanities: "The cultural secularization" proposal

#1
C C Offline
https://www.chronicle.com/interactives/2...OEFmX0hiRQ

EXCERPT (Simon During): Are the humanities over? [...] There are certainly reasons to think so. It is widely believed that humanities graduates can’t easily find jobs; political support for them seems to be evaporating; enrollments in many subjects are down. ... Even if the situation turns out to be less than terminal, something remarkable is underway. Bewilderment and demoralization are everywhere. Centuries-old lineages and heritages are being broken.

I want to propose ... that, in the West, secularization has happened not once but twice. It happened first in relation to religion, and second, more recently, in relation to culture and the humanities. We all understand what religious secularization has been — the process by which religion ... has been marginalized ... A similar process is underway in the humanities. Faith has been lost across two different zones: first, religion; then, high culture. ... We now live in a doubly secularized age, post-religious and postcanonical. The humanities have become merely a (rather eccentric) option for a small fraction of the population.

Cultural secularization resembles earlier religious secularization. ... As a society, the value of a canon that carries our cultural or, as they once said, “civilizational” values can no longer be assumed. These values are being displaced and critiqued by other ostensibly more “enlightened” ways of thinking. The institution — the academic humanities — that officially preserved and disseminated civilizational history is being hollowed out, partly from within. Only remnants are left.

For all that, we should not insist too strongly on analogies between the two secularizations. Doing that risks downplaying the ways in which they differ...

[...] two forms of cultural secularization — the erosion of canonicity and the loss of authority — are joined. That is why it has become almost impossible today to affirm the social or ethical value in studying, say, verse forms in John Dryden’s poetry; Gotthold Ephraim Lessing’s relation to Moses Mendelssohn; the early modern Dutch ship-building trade; differences between humanist thought in Florence and Milan in the quattrocento; contemporary analytic philosophy’s technical debate over free will. Such topics are of course still researched and even taught, but they have become socially and culturally peripheral precisely because they are not connected to a communal acknowledgment of the high humanities’ value. Thus, at least in Anglophone countries, it has become all but impossible publicly to defend the use of taxpayer money on them.

So why did cultural secularization happen? Globalization, of course, has been one of its causes — globalization intertwined with both feminism and decoloniality. As such, it is a slightly contradictory globalization that affirms a relativism for which all cultures are ascribed equal value at the same time as it downgrades European high culture as a product of colonialism, patriarchy, and white supremacy. ... In this context, canonical European culture is dismissed as a vehicle for dead white men, of little interest to those who are neither men nor white nor dead.

A second cause of cultural secularization is what is often calledneoliberalism,” the extension of market relations into domains and institutions where they previously played little or no part.

Cultural secularization’s last and more minor cause is internal to the academy — namely, professionalization. It is obvious that cultural secularization has happened alongside the increasing self-enclosure of the academic disciplines.

Despite the second secularization, in some form or other the humanities retain considerable force and shaping power. The humanities have never had a single project or ethical center. [...] Despite the humanities’ variety and dispersion, they accrue a power that is hard to extinguish just because they provide fertile ground for historicized reasoning, truthfulness, memory, conservation, imagination, and judgment. ... This is why a secularized humanities — a postcanonical humanities — still reaches deep into our society through all kinds of networks and institutions, in many forms and media, often at a distance from the academy.

Most discussions of the humanities assume that they are essentially academic. This is a simplification [...] many of the most significant scholarly and theoretical contributions to that trajectory were written outside the academy. Indeed, beginning with the emergence of humanism ... until the later 19th century, the university system was routinely at odds with the currents that have most powerfully shaped the humanities as we know them. Historically, the humanities and the universities have mainly been opponents. Admittedly, the academy became more important to the humanities after 1945, and today it monopolizes at least our image of them, but it remains important to keep both today’s and the past’s extramural humanities in mind when we think about the whole humanities world.

[...] To recognize that the humanities are expressed in designs, fictions, movies, and so on — that a humanities sensibility is articulated in all these marketable forms — is to modify our sense of the humanities’ current imperilment. Under cultural secularization and its post-disciplinary university, the academic humanities lose authority even as the popular, amateur, and figurative humanities thrive.

What about resistance to cultural secularization? It will help to turn first to the three major genres of resistance to religious secularization. The first is absolutist: Secularization is wrong because God’s revelations and miracles are real. The second is functionalist: Religion provides the framework in which our society, culture, and morality are most securely grounded, and therefore attempts to marginalize it should be thwarted. The third is existential: Human beings are lost in a cosmos they cannot account for and therefore driven toward the transcendentalisms that articulate the wonder, awe, and anxiety they encounter in approaching Being. Religion, the thinking goes, best expresses those affective, existential needs in part because it binds us to earlier generations.

The secularization analogy is illuminating here. Some of those who wish to push back on cultural secularization do so on absolutist grounds, making the claim, for instance, that the cultural canon that holds Western civilization’s glories is where real beauty and truth exist. Some make a functionalist argument: The humanities provide irreplaceable grounds for a good democratic society. They can, for instance, shape empathetic and tolerant moral sensibilities more powerfully than any alternative. Last, some who resist cultural secularization do so on existential grounds. They claim that high cultural traditions and artifacts, along with the practices of interpretation and critique developed in response to them, provide us with the least reductive, most subtle, most profound, impersonal, and thoughtful experiences and lessons available to us, experiences that preserve and sanction the heritage.

None of these defenses seems to me particularly strong. Most of us agree that our canon does not bear any absolute truth and beauty, but rather it belongs to (a fraction of) one particular culture or cluster of cultures. The functionalist argument is weak because, as we have seen, the humanities preach many messages besides empathy and tolerance and the democratic, cosmopolitan virtues. And they don’t seem to make people more empathetic and tolerant anyway. The existential argument is politically impossible because of its implicit elitism: It divides and hierarchizes the world into those shaped by the humanities and those not. Against the grain of contemporary ideology, it also downgrades experiences that happen in, say, nature or in sport rather than in the proximity of high-cultural artifacts. But it is also weak because it is irrelevant. Some, especially among the upper-middle class, will no doubt continue to experience canonical cultural works as incomparably enriching (I do so myself), but that will not hold cultural secularization back. Under secularization, admiration for and commitment to the canon and the old disciplines remains an option (especially for elites), just as religion remains an option (especially for non-elites).

Some causes for cultural secularization are obdurate: It seems clear, for instance, that we cannot effectively prevent constant changes in technology. [...] There are, however, two causes of cultural secularization that are open to negotiation because they are more plainly ideological. The first has to do with the processes of intellectual “decolonization” and identity emancipation that underpin cultural secularization. The argument that, to put it very crudely, the received canon is to be downgraded on the grounds that it was created by white, male, heterosexist, Eurocentric, colonizing elites is very powerful today for reasons that most of us understand, and that express a desire for justice and equity that most of us share. But that understanding and that desire court dangerous simplifications. The purposes, qualities, and forms through which literature, art, music, and so on gain their powers and from which they draw their intensities should be understood as “relatively autonomous.” They have no direct relation to the broader social conditions out of which they are produced.

This is true of all aestheticized expressive forms in all societies. All known societies, white or not, colonizing or not, have been by the standards that are dominant in the humanities world today, cruel and unjust to some degree or other.
To judge cultures and works not by their own qualities but by our understandings of the equity or not, tolerance or not, fairness or not, of the societies or individuals that produced them, is to end up with an all but empty heritage, and, in particular, to disown and waste the pasts that have formed us and the constructed world in which we live.

The other cause of cultural secularization that should invite pushback is the neoliberal extension of market structures into the education system. High culture and the old humanities disciplines now stand more against than athwart the neoliberal state’s ideological and administrative protocols, which pressure all social formations whatsoever into market-based rationality...

[...] The high humanities are to be preserved, then, not just because they intensify practical reasoning and imagination; because they enable us fully to appreciate and enjoy the cultural heritage and connect us to the past; because they offer a space for free contemplation and reflection; because they help us spiritually “endure modernization” ... or because they encourage particular political subjectivities and movements. They are to be preserved because they are compelled to push back on the capitalist apparatuses that are dismantling them. In that pushback, what remains of them is aligned with green and radically left anti-capitalist movements. That is so even for those in the humanities (and there are many such) who do not personally sign on to political programs that formally contest current capitalist state regimes.

The idea that we are now enduring a second secularization — this time not of religion but of culture and the humanities — helps reconcile us to our losses by helping us to see their larger logic. It is important to remember that religious secularization does not mean the end of religion. The same will be true of cultural secularization. And just as religious secularization involved political resistance, adjustment to cultural secularization will involve critique and resistance. (MORE - details)
Reply
#2
Zinjanthropos Offline
I'll blame the Internet. So many opinions & too much information.
Reply


Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  On the end of the canon wars (the humanities: its demise, justification, rescuing) C C 0 116 Oct 26, 2022 11:41 PM
Last Post: C C
  Extending rights of nature & cultural hegemony concerns to barren worlds like Mars C C 0 79 May 11, 2021 07:46 PM
Last Post: C C
  The "faith is the most fundamental of the mathematical tools" proposal C C 0 219 Jan 7, 2020 02:17 AM
Last Post: C C



Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)