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Late last month, the faculty on the College Advisory Council (CAC) gave me a writing assignment. In preparation for our Fall 2017 faculty meeting on November 17, they asked me to take a step back from the updates on priorities, imperatives, and initiatives that have occupied our more recent faculty meetings, to articulate a broader vision of the College of Arts & Letters in the 21st century mission of Michigan State University.

In asking me to consider more carefully and voice more clearly why we are doing what we do in the context of this broader educational mission, the CAC has done what great educators in the liberal arts tradition require us habitually to do: reflect upon and weave meaning into the fabric of our shared lives.

This is the context from which this text begins, and already we have arrived at a preliminary response, for the assignment requires the production of a text in response to a request for meaning; and this activity, identified already as a kind of weaving, animates the life of the College of Arts & Letters in the MSU context.

The word “text” comes from the Latin ‘textus’, that which is woven, the past participle of ‘texere’, which means “to weave, to braid, to join.” At its root is the Proto-Indo-European, *teks, from which English derives words like context, pretext, subtle, technology, and textile. In this, we hear too the Greek word ‘techne’, the art of making, or perhaps better, the making associated with the arts.

We linger over this word because texts matter. They create meaning by undertaking practices of weaving, bringing disparate elements together into a more textured whole.

So let us begin where we find ourselves, here in the MSU context, now as technology reshapes our relationships with one another.

As we emphasized in the 2017 Dean’s Report, the Agricultural College of the State of Michigan faced a critical moment of decision in 1859, when the State Legislature considered reducing the four-year liberal arts curriculum to a two-year program more narrowly focused on farm management. The eloquence of the faculty and students in advocating for the value of a broad liberal arts education won the day in 1861 when the Act to Reorganize the Agricultural College of the State of Michigan situated the liberal arts endeavor at the heart of the mission. The faculty and students recognized then, what we know now: there is no more practical education than a liberal arts education; for it cultivates critical capacities of discernment and nurtures habits of weaving that tighten the fabric of community.

This commitment to a broad liberal arts education was reaffirmed more than 100 years later, in 1962, by a decision to divide what was then the College of Science and Arts into three core Colleges: Arts & Letters, Social Science, and Natural Science. According to the January 22nd, 1962, State News, Provost Paul Miller “called the proposed split an attempt to emphasize the fundamental disciplines in a society where professional schools and institutes are gaining stature.” David Thomas, author of Michigan State College: John Hannah and the Creation of a World University, 1926–1969, emphasized that this move would “allow MSU to put more emphasis on liberal arts at the undergraduate level,” which would facilitate the more holistic development of students in their relationship to modern society.1

On its surface, it may seem counter-intuitive to break up a large College of Science and Arts as a strategy by which to emphasize and advance the liberal arts; but this division, and the assignment of an intellectual leader of each core College, enables precisely the kind of interdisciplinary weaving that adds liberal arts texture to the education and research mission of the University.

As the primary texts of Michigan State University, the core colleges are well positioned to weave the values and practices of the liberal arts more tightly into the student, faculty, and alumni experience.

The College of Arts & Letters has long embodied these practices of weaving in our pedagogical, creative, and scholarly activities. But the present moment demands something more of us. This context, saturated by technology, requires a more textured response.

Kairos: The Opportune Moment

In her book, The New Education, Cathy Davidson recognizes the transformative impact the invention of the Internet has had on human culture, and particularly on the nature of the education our students will need to thrive in a globally interconnected networked world.2 For Davidson, this requires the remaking of the university so that we foster student-centered, active learning approaches that empower our students to advance knowledge within the complex contexts in which they find themselves, drawing upon the expertise they have cultivated in the information-rich world they inhabit.

As students attempt to chart meaningful lives in a world in which information is widely accessible but its significance remains ambiguous and elusive, the virtues of a liberal arts education gain in urgency.

We have spoken of these virtues before, but we return to them again here as we chart our path forward. They include: the ability to communicate with eloquence, embrace diversity with grace, perceive globally with imagination, and respond to complexity with nuance. The core habits that enable us to put these virtues into practice, to weave them into our pedagogy, research, and creative activity, include attentive listening, critical discernment, and ethical imagination.

Don’t confuse ethical imagination with empathy. Although empathy is a necessary condition for ethical imagination, it remains too subjective a feeling. Ethical imagination requires more us. It must be nurtured by attentive listening if it is to first become empathy, but it must also draw upon our capacities of critique in order to enable us to discern new possibilities for a more just future within the context in which we find ourselves.

Ethical imagination gives texture to the responses we in the College of Arts & Letters must undertake in the present moment as emerging technologies reshape the world and our relationships with one another in it. In this, we return to ancient capacities of what the Greeks called ‘kairos’, the abilities to respond with the right tension, at the right time, in the right ways, so that the texture of our relationships with one another is enriched and rendered more beautiful.

But this remains still too abstract; the moment requires practices of weaving. The second meaning of the Greek word ‘kairos suggests as much; for ‘kairos’ also names the “row of thrums in the loom, to which the threads of the warp are attached.” The kairos enables the weaving of warp and weft.

So while I recognize and affirm the need to articulate a broader vision of the College of Arts & Letters in the 21st century MSU mission, the moment demands more of us than a vision. If a great liberal arts education empowers us to disentangle ourselves from the limitations and injustices of our present reality in order to imagine a more just and beautiful future, it must also enable us to weave that vision into the life of the communities about which we care so deeply.

So the assignment the CAC has given me cannot be accomplished simply by stepping back from the priorities, imperatives, and initiatives we are now undertaking; for those very activities are the ways we are weaving the liberal arts into the fabric of the University.

Five Ways of Weaving

  1. The name of our emerging School of Language Sciences, Literatures & Cultures points already to the kind of weaving the College embodies and sustains. In it we discern the interconnected threads that give the study of language texture. Language is the medium through which humans make meaning, and the strengths we bring to the study of language through our science, our pedagogy, and our literary and cultural imagination will, through the School, be woven more tightly into the University and the broader communities we seek to transform.
  2. Let the Center for Interdisciplinarity be a loom. This year, we are teasing and carding conversations within the College and across campus that will enable us to weave the core commitments of the liberal arts  —  the very virtues of which we have been speaking  —  into the research mission of the University.
  3. We are advancing our promise to practice inclusion as a matter of institutional practice through our Consortium for Critical Diversity in a Digital Age Research (CEDAR) initiative. Drawing on and facilitating the the Critical Diversity in a Digital Age cluster hiring strategy and nurturing connections among current faculty, CEDAR is an interdisciplinary catalyst for MSU scholarship that critically engages questions of diversity in a digital age.
  4. Our Citizen Scholars Program, now in its second year, continues to embody precisely the sort of accessible, student-centered, active learning experiences Davidson suggests must be at the heart of our attempts to remake the University for the 21st century.
  5. The Excel Network weaves experiential education together with career development and alumni relations to empower students to chart a successful path from college to the world of meaningful work.

These are the priorities and initiatives that enable us to continue to weave the virtues of the liberal arts into the fabric of Michigan State University.

Let the signature of the College of Arts & Letters be our practices of weaving, embodied in the texture of the texts we create, made elegant and graceful by the depth and integrity of the values that inform them. Undertaking these practices in this moment, shaped by ethical imagination, will enable us to continue to weave the liberal arts into the rich and varied tapestry that connects Michigan State University to the world that so urgently needs the care we can provide.

  1. Thomas, David. Michigan State College: John Hannah and the Creation of a World University, 1926-1969. First edition. East Lansing, MI: Michigan State University Press, 2008, 402.
  2. Davidson, Cathy N. The New Education: How to Revolutionize the University to Prepare Students for a World In Flux. 1 edition. New York: Basic Books, 2017, 5.

5 Comments

  • Suzanne Wagner says:

    On behalf of the CAC, many thanks for this thoughtful piece. Here is a question from us that we hope you might touch on tomorrow. You provide a bit of historical context about CAL’s development. Indeed, we are odd among peer institutions in that we are a college of liberal arts and humanities (rather than, for instance, arts and sciences). How do you see our priorities and directions in today’s context–in 2017 rather than in 1962, when CAL was formed? Are there ways in which we do or can leverage the fact that we’re a stand-alone liberal arts college?

    • Christopher Long says:

      Thanks, Suzanne, and thanks to the CAC for prompting these reflections and for following up here online to open a further dialogue. I look forward to our face to face conversation on the 17th, but I also appreciate your willingness to engage this conversation more publicly here.

      In a way, this online conversation points to the context in which a liberal arts education and the cultivated practices of the liberal arts virtues of which I spoke gain in urgency. So, perhaps we could start here, where the attempt to articulate a vision for the College is woven into an online, asynchronous conversation about the broader significance of our work.

      A sophisticated understanding of technology, both of how it works for us and upon us, has long been a strength of the College. Through literary, artistic, cultural, philosophical, historical, and scientific theory and practice, the College of Arts & Letters has sought to uncover and critically consider the manner in which technology shapes and misshapes our human relationship with the world. Thus, as a College we are well positioned to weave this sophisticated understanding of technology together with the enduring virtues of a liberal arts education into our teaching and research.

      In the current context, drawing on these combined strengths will enable us to advance initiatives that will educate the next generation of citizens capable of making decisions shaped by ethical imagination. Drawing on these strengths too will enable us to advance interdisciplinary research and creative activities that enrich a wider public.

      To do this, however, requires us to collaborate with the other colleges at the University and with domestic and international community partners. This is one reason I tried to emphasize the central importance of practices of weaving.

  • The metaphor of the loom, the process of weaving, and the resulting artifact (textile or texto) is one that many of us use in the critical study of texts. Spanish “tejido” (texture, weave, fabric, textile) and “texto” (literary text, historical text, etc.) have their origin in Latin “textum.” Weaving and the loom are also metaphors for collaboration across disciplines and languages. I have always being drawn to looms and weavings and in the making of as I have posted here: https://rocioquispeagnoli.com/collaborations/ Different colors and threads come together in the loom to design and produce an intricate, diverse and beautiful textile that yields multiple meanings.
    I am excited about the doors that are being opened through this vision.

    • Christopher Long says:

      Thanks, Rocio, for this comment and the link. The image you captured and highlighted demonstrates the rich texture of the sorts of collaborations we are seeking to cultivate. I appreciated this line from your post:

      Different colors and threads come together in the loom to design and produce an intricate, diverse and beautiful textile that yield multiple meanings. This image constitutes a visual metaphor for collaboration.

      My hope is that the school will be a catalyst for this sort of collaboration, a way of practicing the intricate weaving of which you speak here and, of course, on the excellent Collaborative Edge podcast.

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