We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
America Goes to College

Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
- Format:
-
21 November 2002

Extols the virtue of small liberal arts colleges and the liberal arts tradition.
A rallying cry on behalf of a distinctly American institution of higher learning-the small liberal arts college-America Goes to College combines broad-based scholarship with personal narrative and reflection. In a highly entertaining manner, John E. Seery showcases the precarious successes of a well-rounded liberal arts college education, while at the same time signaling some of the dangers that loom on the horizon. Seery contends that the liberal arts are best pursued within the face-to-face interactive setting, characteristic of the small college classroom, as opposed to the large university lecture hall. Moreover and more provocatively, he identifies political theorists as the proper custodians and practitioners of the liberal arts tradition as it unfolds today. It is the unfettered freedom of the small liberal arts college, where vision and practice can actually coincide, that makes it the embodiment of the advantages of the American higher education system-a national treasure deserving of support.


Acknowledgments
Introduction: Political Theory for the Liberal Arts
CANONS
1. My Turn: A Great Bookish Tell-all
2. The Columbus Controversy as Confession
COLLEGES
3. George Kateb's Main Thing
4. What Teaching at Pomona College Means to Me
CONTROVERSIES
5. Moral Perfectionism and Abortion Politics
6. Political Philosophy in the Twilight of an Idol
CANVASES
7. Grant Wood's Political Gothic
8. Do Media Studies Belong in a Liberal Arts Curriculum?
COMPOSITIONS
9. Unremembered Acts Remembered
10. Castles in the Air: An Essay on Political Foundations
COMMISSIONS
11. Political Theory in the Twentieth Century
12. America Goes to College: A Manifesto of Sorts
Notes
Index