Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The Humanities: What Future?
View through CrossRef
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.
Title: The Humanities: What Future?
Description:
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.
Related Results
Covid – 19: An Indication towards Digital Humanities
Covid – 19: An Indication towards Digital Humanities
The word ‘Humanities’ in its condensed form is generally associated with teaching of English. But it has a major role to play in area of arts and literature, philosophy, language, ...
FAIRness of research data in humanities
FAIRness of research data in humanities
Research data are considered the primary result and output of scientific research, and sharing and reusing data are key aspects of the transition to open science on a European leve...
Do the medical humanities enrich learning during an undergraduate anaesthetic placement?
Do the medical humanities enrich learning during an undergraduate anaesthetic placement?
This article was migrated. The article was marked as recommended. The value of humanities may not be immediately apparent to those focused on the medical sciences. Medical humaniti...
Humanities Computing as Digital Humanities
Humanities Computing as Digital Humanities
This article presents an examination of how digital humanities is currently conceived and described, and examines the discursive shift from humanities computing to digital humaniti...
DAMPAK TEKNOLOGI TERHADAP PROSES BELAJAR MENGAJAR
DAMPAK TEKNOLOGI TERHADAP PROSES BELAJAR MENGAJAR
DAFTAR PUSTAKAAditama, M. H. R., & Selfiardy, S. (2022). Kehidupan Mahasiswa Kuliah Sambil Bekerja di Masa Pandemi Covid-19. Kidspedia: Jurnal Pendidikan Anak Usia Dini, 3(...
DIGITAL HUMANITIES – HUMANIORAS FREMTID?
DIGITAL HUMANITIES – HUMANIORAS FREMTID?
DIGITAL HUMANITIES: THE FUTURE OF THE HUMANITIES | The article deals with a widespread global phenomen within the Humanities, i.e. Digital Humanities. In the wake of the spreadof t...
‘This ever more amorphous thing called Digital Humanities’: Whither the Humanities Project?
‘This ever more amorphous thing called Digital Humanities’: Whither the Humanities Project?
In 2012, Digital Humanities became one of the most talked-about topics in the humanities and was suggested as a movement that could possibly help halt the decline in the traditiona...
Introduction
Introduction
In Humanities Perspectives in Peace Education: Re-Engaging the Heart of Peace Studies, scholar-teachers across a variety of humanities fields explore the content, methods, and peda...

