Love Lit or Study It, But Not Both
Thomas H. Benton has an interesting piece in which he argues that pursuing a Ph.D. in English requires that one give up the things that attracted one to the literature in the first place.
In a course I taught last spring, after three months of tracing the development of literary theory from humanism to structuralism to poststructuralism to the dilemmas of the present, I finally asked my students the question: "So, why do you want to study literature, knowing what you now know?" I wondered if studying a century of cynicism had altered their motives in the slightest.
They were all considering graduate school, but their answers had little to do with what I knew they would need to write in their application essays. Sitting in a circle in the grass, backed by purple hydrangeas, they offered the following motives:
Formative experiences with reading as a child: being read to by beloved parents and siblings, discovering the world of books and solitude at a young age. Feelings of alienation from one’s peers in adolescence, turning to books as a form of escapism and as a search for a sympathetic connection to other people in other places and times. A love for books themselves, and libraries, as sites of memory and comfort. A "geeky" attraction to intricate alternate worlds such as those created by Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, and George Lucas....
This may all be true, but when I started graduate studies in English as a masters student, I was told the readers stopped with an MA and the scholars went on to get Ph.D.'s.
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