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mrswdk wrote:Fun fact: when the first engineering course started at a British university, the other professors hate it so much that every time the lecturer teaching the course needed rooms for it they'd block book everything so that he was forced to use stairwells, halls, go outside or whatever. They though that such a subject was too vocational and therefore not worthy of being taught alongside their courses.
mrswdk wrote:I doubt anyone has ever considered English Lit 'vocational' tbh.
In the mid-19th century, English literature within the United States was generally seen, within academia, as inferior to classical literature and its study generally limited to secondary schools. The gradual legitimization of the English language within American academia was accompanied by the introduction of a limited number of university courses devoted to the study of American literature. The first university-level course in American literature was introduced at Princeton University in 1872 by John Seely Hart. By the 1880s, several universities offered undergraduate classes in the subject, including Dartmouth College, Mount Holyoke College, the University of Notre Dame and the University of Iowa. The first graduate-level course in American literature was taught at the University of Virginia in 1891.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_ ... discipline)
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
saxitoxin wrote:Americans also looked down on English literature, apparently -In the mid-19th century, English literature within the United States was generally seen, within academia, as inferior to classical literature and its study generally limited to secondary schools. The gradual legitimization of the English language within American academia was accompanied by the introduction of a limited number of university courses devoted to the study of American literature. The first university-level course in American literature was introduced at Princeton University in 1872 by John Seely Hart. By the 1880s, several universities offered undergraduate classes in the subject, including Dartmouth College, Mount Holyoke College, the University of Notre Dame and the University of Iowa. The first graduate-level course in American literature was taught at the University of Virginia in 1891.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_ ... discipline)
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