The Nature of College. James J. Farrell

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The Nature of College - James J. Farrell

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Nature of Fertility

       Good Sex on a Good Planet: Making Love as if Nature Mattered

       Chapter 9 - The Nature of Religion

       The Spiritual Life of College Students

       Religion as a Natural Resource for Environmentalism

       A Culture of Silence

       ”Found difficult, and left untried”

       Chapter 10 - The Nature of Politics

       How College Students Think About Politics

       “I’m Not Political”

       Higher Education and “Sitizenship”

       New Politics, Net Politics

       The Individualization of Responsibility

       The Institutionalization of Responsibility

       Training for an Ecological Revolution

       Chapter 11 - Making Environmental History

       Making History on Campus: What’s Happening

       Making History on Campus: What’s Not Happening

       Making Environmental History: What Could Happen

       Commons Sense for College Culture

       Notes

       Acknowledgements

       More Nonfiction from Milkweed Editions

       Milkweed Editions

       Copyright Page

      Also by JAmEs J. FArr Ell

       Inventing the American Way of Death, 1830-1920

       The Nuclear Devil’s Dictionary

       The Spirit of the Sixties

      One Nation Under Goods:

       Malls and the Seductions of American Shopping

       To America’s College Students

      Prelude

       A way of seeing is also a way of not seeing.

      Kenneth burke, Permanence and Change

      “Ordinary” is just another word for not paying attention.

      Frank Gohlke and mark I owry, “Prairie Castles”

      We have several thousand thoughts a day, and probably about 95 percent of those thoughts are the same every day.

      John Adams, Thinking Tod ay as if Tomorrow Mattered

      Education, I fear, is learning to see one thing by going blind to another.

      Aldo l eopold, A Sand County Almanac

      I am sane only when I have risen above my common sense. ...

       Wisdom is not common.

      Henry David Thoreau, Journal entry: June 22, 1851

      College students have a lot on their minds. A few years ago, students of mine mapped the mind of an average college student. I gave them an outline of an empty head and asked them to fill it with the everyday concerns of college life. The results were fascinating: classes, homework, grades, friends and family, sex and relationships, food and snacks, drinking and drugs, jobs and financial issues all interrelated with religious and moral concerns. They try, as one student said, “to figure out what the hell they’re going to do with the rest of their lives.”

      As this suggests, students think about a lot at college. But what do they really learn? In the classroom they pick up some math, a little science, and a social study or two. They learn enough American history and political science to be competitive on trivia night, but they also acquire such subtle skills as how to look attentive in class while thinking of sex, relationships, and money. They discover, quickly, the social value of a major, which is why so many incoming students are premed or pre-law. If they aren’t careful, students might get stereotyped by less desirable majors, like the soon-to-be-impoverished poets in English or the dreamers in the art department. By the second semester of their first year they already know which professors give an “easy A” and why they should never take an 8:00 a.m. class again. Masters at multitasking, they procrastinate, text friends, check Facebook, drink coffee, listen to music, and clean—all at once.

      At college, students learn to live for the breaks and wait for the weekend. They know which fraternities throw the wildest parties. They master the fine art of drinking beer from a bong or a Frisbee or a boot, along with the more difficult lessons associated with overcoming a hangover. At parties and elsewhere, students learn how to present themselves physically and socially for maximum magnetism. Once they draw someone in, students practice other arts and crafts, like the fine art of hooking up or the subtle craft of condom use. They find the best campus places for privacy and discover the delicate politics of “sexile.”

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