Abstract

Critical thinking skills are valued across the university. Derek Bok writes that 90 percent of faculty identify critical thinking as the most important goal of a university education. In English and foreign language departments, critical thinking has often served as a default goal when faculty cannot agree on which texts or approaches to teach. Without disputing the importance of these skills, I argue that an exclusive focus on critical thinking compromises more modest but also very worthy aims, including appreciation. This article makes the case for renewed attention to appreciation as a goal of literary study. I argue that teaching appreciation helps to cultivate virtues of open-mindedness, responsiveness, and attunement, and that such teaching may be useful in addressing widespread declines in reading and reading skills. At the end of the essay I describe changes I have made in my own teaching practices to emphasize literary appreciation.

Journal
Pedagogy
Published
2009-04-01
DOI
10.1215/15314200-2008-035
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Citation Context

Cited by in this index (2)

  1. Pedagogy
  2. Pedagogy

References (4)

  1. Bok, Derek. 2006. Our Underachieving Colleges. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
  2. Chekhov, Anton. 1984. “The Lady with a Dog.” In The Russian Master and Other Stories, trans. and ed. Ronald H…
  3. Corn, Wanda. 2000. The Great American Thing: Modern Art and National Identity, 1915 – 1935. Berkeley: Univers…
  4. Fadiman, Anne. 1998. The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.