From The Newsobserver
Duke professor leaves classroom, hopes to restore
importance of language, history, literature
Peter Burian began teaching Duke students Greek drama and
Latin more than four decades ago, before students had computers in their
pockets and earbuds dangling from their necks. The classics professor
challenges today's undergraduate to slow down, dig deep and think before they
communicate. In an era when students are obsessed with technology and instant
everything, Burian leads them on a journey to the ancient world, where they
find surprisingly relevant messages. After 44 years, he will teach his last class
on Wednesday.
In a narrow seminar room at Duke University,
Peter Burian leads 14 students through ancient Rome to the palatial Baths of
Caracalla, where 1,600 Romans at a time could soak in pools of cool, warm and
hot water.
His mellifluous voice narrates the slideshow from his
laptop. The imperial baths, he said, were a place where all of society
gathered, where any Roman could rub shoulders with another. “There’s nothing
like taking all of your clothes off to level the playing field,” Burian told
the students.
It’s the end of the semester, and that means the students
are witnessing the decline of the Roman Empire, with parallels to the modern
economic meltdown in Greece and other parts of Europe.
For 44 years, Burian, a professor of classical studies,
has transported his students to the ancient world, a place inhabited by
emperors and slaves, gods and heroes. And along the way, he has taught them
about their own time and place, and maybe a bit about themselves.
Burian’s last class at Duke was Wednesday. At 68, he’s
retiring from the classroom, but will spend a year as dean of humanities at
Duke, where he will put his wisdom to work on larger questions about the study
of languages, literature, history, philosophy, religion.
It’s a point of critical tension for American higher
education. For decades, students have been turning away from those subjects in
favor of social sciences, business and science. In 1967, nearly 18 percent of
all U.S. undergraduate degrees awarded were in the humanities; in 2009, the
share had dropped to about 8 percent, according to data from the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences.
It’s no wonder. Any conversation about education these
days seems to revolve around “STEM,” the acronym for science, technology,
engineering and mathematics. People talk about higher education as job
preparation, and parents who pay hefty tuition bills get antsy if their
children aren’t acquiring marketable skills.
Amid the rush to math and science, though, there is a
growing chorus of those who say the humanities may actually be great
preparation for a complex world. Earlier this month, about 250 higher education
leaders from across the country gathered at Wake Forest University for a
conference called “Rethinking Success: From the Liberal Arts to Careers in the
21st Century.” There, a CEO, an economist and former Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice talked about the value of a broad education that challenges
students to be critical thinkers and creative problem solvers.
Burian, too, believes there is lifelong value to
understanding what happened 2,000 years ago, to digging into the difficult
works of Virgil, Homer and Euripides.
“There’s a place for stuff that really does kind of make
you slow down and think, make you question whether you understand what’s going
on, make you wonder about your own beliefs,” Burian said. “The greater value is
discovering yourself in some way.”
Slow down, think
In his calm, gentle way, Burian urges his students to
reflect. He requires them to bring a question to class each day, which provides
a launch pad for discussion.
Burian arrived at Duke in 1968, long before laptops and
iPads, Facebook and Twitter. Students are as smart and accomplished as ever, he
said, though they don’t seem to read as much as they used to.
“People are flooded with information,” he said.
“Sometimes I think that we should just stop using the word information for a
decade or so until we can figure it out exactly what we mean by it. Everything
is information. It’s all out there and the idea is to get as much of it as
quickly as you can. That sort of leaves open the question of what you do with
it. I guess that that’s my feeling about where the humanities ought to come
in.”
Duke is taking a new look at how these subjects fit into
the university’s curriculum. Last year, the university received a five-year, $6
million grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to revitalize undergraduate
humanities.
Part of the effort will look at how the traditional
fields fit in with vast changes in society. So, for example, studying the Arab
Spring revolutions requires understanding technology and social networks; it
also must include questions about language, culture and history.
“We want to be with it, we want to be modern, we want not
to seem tedious and old-fashioned and frumpy,” Burian said in his office,
surrounded by floor-to-ceiling shelves crammed with books. “But really, a lot
of what the traditional humanities have been good for is not speeding up and
creating all the information that you can, but in slowing down, reflecting,
developing the imagination, taking the long view and thinking about how to
think. And if we don’t have that role, I’m not sure where it’s going to come
from.”
So there is work to do, and that’s what Burian will sink
his teeth into next year as dean.
It shouldn’t be a problem for the scholar in Greek drama
and literary translation who has written five books, numerous articles and
taught more than 50 different courses during his years at Duke. Even in his
last semester in the classroom, he took on a new course and taught every
weekday – unusual for a senior faculty member.
He takes on demanding translations, speaks beautiful
Italian and he lends his ear to students, said Tolly Boatwright, a professor in
classical studies.
“He offers students a way to connect with humanities and
being human,” Boatwright said. “He listens to students and draws them out and
encourages them to develop in that way.”
Haun Saussy enrolled at Duke in 1977, and decided to try
Burian’s course in beginning Greek. By Christmas, he was reading Plato.
“Right away I decided that being a Greek major was the
most interesting thing I could do,” said Saussy, now a professor of Chinese and
comparative literature at the University of Chicago. “He was just a terrific teacher
... He was just a great observer and commentator and made it come alive.”
Adapting at Duke
Burian was raised around Boston and in Iowa City, where
his father was an ophthalmologist at the University of Iowa. His family was
dominated by science and medical types, and he tried it himself, working at a
hospital kidney lab for two summers.
It wasn’t for him. A bookish youngster, he enrolled at
the University of Michigan, where his freshman adviser encouraged him to try
Greek. He was hooked, and went on to write his Princeton dissertation on Greek
tragedy.
After he took a job at Duke, Burian had to overcome his
anxiety about standing up in front of a classroom. Short and just 25, he wore a
tie to class every day so the students knew he was the professor.
“I’d never taught anybody anything,” he said. “My
greatest fear was that 40 or 45 minutes in I’d run out of things to say and
everybody would see me for the fraud that I was.”
So he over-prepared, every night writing and refining his
lectures. “Once I relaxed a little bit,” he said, “I realized I loved
teaching.”
Then, of course, he had to learn about the South. When he
tried to start a chapter of Faculty Against the Vietnam War, he was called on
the carpet by an administrator who told him campus mail could not be used for
private activities. And crossing the parking lot on the way from a protest in
Army surplus gear, the scruffy-bearded Burian encountered the Duke president.
“Terry Sanford emerges and looks at me with this obvious
what-the-hell-is-this-person-doing-on-my-campus look and said, ‘Howdy.’ And I
said, ‘Howdy.’”
Though he may have started as an outsider, Burian would
become something of an institution at Duke. He chaired his department and
served on dozens of university committees; he led the main faculty governance
body, the Academic Council, in 2000-2002.
Along the way, he got a front-row seat as Duke blossomed
from a good regional campus to a national player and a top-10 university.
Duke’s rise was partly due to its investment in humanities, Burian said, when a
provost realized he could build a first-rate English department for the price
of a few chemists with their labs and graduate students.
Back at the classroom, Burian fumbles a bit with a cord
that doesn’t work with his laptop. During the slideshow, he clicks on the wrong
spot, and the slides disappear. A student helps him get back on track with his
mouse.
Burian may not be completely comfortable with the latest
technology. But when he assigns his students “The Iliad,” he knows that they
gain something from the difficult epic poem.
They ride the emotional journey of Achilles, the fierce
warrior who is ultimately a fragile character.
“In the end, the kinds of human issues that we all face
are identifiable,” Burian said. “There’s something important about recognizing
that people have been worrying about the same things, arguing about them,
desperately trying to understand them, forever.”
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