The Man Who Died for the Liberal Arts: The Atlantic, May 2024
'The Man Who Died for the Liberal Arts,' The Atlantic, May 2024. - In 1942, aboard ship and heading for war, a young sailormy unclewrote a letter home, describing and defining the principles he was fighting for. By David M. Shribman. 🇺🇲- Philip Shribman, in a college photo from around 1940; behind it, an excerpt from a wartime letter he sent to the sociology professor George F. Theriault.
Chugging through Pacific waters in February 1942, the USS Crescent City was ferrying construction equipment and Navy personnel to Pearl Harbor, dispatched there to assist in repairing the severely damaged naval base after the Japanese attack. A young ensignreal eager to get off that ship and get into action, in the recollection of an enlisted Navy man who encountered himsat down and wrote a letter to his younger brother, who one day would be my father.
Philip Alvan Shribman, a recent graduate of Dartmouth and just a month away from his 22nd birthday, was not worldly but understood that he had been thrust into a world conflict that was more than a contest of arms. At stake were the life, customs, and values that he knew. He was a quiet young man, taciturn in the old New England way, but he had much to say in this letter, written from the precipice of battle to a brother on the precipice of adulthood. His scrawl consumed five pages of Navy stationery.
Its growing on me with increasing rapidity that youre about set to go to college, he wrote to his brother, Dick, then living with my grandparents in Salem, Massachusetts, and tho Im one hell of a guy to talkand tho I hate preachinglet me just write this & well call it quits. He acknowledged from the start that this letter wont do much gooda letter that, in the eight decades since it was written, has been read by three generations of my family. In it, Phil Shribman set out the virtues and values of the liberal arts at a time when universities from coast to coast were transitioning into training grounds for Americas armed forces...
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2024/05/philip-shribman-liberal-arts-wwii/677836/
- David Shribman was for many years the executive editor of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. He was awarded a Pulitzer Prize in 1995 for his writing on American political culture
niyad
(113,550 posts)IbogaProject
(2,840 posts)Here https://archive.is/0yEPM
For educational and research use
appalachiablue
(41,170 posts)appalachiablue
(41,170 posts)no_hypocrisy
(46,182 posts)Logic, German, Italian, Spanish, art history, theater history, four eras of music history, European civilisation, D.H. Lawrence, photography, music theory, writing, and more.
No focus on careers. Critical thinking.
niyad
(113,550 posts)fortunate enough to go to one of the best LA colleges in the country, four amazing years that I treasure on every level. And, 50- plus years later, I am still connected, still being enriched, still learning, as I am fortunate enough to be able to attend lectures, concerts, all manner of events. Back in 2001, I was waiting in line to attend a lecture, and heard the person in front of me being addressed by name. He had been my advisor 30+` years back. When they were finished speaking, I said, "Professor F. you won't remember me," and he said, "But of course I remember you, Ms. F." , and we talked for about ten minutes until the doors opened to admit us.