It is 1916. You are an undergraduate at the University of Oxford studying theology in the hope that the ministry will be a good career choice. Your timetable says that you will be studying doctrine, biblical studies, the history of Christianity and Hebrew. In year three there is a single module given over to 鈥渙ther religions鈥.
Skip forward more than half a century and you are at King鈥檚 College London, sitting your English literature finals in the 1970s. You stare at the first line of your compulsory translation 鈥 鈥Ond 镁膩 ongeat se cyning 镁忙t, ond h膿 on 镁膩 duru 膿ode鈥 鈥 and wish you had revised that old Anglo-Saxon better.
Now look at this 2015 exam question. 鈥淒o African and Asian subcultures in Britain represent a 鈥榬adical space of possibility鈥? Discuss with reference to music and/or carnival.鈥
These three examples illustrate how the humanities have changed in their course content in 100 years. Faculties across the country now accept the anthropology of cyberspace, Stephen King鈥檚 novels or fieldwork on the Scouse accent as legitimate areas of study.
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But are these changes simply reflective of religious and cultural diversification in the UK, or has academia itself 鈥 through the approach of subjects such as sociology and anthropology 鈥 led the way in bringing courses up to date?
Reasons given for changes 鈥 about to be made 鈥 to one of the oldest courses in the country, theology at Oxford, would appear to suggest that it is the former. After seven years of consultation, a new course will be arriving in September 2017 under the name 鈥渢heology and religion鈥 for the first time.
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Johannes Zachhuber, professor of historical and systematic theology and the theology faculty鈥檚 board chairman, said that the name change 鈥渨as the moment we chose to recognise things really have become different鈥. While options to study 鈥渙ther鈥 religions are certainly not new, compulsory Christianity papers will be gone by the second year so students can avoid studying the religion altogether and take papers such as 鈥渇eminist approaches to theology and religion鈥, or 鈥淏uddhism in space and time鈥, should they so wish.
Professor Zachhuber said that the changes have been instigated by students and lecturers. 鈥淲e recognise that the people who come to study at Oxford come from a variety of different backgrounds and have legitimately different interests,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey come from the respected communities of Britain.鈥
The teaching faculty has changed too. A 鈥渕assive generational turnover鈥 of lecturers saw one-third of posts filled by often younger staff who have their own research interests.
鈥淚f you have a very rigid curriculum, there will be an increasing mismatch between what lecturers are doing in their research time and what they鈥檙e having to teach,鈥 explained Professor Zachhuber.
Benjamin Thompson, associate professor of medieval history and co-ordinator of undergraduate history at Oxford, said that he had seen similar changes in content in history in recent years. 鈥淭hese changes are what students want, because a bigger world is affecting them,鈥 said Dr Thompson. 鈥淭he most obvious example is the rise of militant Islam, or how well the Chinese economy is doing.鈥
Shifting attitudes
Such a shift is also timely, given a newly politicised student body, he said. 鈥淲ith the Cecil Rhodes statue debate, this 鈥榙ecolonisation鈥 of the curriculum is now quite interesting,鈥 said Dr Thompson.
But how much are these changes of approach linked to the shifting attitudes of students, staff and society? Have scholarly approaches themselves not had a role to play?
Dr Thompson pointed out that nowadays, to study a medieval knight, 鈥渨e might look at his uniform and trace its origins to the silk roads in the Far East鈥.
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It could be argued that mapping the social ties of an object in such a way is an anthropological method, rooted in a seminal book by anthropologist Arjun Appadurai, The Social Life of Things.
Edward Simpson, professor in social anthropology at Soas, University of London, suggested that the idea of an interconnected world has validated social anthropology from the start.
鈥淕lobalisation is our starting point these days, not our conclusion,鈥 he said, pointing out that funding streams for research are more interested in themes such as development or infrastructure than a particular place. 鈥淭here has been a shift from geography to theme,鈥 he said.
The same can be seen at Oxford, where there is now a paper called 鈥渢heme鈥 on the history course. Students might look at masculinity or global disease through the ages, disregarding the constraints of time and space to focus on a phenomenon.
This rise in themes seems to go hand in hand with a reduced focus on the 鈥済reats鈥 of history or of literature and an increased interest in the ordinary people who illustrate those themes. Lucy Munro, reader in early modern English literature at King鈥檚 College London, said the idea of the 鈥渘ation鈥 had been dethroned to make way for the subaltern 鈥 the oppressed and forgotten. 鈥淲e do still teach the big canonical texts, but alongside that we鈥檝e become interested in how they relate to alternative voices,鈥 said Dr Munro.
Indeed, the 鈥淓nglish鈥 in English literature no longer refers to a nation but to the language of English, no matter the nationality of the author. Critics themselves may be native American and African academics. And just as the Bible is no longer the heritage of theology, so is Anglo-Saxon no longer the basis of English literature. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 very accessible to most students,鈥 remembered Dr Munro, adding that they can now choose whether or not to study the old language.
Giving voice to the under-represented and overlooked in a humanities subject is now the name of the game. This has overtaken the big questions of the 1960s such as the relation between the individual and society, said Professor Simpson.
聽鈥淲e鈥檝e gone from asking the big philosophical questions to a problem-oriented, activist view,鈥 said Professor Simpson.
The ordinary and the alternative have emerged as academia鈥檚 most fashionable 鈥渢hemes鈥. They transcend boundaries of hierarchy, place and period. All this suggests that scholarly approaches to research could be at the root of changes to undergraduate teaching more widely in the humanities.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not that anthropology has spilled into other subjects. Rather, subjects have converged,鈥 said Professor Simpson. 鈥淭heory itself has become more fleet-footed.鈥
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: What drives big shifts in tackling big questions?
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