Shimer, A different college.

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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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we're not kids anymore.

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@shimercollege
Shimer, A different college.
Yes, we are thespians too.
(Photo: Shimer's recent performance of All in the Timing by David Ives)
President Henking interviews Bart Schultz, Senior Lecturer in the Humanities (Philosophy) and Director of the Civic Knowledge Project at the University of Chicago.
About Bart Schultz:
Bart Schultz is Senior Lecturer in the Humanities (Philosophy) and Director of the Civic Knowledge Project at the University of Chicago, where he has taught since 1987. His books include Essays on Henry Sidgwick (Cambridge, 1992), Henry Sidgwick: Eye of the Universe (Cambridge, 2004, winner of the American Philosophical Society’s Jacques Barzun Prize in Cultural History for 2004), Utilitarianism and Empire(Lexington, 2005), and The Happiness Philosophers: Lives of the Eminent Utilitarians (Princeton, 2016). He is on the Editorial Board of Utilitas, the leading professional journal of utilitarian studies, and serves on the Board of Directors of PLATO (Philosophy Learning and Teaching Organization). Through the Civic Knowledge Project he has developed a number of public ethics programs, including the precollegiate philosophy programWinning Words, winner of the 2012 American Philosophical Association’s PDC Prize for Excellence and Innovation in Philosophy Programs.
Students React to Ridiculous College Application Essay Topics (Where’s Waldo? ...Really?)
College applications can really suck—especially if what you have to offer doesn’t quite fit into the boxes of a college app. But applying to Shimer College isn’t like that. Apply to @shimercollege today for a unique & meaningful liberal arts education. Rolling admissions means you can apply right now and get your admissions decision right away. And our admissions process is actually about you and not your answers to random, silly essay topics. We're different. In fact, just watch this funny video some of our students made about the college admissions process. These are their reactions to the crazy essay topics really asked by other colleges. Enjoy!
How to Get a Job That’s Not Just a Job: Liberal Arts Education and Creating Meaningful Careers
For the next time you tell a friend you want a liberal arts degree and they respond, "but... what are you going to do with that?" Watch this video of @shimercollege alumni speaking to how their one-of-a-kind, Shimer education prepared them for successful—but also meaningful—careers.
If I am not able to write because I’m afraid of being a bad writer, then I must be a bad writer. At least I’ll be writing.
Susan Sontag, via Brainpickings (via bostonpoetryslam)
Heartening thoughts from Sontag as we kick off our annual Shimer Poetry Competition!
Why the intellectual ethos of your college matters.
On September 27th 2014 Shimer College professor Dr. Ann Victoria Dolinko gave a talk on feminism at a local Chicago café. Entitled “Feminism: Everything you Always Wanted to Know but were Afraid to Ask,” the talk discussed feminism in terms of its life and history in politics, activism, and the academy. Dr. Dolinko also reflects upon teaching at Shimer College (a small liberal arts college in Chicago), where she has worked for 20 years to ensure that books by women and people of color are included in the school’s dialogue-based core curriculum, also known as the “Great Books program.” The talk was followed by a Q&A session (see link at end of the video) in which Dr. Dolinko addressed various issues pertaining to contemporary feminism, including: what it means to be an “ally,” how one challenges their privilege, and what the possibilities are for “eco-feminism” in a capitalist society.
Image from Smithsonian Institution.
On February 27, 1964, black feminist activist, scholar and educator Anna Julia Haywood Cooper died at the age of 105.
Born into slavery in 1858 in Raleigh, Cooper graduated from St. Augustine’s Normal School and then earned a B.A. and an M.A. in mathematics from Oberlin College in Ohio. She taught for a few years in Raleigh before moving to Washington, D.C., to teach there.
In 1892, she published A Voice from the South, one of the first comprehensive statements of black feminism. Her analysis of racism, sexism and subjugation of black women would echo into the black feminist movements of the 20th century.
Cooper devoted her life to the advancement of gender and racial equality and higher education of black women, published essays, made speeches and was active in black women’s uplift organizations.
At the age of 66, Cooper became the fourth African American woman in the nation to receive a Ph.D., earning her doctorate from the Sorbonne in Paris. Working well into her nineties, she spent her final thirty years at D.C.’s Frelinghuysen University, a school for working-class black adults.
She died in 1964 and is buried in Raleigh.
This Day in NC History: Loss of a Black Feminist Pioneer.
“When and where I enter...” First years at Shimer read Ana Julia Cooper’s A Voice from the South in Social Sciences 1. Important text, incredible figure and author.
See how MoMA Film is racing to preserve movie history at our Celeste Bartos Film Preservation Center in Hamlin, Pennsylvania.
Captioned in Words:
We come together and read. But reading also gives us new ways to think about how we come together. In other words, Shimer College’s intellectual ethos is not some commodity—it’s part of how we do community.
Captioned in Books:
Euclid: The Elements of Geometry Ruth Benedict: Patterns of Culture Aristotle: Ethics, ch. VIII [On Friendship]
Viking Gold Shield Pendant, 10th-11th Century AD
Daily Black History Month Gifs
Happy Birthday Toni Morrison! (born Feb. 18, 1931)
Public Lecture by Dr. Aron Dunlap, Asst. Prof. of the Liberal Arts at Shimer College, delivered at the Seminary Co-op Bookstore —– Description: In the years following WWII there seemed to be a general consensus among intellectuals in the West that if there was a pathological underbelly to any psychological health we might presume to own, it was anxiety. This was, they agreed, the Age of Anxiety, which was the title of a long poem by W.H. Auden that functioned as the inspiration for Leonard Bernstein’s 2nd symphony. The phrase made its way into common parlance and we see it forming the nucleus of concern in theologian Paul Tillich’s tremendously popular work, The Courage to Be. In this work, Tillich agreed with existentialists such as Sartre that, while fear has an object, the problem with anxiety was that it had none. For these thinkers, anxiety was part and parcel of human life, and one had to learn to take responsibility for a life that would never be free of the awe(ful) dread of living and the certainty of death. For Freud, the neurotic anxiety issuing from the castration complex was a kind of “bedrock” beyond which psychoanalysis could not venture. In his wake, Jacques Lacan re-interpreted this aspect of his master’s thought while also challenging the existentialists by claiming that anxiety, in fact, is “not without its object,” namely, objet a, the object cause of desire, which stands in the confluence of Lacan’s three registers of the Symbolic, Imaginary and Real, and which is an entirely dependable “signal” of the Real. While Hannah Arendt uses a radically different vocabulary, there is, in her political thought, something that, like objet a, falls away. In the American political experience what falls away is enjoyment in politics. What takes its places is the inevitable duality (right, left; conservative, liberal) that settles down in the place vacated by the object cause of desire.
I would not know what the spirit of a philosopher might wish more to be than a good dancer.
Friedrich Nietzsche (via philosophybits)
Grasshopper Jungle by Andrew Smith
“There isn’t anything like Grasshopper Jungle in young adult fiction. First of all, it’s insane. Giant, six-foot-tall praying mantis-looking bugs are bursting out of the stomachs of certain residents in a decaying Midwest town — and all they want to do is eat and mate. They’re taking over Ealing, Iowa, and it’s raunchy and hilarious. But while all this mayhem is going on, the heart of the book is a kid caught in a love triangle with his girlfriend and best friend, attempting to understand his sexual identity. (Yeah… didn’t see that comin’, huh?) I don’t typically throw around the word “brilliant,” but here, I would.”
— Jordan
Édouard Vuillard - Cafe scene - 1908-1910