Susan McWilliams is Associate Professor of Politics at Pomona College and the author of Traveling Back: Toward a Global Political Theory. John E. Seery is George Irving Thompson Memorial Professor of Government and Professor of Politics at Pomona College and the author of America Goes to College: Political Theory for the Liberal Arts.
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Susan McWilliams and John E. Seery, Pomona College
Part One: The Classroom
What's Love Got to Do with It? Shakespeare: A Liberal Art
Martha Andresen, Pomona College
In Defense of Small: Some Personal Reflections on Teaching Chemistry at a Primarily Undergraduate Institution
Dasan M. Thamattoor, Colby College
An Invitation to Get Lost: The Right Kind of Place for Liberal Learning
Nicholas Buccola, Linfield College
From Observation to Engagement to Collaboration: The Liberal Arts Journey
Jerusha B. Detweiler-Bedell, Lewis & Clark College
Magic in the Classroom
Arthur T. Benjamin, Harvey Mudd College
Part Two: The Career
Learning to Live a Life of Learnable Moments
Justin Crowe, Williams College
(What Is Meant to Be) Straight Talk on Intellectual, Cultural, and Moral Formation
Jason Peters, Augustana College
Robert Frost, Symbolical Teacher
Robert H. Bell, Williams College
The "Job Definition" of a Faculty Member at a Liberal Arts Institution
Elizabeth J. Jensen, Hamilton College
How Liberal Arts Colleges Have Shaped My Life
Akila Weerapana, Wellesley College
Part Three: The Curriculum
Liberal Education as Respecting Who We Are
Peter Augustine Lawler, Berry College
Humanizing the Subject: Toward a Curriculum for Liberal Education in the Twenty-First Century
Jeffrey Freyman, Transylvania University
Singing a New History: Pathways to Learning in a Liberal Arts Setting
Steven S. Volk, Oberlin College
Living Art
Ruthann Godollei, Macalester College
Social Entrepreneurship and the Liberal Arts
Jonathan Isham, Middlebury College
Beyond Cs Getting Degrees: Teaching the Liberal Arts and Sciences at a Comprehensive University
Jeffrey A. Becker, University of the Pacific
Part Four: The Community
Unlearning Helplessness: The Liberal Arts and the Future of Education
Adam Kotskom, Shimer College
Liberal Arts Colleges: The Mother of (Re)Invention
Jay Barth, Hendrix College
The Best Kind of College: Spelman College
Donna Akiba Sullivan Harper, Spelman College
Athletics in the Liberal Arts
Jennifer Shea Lane, Wesleyan University
Going Elsewhere, Coming Home
Yolanda P. Cruz, Oberlin College
On Not Lamenting Our Virginity
Jane F. Crosthwaite, Mount Holyoke College
Part Five: The College
Departures
K. E. Brashier, Reed College
What Matters Most? Liberal Arts Colleges in Perilous Times
John K. Roth, Claremont McKenna College
Importing the American Liberal Arts College?
Kristine Mitchell and Cotten Seiler, Dickinson College
Nationalism and the Liberal Arts
Will Barndt, Pitzer College
The Liberal Arts and the Pursuit of Wisdom
Timothy Baker Shutt, Kenyon College
About the Editors
Index