kata ta biblia

a blog exploring Christian origins, biblical studies, social/cultural history, method, education and the journey through academia

Issues of economic class and academia

Wonderful article in The Chronicle, an excellent personal reflection from a professor with working class background. Here’s an excerpt:

I know that I don’t belong in the old neighborhood either. I made my choices long ago; or perhaps others made them for me. No one is awaiting my return. I think I can hear what they’d say: “You seem to like playing the working-class hero for rich people. Whatever. Do it if it works for you. You never belonged here anyway, even when you were a kid. If I could get out of here, I would. So get on with your life. We’ll be fine without you.”

Meanwhile, back on the job as a tenured professor — certifying the inherited status of his middle-class students — the self-proclaimed “academic class traitor” romanticizes his alienation and mocks his own naïve posturing. He realizes there are no people whom he can serve without some inner conflict.

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  • Alan & Beth Claassen Thrush

    Hey, Pat. It’s been a while since I last visited your blog. Thanks for keeping your thoughts out there. I particularly liked your post on sermon elitism. This is something I struggle w/ here. Yet God uses our pastor, who only finished high school, to speak to us, even when there are gaping holes in his exegetical work. Thanks be to God.
    –Alan