I can't praise this book highly enough. I wish that I'd discovered and read this much earlier: it has honestly breathed new life into me. Griffin is a champion for teaching as an inextricable part of the life of the mind and a life's mission, rather than as simply a way to pay the bills in academia. Her even-handed, insightful analysis of the differences gender make in and out of the classroom made me breathe a sigh of relief. There is real genius in the connections she draws between her inspired analyses of history and literature and the daily life of a college campus. And, as if all this were not enough, Griffin's prose is gorgeous--a true delight to read. I suspect that this book hasn't gotten wider attention because it defies the usual divisions of academic work: it is neither a work of cultural studies nor a theory of pedagogy, because it is both. If things were as they should be, though, work like this would be the standard, and not the exception.
Deserves MUCH Wider Readership
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 23 years ago
I wish this book had been published by a mainstream, New York publisher. Every professor -- especially every woman who considers an academic career -- should read this book and Gail Griffin's second, Season of the Witch. Griffin (or Gail, as she'd probably prefer) writes an unsparing, honest account of her life as a college professor at a small "teaching institution." What's rare -- and what probably kept this book out of the mainstream -- is her ability to integrate literature with life. She must be an incredible teacher. Her brief descriptions of classroom discussion motivated me to search out some books I would have missed otherwise, notably The Color Purple. As a career coach/consultant, I noted that Gail Griffin reveals her own career sensitivity. She instinctively chose a college where her unique talents would flourish. As she writes, she felt at home right away, although she fought the feeling. Like most new assistant professors, fresh from a prestigious graduate school, she had been taught to value scholarship -- articles in high-powered journals -- over teaching. In the language of career counseling, she created a career that expressed her own value system and seems to serve her life purpose.As an ex-professor, I can appreciate Griffin's challenge at tiny Kalamazoo College. Staying intellectually keen while teaching only undergraduates calls for a unique discipline, motivation and, above all, sense of oneself. I couldn't have done it: I taught the jaded MBAs that some of Griffin's students became. If I were teaching a course on careers, especially academic careers, this book would be on the list. I can't help comparing it to the gloomier but also brilliantly written Cliff Walk,which would also be required reading. Griffin herself might pick up a gender subtext, far better than I could. I wish she'd write another book and get a big-name publisherto pick it up.
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