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MLA: The Human Experience

MLA: The Human Experience. Why the Humanities are Important. What are the Humanities?. Art & Art History Classics Drama Languages and Cultures English History Linguistics Music Philosophy Religious Studies Division of Literatures, Cultures & Languages. Insights Into Everything.

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MLA: The Human Experience

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  1. MLA: The Human Experience Why the Humanities are Important

  2. What are the Humanities? • Art & Art History • Classics • Drama • Languages and Cultures • English • History • Linguistics • Music • Philosophy • Religious Studies • Division of Literatures, Cultures & Languages

  3. Insights Into Everything • Through exploration of the humanities we learn how to think creatively and critically, to reason, and to ask questions. Because these skills allow us to gain new insights into everything from poetry and paintings to business models and politics, humanistic subjects have been at the heart of a liberal arts education since the ancient Greeks first used to them to educate their citizens.

  4. Understanding Our World • Research into the human experience adds to our knowledge about our world. Through the work of humanities scholars, we learn about the values of different cultures, about what goes into making a work of art, about how history is made. Their efforts preserve the great accomplishments of the past, help us understand the world we live in, and give us tools to imagine the future.

  5. Bringing Clarity to the Future • Today, humanistic knowledge continues to provide the ideal foundation for exploring and understanding the human experience. Investigating a branch of philosophy might get you thinking about ethical questions. Learning another language might help you gain an appreciation for the similarities in different cultures. Contemplating a sculpture might make you think about how artist's life affected her creative decisions.

  6. Continued • Reading a book from another region of the world, might help you think about the meaning of democracy. Listening to history course might help you to have a better understanding of the past, while at the same time giving you a clearer picture of what the future holds.

  7. What Values do the Humanities Support? • Researchers in the humanities prefer the monograph (book). One also notices a much wider time spread in the materials used. For example, publications of the past five years of most importance to scientific research; the humanist, however, is likely to be interested in works of twenty to one hundred years ago, or more. Humanists tend to browse resources more than scientists.

  8. How are Disciplines Different? • Sciences: Findings from tests and experiments, observations, discoveries, original research… Interpretations and discussions of test data as found in journals and books • Literature: Novels, poems, plays, short stories, letters, diaries, manuscripts, autobiographies Journal articles, reviews, biographies, criticism about writers and books • Social Sciences : Case studies, surveys and questionnaires, original research and reports Commentary and evaluation in reports, documents, journal articles and books

  9. Continued • Government, Political Science, and History : Speeches, original writings, documents, government reports, newspaper reports, news magazines, journal articles, newsletters and books • Fine Arts: Films, paintings, music, sculptures, photographs…original works of art Evaluations in journal articles, critical reviews, biographies and critical books about the artists and their works

  10. How is humanities research reshaping our future? • Examining the Past to Understand the Future • Humanities research often involves an individual professor researching in a library in order to write a book. The books that result from this study are part of an ongoing dialogue about the meaning and possibilities of human existence that reaches back to ancient times and looks forward to our common future.

  11. Scholar Collaboration • A scholar might publish research in-progress in an on-line journal to solicit feedback from others in her field. Some professors develop projects with the classroom in mind and engage their students in research projects. Other projects require the gathering of original information by doing fieldwork which could entail interviewing people, unearthing artifacts or documenting the history behind an archive of photographs.

  12. An Interpretive Approach to Research • A hallmark of humanistic study is that research is approached differently than in the natural and social sciences, where data and hard evidence are required to draw conclusions. Because the human experience cannot be adequately captured by facts and figures alone, humanities research employs methods that are historical, interpretive and analytical in nature.

  13. Continued • Professors who engage in humanities research are often posing questions about common assumptions, uncovering new meanings in artistic works, or finding new ways to understand cultural interactions. This type of inquiry can produce clearer pictures of the past, uncover the many insights that we can draw from our forbears, and in turn, help us better to prepare for the future.

  14. Humanities Research Relies On • Humanities research, then, usually involves two components: 1) finding primary text material that will serve as evidence for the researcher's argument and 2) reading secondary sources to see what other researchers have said about the topic.

  15. What are primary texts? • Primary texts can include: • Diaries • Speeches • Letters • Literary works • Articles or essays (historical) • Manuscript facsimiles (or copies) • Autobiographies • Transcribed interviews • Brochures, pamphlets, postcards, programs, advertisements • Government documents • Official records (birth, marriage, death) • (Excerpts or translations can count as primary texts.)

  16. What are secondary sources? • Secondary sources are the analysis and interpretation of primary text material. Humanities researchers use the evidence gathered from primary texts to create a secondary source. Secondary sources compete with or support the arguments of other researchers who have written on the topic. • A secondary source can become a primary text. A study of Shakespeare's tragedies written in the nineteenth century, which can be considered a secondary source for someone studying the plays themselves, might become a primary text for someone looking at the history of criticism about the tragedies. • Humanities research, then, usually involves two components: 1) finding primary text material that will serve as evidence for the researcher's argument and 2) reading secondary sources to see what other researchers have said about the topic.

  17. Questions of Value and Worth • And worth here can only be demonstrated by quantifiable successes. You must be able to achieve and your achievements must be measurable, visible, demarcated by social rituals and public praise.

  18. Thank You • http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/01/ • MLA Formatting and Style Guide Modern Language Association

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