Culturally Adrift Without Classical Moorings
A return to Latin and ancient Greek would make for a real education revolution, writes Dan Ryan
MY grandfather, who spent most of his life on a sheep station in western Queensland, could quote tracts of Virgil and Homer from memory. My mother topped Latin in year 10 in her school in Brisbane in the 1960s, but things were on the slide; her prize was a copy of the Iliad not in Greek but in English, and in an abridged form, with all the poetry stripped away.
By the time I went to school there was apparently no need to teach the classics any more. They were dead languages and, besides, there was not enough time in the school day to fit them in between classes in home economics, woodwork, typing and the like. How sure are we that the effective elimination of the classics from our education system has been without consequence?
Educators once believed in the classical education very strongly. Little more than a generation ago you could not get into Oxford or Cambridge without demonstrating competency in Latin, and practically every Western historical figure and writer until the 1950s was taught the classics from an early age. The line of thinking that we don't need to learn Latin and Greek because they are too hard, irrelevant, not useful or not the languages of the future would have been regarded as the argument of philistines.
The rationale was not always stated explicitly; it was simply understood. A classical education was needed first of all to impart content -- to maintain basic Western cultural literacy. Your understanding of the West would be necessarily incomplete and superficial without a good acquaintance of the Aeneid, the works of Ovid and Aeschylus, the speeches of Pericles and Cicero, and the Homeric epics. The second reason, as classicist Tracy Lee Simmons emphasises in his excellent book Climbing Parnassus, was that learning these hard ancient languages had a point in itself -- it required students to focus on the precise meaning of words, making them less patient with sloppy language and thinking. For Westerners, only the languages of Latin and Greek can perform this role.
The high-minded hope was that the combination of the content and the process would make us better able to govern ourselves, both individually and as a society. To know a liberty fit for men, notanimals. What does it say that we are now fixated about becoming Asia-literate, but that there is no concern about the obvious decline in Western cultural literacy levels?
I am not saying that one should not learn Asian languages or have a deep interest in the cultures of Asia. I speak and read Mandarin and have been learning since university days. I ended up marrying a Brit who speaks Punjabi, Hindi and Urdu. Whether spending $11 billion on compulsory mass Asian language education training from year 3 onwards would result in a net economic gain or otherwise make sense is something others can duke out. From what I've seen so far of the plans, colour me highly sceptical.
What I do strongly believe is that one's understanding of the East will, in the long run, be hindered unless you have a proper understanding of the West. Lawrence of Arabia would have thought the lack of Latin and Greek a terrible obstacle to the understanding of Arabic. William Jones, the famed Sanskrit scholar, would have thought likewise with regard to understanding the languages and cultures of the subcontinent. The same holds true for the languages of East Asia. Australia's pre-eminent Sinologist, Pierre Ryckmans, was educated in Europe. I bet my bottom dollar he was taught Latin during his formative years. It shows in his writing style and liberal mind.
Without a decent acquaintance with the Western classical heritage we are dooming ourselves to a glib relativism born of ignorance, to being forever trapped in the parochialism of the present, to being a nation adrift without a cultural anchor.
What is needed is not a new state education plan. The renewal is unlikely to come via our sclerotic state-directed command-and-control education system that governs both fee-paying and non-fee-paying schools. Carthago delenda est.
If there is a renewal, I suspect it will be through less mainstream institutions like Sydney's Campion College, through teachers with a deep love of Western culture, and through some of the classically educating home schooling families I have been honoured to know.
It will come when we realise that it has been a terrible dereliction of duty not to pass on "the best that has been thought and said" to the next generation and we are not going to let it continue. Now that truly would be an education revolution.
Dan Ryan is a general counsel to a leading information technology company. He has worked in Hong Kong and China for 10 years.
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It’s probably a response to this, a plan by the New South Wales Government to run immersion programs in either Mandarin, Japanese or Indonesian in its primary schools.
What it comes down to, for me, is what importance we place on knowledge for the sake of knowledge. I think it’s important that we have people in our society who can read Latin and Greek. I’m not convinced that we need so many that it’s worth putting time and money into teaching them to everybody in High School. In practical terms, an Australian is far more likely to be more employable and do a useful job for the economy or the government from speaking Mandarin than from speaking Latin.
The biggest problem, I think (and former Prime Minister John Howard agrees with me on this, FWIW), is that we try to put everybody through the same education as everybody else. I wouldn’t have minded learning to read classical Latin in high school, and I would have enjoyed it far more and retained far more of it than a lot of the ‘responding to text’ stuff we did in Senior English. But it would have been useless to try and teach it to non-academic people, just as it would have been useless to try and train me to become a pro footballer.
I could speak a lot about this topic, but at a basic level I think our education system tries to achieve too much and ends up achieving too little. The English and Social Studies curricula focus on teaching ‘critical analysis’, which is a useful skill but not one that you can readily teach to teenagers in my view. It takes experience and a wide knowledge base. It would be far more useful to teach everyone to have a command of written and spoken English and a sound knowledge of historical facts, and then let students with an aptitude for those subjects move onto more advanced material. I’m convinced that students would enjoy school far more and be readily employable earlier with less higher education if there was more specialization in the High School curriculum – technical education for those technically inclined, and a more academic one for those who like and might use it. Then we could look at teaching classics again, but not before IMHO.