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Historical Narrative of the Humanities Core

The Stanford Humanities Core (HumCore) is a collaboration between Stanford departments to teach global humanities. An IDP coordinating a cluster of integrated seminars with a minor and certificate, it is the only such program at Stanford. 

What does it mean to teach a “humanities core” at Stanford today? Over the last few decades, our fields of study have witnessed a growing discomfort with the Western canon. It is no longer tenable to associate humanistic study in California solely with that famous story which starts in Ancient Greece and ends in the United States, stopping along the way in the European Renaissance and Enlightenment. Stanford faculty have been taking part in these field-defining conversations for many years. 

HumCore: a collaboration between departments. Graphic shows different colored boxes of different sizes, labeled "East Asian Studies, Classics, English, Comparative Literature, TAPS, Religious Studies, History, French" showing how many departments make up the HumCore

The unique structure of HumCore achieves a long-standing research goal in the humanities: to conceive of the diversity of human endeavour without privileging a single narrative or reading a particular history in a vacuum. It is twenty-one years since Dipesh Chakrabarty wrote Provincializing Europe, and twenty-seven years since Richard Roberts told the history of the “Western Civ” debate at Stanford. HumCore intervenes in these conversations and shows how the European narrative of classic and canonical texts that starts with Homer can be studied and taught while taking its place in the same epistemological position as indigenous ontologies from Oceania or philosophical categories in Classical Chinese. The organizational principle that creates this outcome is: only one course dealing with Europe in each cluster. The work – and undergraduate frosh-friendly teaching thereof – is more important now than ever. 

The Humanities Core has a unique collaborative structure: courses meet twice a week, and the second meeting each week is a plenary session that brings together students and faculty across the Core. Each quarter, this structure gives students a seminar-based exploration into ten of the most important texts or cultural objects from a given tradition – alongside weekly conversations that draw comparisons and discuss connections between different parts of the world.


HumCore Structure 2020 Onwards:

Monday class session: student explores a single history or tradition with their professor.

Wednesday class session: student goes to a plenary “collaborative conversation” with their professor and classmates – and all the other professors teaching in the HumCore that quarter.


 

HumCore is designed to give Stanford undergraduates in any school and with any major plan an accessible and structured introduction to culture, art, literature, politics, religion, and history. It is an arrangement of elective courses that give students entryways into humanities research. The unique collaborative structure of the courses gives students a global humanities exploration from whichever starting point they choose. 

HumCore: an example of student pathways, four good outcomes. Flowchart starts with HumCore 122/English 122C "The Renaissance in Europe". One path goes through "15 additional HUMCORE units" and then through "HumCore Minor". The second goes through "6 additional HUMCORE units" and then "HumCore Certificate". The third goes through "22 additional English units" and then "English minor". The fourth goes straight from Humcore 122 to a green check markAll end in green check marks.

HumCore courses are listed as electives in the academic department of the primary instructor. For example, “The Renaissance in Europe” in Winter 2021 belongs to the Department of English as ENGLISH 112C and is cross listed as HUMCORE 122. In Spring 2021, “Freedom Fighters, Terrorists, and Social Justice Warriors in South Asia” belongs to the Department of Religious Studies as RELIGST 118 and is cross listed as HUMCORE 134. The home department of the HumCore director coordinates the cross-listings. 

HumCore is an integrated set of humanities courses. There are no prerequisites, and no required order in which they should be taken. On the contrary, the structure of HumCore courses, with the weekly collaborative conversations, ensures that whatever course a student selects they always get a global and comparative humanities exploration. No single tradition can be studied in a vacuum. 

HumCore is also designed to be taken as a set of courses, providing a broad chronological sweep from 2000 BC to the present day. The fall courses deal with the ancient world across Africa, Asia, and Europe. The winter courses address middle periods: Renaissance Europe, Classical Islam, and medieval Japan. The spring courses deal with global modernity up to the present day.

When humanities professors at Stanford and elsewhere engage in research, it looks very much like a HumCore class: we read primary texts and discuss them with our colleagues. HumCore students in every single course develop their ideas alongside faculty and have access to mentors who can help guide them into majors, minors, and honors programs.

A typical HumCore student is frosh, interested in humanities work but unsure of which time period, language, or culture in which to start. HumCore helps orient such a student and introduce them to the academic departments where humanities research takes place. Another typical HumCore student might be engaged in STEM research but looking for guidance as to which humanities courses will offer them broad exploratory introductions to global ideas. Alumni of HumCore courses have gone on to major and minor in humanities departments, some have minored in the HumCore itself, and others have joined projects like the Humanities Research Intensive.