Monday, August 16, 2010

William Ferris, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Dear Dean Gertler,

I was shocked to learn that the University of Toronto has recommended that the Centre for Comparative Literature be “disestablished” as of 2011. The Centre, founded in 1969 by Northrop Frye, is the premier site for the study of comparative literature in Canada, and the home of three past presidents of the Modern Language Association of America (Northrop Frye, Mario Valdés, and Linda Hutcheon). The Centre will no longer be able to admit students to the PhD or MA degrees, and it will be reduced to a collaborative, non-degree-granting program in a School for Languages and Literatures. Such a move has grave implications for the role of literature and the humanities in the academy.

In today’s globalized, multicultural world, the discipline of comparative literature is more important than ever. Because of its crossing of cultural, disciplinary and linguistic borders, and its self-reflexive and critical modes of thinking about literature and culture, the research nurtured by the Centre’s faculty and students is crucial for a full engagement with the complexities of a multinational world, and it has important implications for the practice of other disciplines. Such research cannot be done in national language and literature departments.

When I served as Chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities from 1997-2001, I strongly supported our nation’s interdisciplinary centres. These programs are uniquely qualified to address the complex issues our society faces today. You have a critically important resource that builds on the legacy of Northrop Frye and brings international recognition to the University of Toronto.

I urge you to reverse the recommendation to close the Centre and to strongly support the long international tradition of excellence and innovation of the Centre for Comparative Literature at the University of Toronto.

Sincerely,

William Ferris



Center for the Study of the American South
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
410 East Franklin Street, CB # 9127
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-9127

1 comment:

  1. President Naylor's response:

    Professor Ferris

    Thank you for your thoughtful note. The matter is still in the hands of the division (Faculty of Arts and Science) where the Dean is consulting carefully. It has not been prepared on even a preliminary basis for approval by university-wide governance.

    Best wishes

    David Naylor

    David Naylor
    President
    The University of Toronto
    Suite 206, Simcoe Hall
    27 King's College Circle
    Toronto, ON M5S 1A1
    Canada

    Telephone: (416) 978-2121
    E-mail: president@utoronto.ca

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