Personal Perspective:
<br />WILLIAM PLATER ON
<br />IMAGINING
<br />INDIANA
<br />"And a voiceless chorus chanting
<br />That the Old Times were the best."
<br />James Whitcomb Riley
<br />With the new
<br />century only seven
<br />years away, many of
<br />us are enjoying the
<br />now fashionable
<br />pastime of
<br />imagining what life
<br />and times in the
<br />year 2000 will hold-
<br />There
<br />oldThere is something
<br />special about the
<br />changing of the century, and predicting
<br />what WILL happen is less risky than
<br />accounting for what HAS happened.
<br />Imagining the year 2000. Imagining
<br />America with a fresh start on a new
<br />century. Imagining Indiana.
<br />A state of diversity if not extremes,
<br />Indiana's place in this possible future is at
<br />hest uncertain. Contrasts between rural and
<br />urban life, between conservative and liberal
<br />testes, between younger and older
<br />generations, between health and poverty, to
<br />name only a few of the differences which
<br />define us, represent fissures in the state's
<br />social geology which could fracture under
<br />the pressure of national and world forces.
<br />In the United States, Indiana is nearly
<br />unique in holding so many contrasting
<br />values, tastes, aspirations, and fears intact
<br />as part of a shared, common culture.
<br />While there may be multiple explanations
<br />for this inherent sense of "Where We
<br />Live," a theme the Humanities Council
<br />has recently explored, James Whitcomb
<br />Riley's explanation may be the most
<br />accurate — as Hoosiers self- referentially
<br />look to their past to explain why things
<br />are as they are ... and always should be.
<br />Indiana seems to live with its past in an
<br />elastic envelope of time and place.
<br />Indiana has been fortunate to retain
<br />this sense of place — something very
<br />much akin to the idea of community so
<br />highly valued by social philosophers —
<br />despite the dislocations of world wars,
<br />racial and economic inequalities, and
<br />Technological infringements which in this
<br />century have torn other places and states
<br />Imm what Riley once called "the land of
<br />Used -to -be." Yet Indiana's community —
<br />like some midcontinent Brigadoon — is
<br />one that time is passing by as we lag
<br />further behind in the educational
<br />attainment of our citizens, as adult
<br />illiteracy grows, and as real family
<br />income falls. So how do we reconcile
<br />nostalgia with anticipation, memory with
<br />dream — and why do we care, anyway?
<br />Precisely because it retains its sense of
<br />community and its sense of place,
<br />Indiana — alone of all the states — has
<br />the best chance of imagining a real future
<br />for itself and of self-consciously,
<br />intentionally creating a new American
<br />dream worthy of pursuit. But its citizens
<br />must be bold and dare to imagine a state
<br />where expectations for educational
<br />attainment are high, where quality of life
<br />is a matter of community rather than
<br />personal achievement, and where
<br />diversity is recognized as a resource for
<br />growth. The humanities offer Indiana's
<br />citizens the toots needed to build a new
<br />state out of such raw materials as dreams,
<br />hopes, and desires. Using the humanities
<br />for the public good, as what Kenneth
<br />Burke called "equipment for living," we
<br />can imagine an Indiana which even Riley
<br />would celebrate over what used to be.
<br />William Plater is Dean of the Faculties
<br />and Professor of English at Indiana
<br />University -Purdue University at
<br />Indianapolis (IUPUI). Dr. Plater served as
<br />an IHC Board member from 1987-1992.
<br />Regional Focus:
<br />INDIANA'S
<br />CULTURAL CLIMATE
<br />As a statewide organization, the
<br />Indiana Humanities Council has to know
<br />its territory. What do Hoosiers think and
<br />feel about the humanities, and, with
<br />regard to cultural and intellectual issues,
<br />what is the state of the state?
<br />Each summer, Board and staff
<br />members of IHC make a systematic effort
<br />to find out. The Council invites
<br />community leaders representing business,
<br />education, local government, and other
<br />institutions to luncheon meetings in
<br />selected cities and towns. These
<br />gatherings have provided both an
<br />opportunity for citizens to become
<br />acquainted with IHC programs and
<br />services and a setting for conversations
<br />about the quality of cultural life in
<br />Indiana.
<br />Not surprisingly, when most people
<br />think about the humanities, they think
<br />about education, and when they think
<br />about education, they think initially
<br />about youth. People are concerned about
<br />the quality of public education and about
<br />shortfalls in funding that mean the
<br />disappearance of special programs and
<br />enrichment activities. So cultivating an
<br />appreciation for the humanities in our
<br />young people becomes difficult for many
<br />Hoosier communities.
<br />In the area of adult education,
<br />however, needs also exist and are
<br />increasing. Longer life spans, combined
<br />with the bewildering complexity of the
<br />Information Age and the evolving global
<br />framework, mean that adults must also
<br />continue to learn.
<br />In particular, the impact of technology
<br />on the way we create and store
<br />knowledge, and communicate with each
<br />other, is changing the universe of the
<br />humanities. Or, as one discussion
<br />participant put it, "Computers are fast,
<br />people are slow."
<br />Sometimes, the problem can be one of
<br />access. Many communities take justifiable
<br />pride in the resources they offer their
<br />citizens: schools, colleges, museums,
<br />libraries, historical and arts organizations.
<br />But they wish that more people could be
<br />helped, or persuaded, to take advantage
<br />of these cultural and intellectual riches.
<br />And finally, a community has to deal
<br />with the factors that can hold it together
<br />or tear it apart. People around Indiana
<br />are beginning to feel a need to explore
<br />the meaning of cultural and ethnic
<br />diversity in the state and nation. IHC is
<br />in the process of planning for a major
<br />initiative in this area.
<br />In 1992 IHC hosted regional meetings
<br />in Bloomington, Columbus, Lafayette,
<br />Richmond, South Bend, and Terre Haute.
<br />The Council welcomes invitations from
<br />other communities to make presentations
<br />NO. 16
<br />JANUARY/FEBRUARY 1993
<br />COUNCIL NAMES NEW BOARD
<br />MEMBERS
<br />The Indiana Humanities Council
<br />welcomes six new members to the Board
<br />of Directors effective January 1, 1991
<br />Vicky A. Bailey is
<br />Commissioner for the
<br />Indiana Utility
<br />Regulatory
<br />Commission. "The
<br />i humanities have always
<br />meant freedom to me.
<br />As a board member, I'll
<br />enjoy sharing my passion for the
<br />humanities with others," she says. She is
<br />a graduate of Purdue University and
<br />president of the Indianapolis Public
<br />Schools Education Foundation.
<br />Philip Baum is
<br />President of Baum
<br />Farming, Inc., Treasurer
<br />of Indiana Soybean
<br />Growers, and a
<br />supporter of the Warren
<br />County Historical
<br />Society and arts groups.
<br />A Beloit graduate, he says he hopes his
<br />"presence on the Board will represent a
<br />new grassroots constituency. I look
<br />forward to much challenging debate."
<br />J. Herman Blake is
<br />19rVice Chancellor for
<br />Undergraduate
<br />Education and Professor
<br />of Sociology,
<br />Anthropology &
<br />Education at IUPUI. He
<br />JA received his Ph.D. from
<br />Berkeley and is a past president of
<br />Tougaloo College. He remarks: "I feel
<br />strongly about the humanities and I
<br />approach my appointment with full
<br />commitment."
<br />William Coats holds
<br />a doctorate in education
<br />from the University of
<br />4 Michigan and is now
<br />Superintendent of Fort
<br />Wayne Community
<br />Schools. He expresses a
<br />"strong interest in the
<br />humanities and meaningful dialogue
<br />about our common strand of values in a
<br />pluralistic society." He has served as an
<br />educational consultant to IBM and Dow,
<br />and as a member of local community
<br />advisory councils.
<br />Thomas Sebeok is
<br />Distinguished Professor
<br />Emeritus of Linguistics
<br />and Semiotics at
<br />Indiana University in
<br />Bloomington. He
<br />earned his doctorate
<br />b1From Princeton. "For a
<br />long time and in many ways, I have been
<br />involved in the spectrum of the
<br />humanities and their outreach to the
<br />physical sciences," says Dr. Sebeok. A
<br />professor since 1943, he has taught in
<br />Argentina, Hungary, Canada, and many
<br />other countries.
<br />Sandra M. Singer
<br />holds Ph.D.in
<br />psychology from the
<br />University of Colorado
<br />and is Vice Chancellor
<br />for Academic Affairs
<br />and Professor of
<br />Psychology at Purdue
<br />University -Calumet in Hammond. "When
<br />our professions force us into narrower
<br />areas of expertise, the humanities serve as
<br />common ground that everyone can relate
<br />to," comments Dr. Singer, who is a board
<br />member of the Community Foundation
<br />Alliance, Youth as Resources and United
<br />Way.
<br />NEW OFFICERS ELECTED
<br />Robert L. Reid
<br />With the beginning of the 1993 program year three new
<br />officers will provide leadership to the Humanities Council
<br />Board of Directors. Robert Reid, Vice President for Academic
<br />Affairs and Professor of History at the University of Southern
<br />Indiana, has been elected Chair of the Board. Bob has
<br />extensive experience with the work of IHC, and most recently
<br />provided outstanding leadership for several aspects of the
<br />Always A River project. Frances Sargent, one of Muncie
<br />Indiana's leading civic activists, has been elected Vice -Chair.
<br />Frances serves as a public member of the IHC Board. David
<br />Mills, Sr. Vice President of National City Bank, has been re-
<br />elected for a second term as Treasurer. Together with Council
<br />PresidentfExecutive Director, this team provides key
<br />leadership for IHC.
<br />LET'S TALK ABOUT IT
<br />Reading and discussing good books is
<br />a naturally engaging communal activity.
<br />For years, IHC has offered various theme
<br />versions of the Let's Talk About It book
<br />discussion program to public libraries, in
<br />a package that includes grant funds and
<br />texts on loan.
<br />For the first time. IHC is making the
<br />Let's Talk About It program available to
<br />other not-for-profit venues such as senior
<br />citizen centers or community interest
<br />groups. Each Let's Talk About It set
<br />consists of 5 books on a broad theme.
<br />Toni Morrison, Kurt Vonnegut, Arthur
<br />Miller, and Anne Tyler are a few of the
<br />authors featured among the 11 available
<br />themes:
<br />• Being Ethnic, Becoming American
<br />• Work and its Rewards in America
<br />• Seasons in the Modern American
<br />Family
<br />• The Myth in Popular Fiction
<br />• Individual Rights and Community
<br />• Images of Romantic Love
<br />• Where We Live: The Indiana
<br />Experience
<br />• Bestselling Hoosier Authors
<br />• Heroes and Heroines of the Ohio River
<br />Valley
<br />• The Ohio River and the Nation:
<br />Encounter and Change
<br />LTAI sponsors recruit up to 20
<br />participants from the community, invite e
<br />scholar to add insights into the literature,
<br />and appoint discussion leaders. IHC
<br />offers a $500 grant to be used for the
<br />scholar's honorarium, publicity, and so
<br />on. Let's Talk About It is a substantive
<br />program that encourages community
<br />dialogue. To receive brochures on the
<br />themes above, guidelines, or an
<br />application, contact Anne Laker at
<br />
|