Thursday, February 28, 2008

Unfairly maligned

I know that classics professors don't have a very hip reputation. Remember the part in "The Sure Thing" when Ione Skye says, "You know what I've always wanted to be?" and John Cusack, responding to her uptight, obsessive-compulsive personality, says, "A classics Professor?"

In two books I've read recently there have been peripheral characters who were classics professors. In Caucasia, the mother's patrician upbringing - upon which she has turned her back - is exemplified by her father. He sounds like he was a fairly nice guy, and it was only after his death that Sandy really rebelled and got involved in the Black Power movement. In A Company of Swans, however, Eva Ibbotson creates a real monster of a father: far more concerned with his position at Cambridge than anything else, he notices his daughter only to worry about how she might disgrace him. He is stuffy, judgmental, bigoted, close-minded; he educates Harriet in Greek and Latin, but will not allow her to go to school (this is at the end of the 19th century).

There are also a number of books in which classics students do bad things - Donna Tartt's The Secret History, Carol Goodman's books, and Pamela Dean's transplantation of the Tam Lin myth into the classics department of a small liberal arts college in Minnesota.

Erich Segal usually has a classicist in his books (he is one, after all), and they are fairly neutral. But I don't think I've come across a piece of literature in which there is a hip, exciting classics professor or student who isn't also a total lunatic.

1 comment:

Doc Jen said...

This post made me chuckle and I have to say that English teachers have a rather checkered reputation on the page and screen as well. We are portrayed as either teacher/rock star (Robin Williams in Dead Poet's Society) or uptight and spinsterish. Even movies that attempt more nuanced portrayals of teachers of writing never show the the complex challenges of the job (too many students, lots and lots of essays to repsond to).

I liked the movie, Freedom Writers, but I kept wondering about all the other classes she had to be teaching besides the one the movie focused on.