• Harvey Young

    Harvey Young is the dean of the College of Fine Arts, a CFA professor of theater, and a College of Arts & Sciences professor of English. He is the author of seven books, most recently Black Theater Is Black Life: An Oral History of Chicago Theater (coauthored with Mecca Zabriskie), and is the president of the Association for Theatre in Higher Education. Profile

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There are 2 comments on POV: The Cards Are Stacked against the Humanities Right Now

  1. As a recent CFA alumna and current master’s student in the Humanities at UChicago, I found Harvey Young’s piece both urgent and insightful. He powerfully illustrates what’s at stake in the ongoing erosion of the humanities, showing how recent political shifts threaten not just funding, but the cultural value of critical inquiry itself.

  2. The humanities don’t just teach us about art or literature—they shape how we understand ourselves and the world around us. When we defund the humanities, we lose the language and tools we need to think critically about culture, history, and justice. It’s alarming that these programs are being treated as expendable when they’re essential to building informed, empathetic communities. As the article suggests, universities need to avoid reproducing the same power dynamics internally that they’re being pressured to adopt from outside. Humanities may not “pay off” in dollars the same way STEM does, but they’re priceless in terms of social and civic value.

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