My life of the mind: Embracing transitions

Raphael’s School of Athens (Apostolic Palace, The Vatican; photo: DY)

Since 1991, I’ve been a full-time law professor.  But that’s changing now. I’ve entered a voluntary phased retirement program at Suffolk University Law School in downtown Boston, where I’ve been teaching since 1994.  Starting with the current academic year, I’m on a half-time teaching schedule, and will remain so for the following two academic years. Although I may continue to teach on a very part-time basis after that, I am concluding my full-time employment as a law professor.

Although I still enjoy teaching our wonderful students at Suffolk, I’m delighted to be transitioning into a busy and fulfilling semi-retirement. I’ll be engaging in a variety of lifelong learning and cultural enrichment activities, volunteer service on various non-profit boards and advisory committees, and ongoing aspects of my long-time work. I’ll also do hobbies and spend more time with people dear to me.

As part of this transition, I’m looking at how my various learning and related activities are shaping up. Here’s how things are looking for now:

Great Books and Great Ideas

In 2024, I completed the Basic Program of Liberal Education for Adults, offered since 1946 by the University of Chicago’s Graham School for Continuing Liberal and Professional Studies. As I wrote earlier on this blog:

The Basic Program is an open enrollment, non-credit, four-year sequence of courses featuring the close reading and discussion of what have been called the Great Books. It starts with works by ancient Greek philosophers and poets and proceeds to examine other canonical authors and works of the Western tradition.

The Basic Program experience was so meaningful, both intellectually and personally, that I’ve continued to take elective courses and course sequences at Graham. Right now I’m enrolled in a series of courses titled “The End(s) of Humanity,” which use the lens of the humanities to consider existential crises such as climate change and the nuclear threat.

And by adding a service component, I’m jumping into this U of Chicago thing with both feet. Last year, I accepted an invitation to join the Graham Council, a volunteer body appointed by the University’s board of trustees that supports the Graham School and provides input and feedback to its administrators and faculty. And in the fall, I was interviewed for a video commemorating the upcoming 80th anniversary of the Basic Program and participated in a panel discussion on the value of reading Great Books.

Offering remarks during a Graham School panel discussion, Hyde Park, Chicago

I now regard the Graham School as a vital long-term home base for my lifelong learning activities. My service role with Graham also enables me to support the liberal arts and humanities generally. In sum, this has become an enormously enriching and satisfying association.

University of Chicago, Hyde Park, Chicago (photo: DY)

Singing

I am passionate about . . . ” is probably one of the most overused expressions of our day. But dear reader, I am truly passionate about singing as a very meaningful, fun, and healthy hobby and pastime.

Since 1995, I’ve taken a weekly singing workshop with the same instructor, Jane Eichkern, first at the Boston Center for Adult Education, now at the Cambridge Center for Adult Education. Taught in a supportive, encouraging small class format, it has been a place of learning, fun, and fellowship. It has been part of the rhythm of my life, going back to my first year in Boston. I have not missed enrolling in a term since I first signed up.

During recent years, I’ve become a big karaoke enthusiast as well. My go-to venue is the main stage at VIVA Karaoke & Studios in Boston’s Theatre District. Before the pandemic, I had become a regular at VIVA’s predecessor, Limelight Karaoke. When they reopened under the VIVA name, I returned and have kept returning.

I’m singing a fave Sinatra tune at the VIVA Karaoke main stage in Boston

I love singing the old standards, also referred to as the Great American Songbook. Songs popularized by the likes of Sinatra, Tony Bennett, Bobby Darin, and others are among my favorites. (If you’re on Facebook, you can check out three of these croonings here, here, and here!)

I harbor enormously modest singing ambitions: I want to be a great karaoke singer. That’s it! I’ve resisted suggestions to expand my vistas by seeking out a choral group or local theatre company to join. Voice class and karaoke are my happy places.

History

I have been an amateur student of history going back to grade school. This next chapter of my life will allow me more time to steep myself in learning about and understanding our past. Fortunately, I live in a city that is simply steeped in history. Among other things, Boston played significant roles in the American Revolution and in the anti-slavery movement that led into the American Civil War. The city is a casebook of early Americana.

I’m forging a very rewarding connection to the world of history via my service on the board of directors of Revolutionary Spaces, Inc., a Boston-based non-profit institution. Rev. Spaces stewards two nationally significant historic sites — the Old South Meeting House and the Old State House, both located in downtown Boston — and offers public education exhibits, tours, and programs about U.S. history, democracy, and freedom of speech. I began attending Rev. Spaces events in 2023. I was so impressed by the quality of programs and staff there that I basically enthused my way onto the board.

Performers take their bows at the annual interactive Rev. Spaces re-enactment of the raucous 1773 public meeting that preceded the Boston Tea Party, at the site where it happened (Old South Meeting House, Boston; photo: DY)

These on-site opportunities join with hundreds of books about history that are part of my personal library, many of which await my semi-retirement. With a bit of luck and good health, the upcoming years will allow me to satisfy more of my history geek leanings.

Non-Scholarly Writing Projects

I’m looking forward to doing more non-scholarly writing during the years to come. This includes social media contributions and articles for periodicals.

In addition, I want to explore some non-traditional venues. Before I began my teaching career, I was very drawn to the world of zines — little magazines and short booklets, often self-published — and imagined myself someday publishing in that mode. Well, the publication expectations of academe took over at that point, to the extent that even serious blogging (of which I’ve done a ton) isn’t considered to be academic writing by many people in this business.

But with my schedule becoming more flexible, I’m starting to explore what continues to be a thriving zine world. Lately I’ve been spending a lot of time with offerings from Microcosm Publishing, and I’ve got several ideas for zine writing that might be interesting to some readers out there.

Part of my latest zine haul from Microcosm Publishing (photo: DY)

Legacy Work

Finally, although I will no longer be a full-time law professor, I will remain professionally active in focal areas that have shaped my academic work for decades, such as workplace bullying, employee safety and dignity, and therapeutic jurisprudence.

I’ve been doing this workplace anti-bullying stuff for a long time, and I have no intentions to stop.

This will include advocating for the enactment of workplace anti-bullying laws in the U.S., engaging in research, writing, and public education projects about creating healthier workplaces, and supporting the evolution of the law through innovative frameworks such as therapeutic jurisprudence. You may read more about my work at my Minding the Workplace blog, which I have been writing since 2008, and download many of my scholarly writings without fee from my Social Science Research Network page.

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My various activities will keep me downing coffee on a regular basis (photo: DY)

When I began thinking hard about what I would like this next chapter of my life to look like, lifelong learning naturally emerged as a recurring theme. The common thread that ties together so many of these activities is a commitment to learning and education, both for me and for others. I’m very much looking forward to it all.

A book about notebooks: “The infinite potential of the blank page”

(Image: Roland-Allen.com)

During the pandemic, I found myself resorting to printed notebooks to jot down ideas and impressions, write mini-essays, develop plans, and make lists. I think I was getting so tired of living my life online that I became specially drawn to the analog appeal of deploying pen and paper for recording my thoughts. 

As for the notebooks themselves, I went both highbrow and budget level, using both pricey Moleskine books and inexpensive Mead composition books. I tended to write the more “profound” stuff in the Moleskines, while putting everyday notes and numbers into the composition books.

Today, I’ve kept up the notebook habit, especially for brainstorming over potential projects, developing ideas, and planning for the coming weeks, months, and years. I feel like I’m in a mental comfort zone when I’m in this notebook writing mode.

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It should be no wonder, then, that I was delighted to discover Roland Allen’s marvelous The Notebook, A History of Thinking on Paper (2023). The book’s title doubles as its description. Allen chronicles in fascinating detail how both prominent and everyday people have used notebooks or their historical predecessors, going back to the days of stone tablets.

Allen’s long introduction starts us in the present, exploring the Moleskine notebook phenomenon and the underlying draw of this brand and others in our digital age. It reassured me that I have not been alone in experiencing the attraction of printed notebooks, even if in some ways it’s easier for us to simply open our laptops and start typing away.

In trying to nail down that appeal, the caption accompanying a photo of a modern notebook explained the heart of it for me: “The infinite potential of the blank page.” Awesome.

 

On studying the “Great Books” at the University of Chicago: A deeply satisfying finish and a glorious failure

Certificate and graduation program

During June, I made a quick trip to Chicago to attend my graduation ceremony from the University of Chicago’s storied Basic Program of Liberal Education for Adults. The Basic Program is an open enrollment, non-credit, four-year sequence of courses featuring the close reading and discussion of what have been called the Great Books. It starts with works by ancient Greek philosophers and poets and proceeds to examine other canonical authors and works of the Western tradition. The Basic Program is offered through the U of C’s Graham School of Continuing Liberal and Professional Studies, one of the University’s three original academic units, dating back to its founding in the early 1890s.

The Basic Program has been a long-time Graham School staple, solidly rooted in the Great Books movement championed by the likes of U of C President Robert Hutchins, Columbia University professor John Erskine, and iconoclastic educator Mortimer Adler during the early and mid 20th century. Traditionally offered in a small group, in-person format in the Chicagoland area, the Basic Program began piloting an online version during the years preceding the pandemic. When COVID arrived, everything moved online.

The pandemic had prompted me to search for interactive, online learning opportunities that might soften the isolation of spending so much time at home. I had known about the Basic Program for many years, but I assumed it would remain an in-person offering only. However, I wondered if the pandemic had prompted a change, and it had indeed. I would enroll in the Fall of 2020.

As I wrote on this blog in early 2021, reading some of the important works that comprised the Basic Program curriculum had long been on my radar screen, but I knew that I couldn’t do it alone:

I can be a person of contradictions. I have long resisted required courses and curricula at just about every stage of learning in my life, going back to grade school. If a subject doesn’t interest me, then I don’t want to sink any time into it.

But here I am, delighted to participate in a four-year, prescribed curriculum of courses and books.

You see, I have long wanted to read the classics of the Western tradition, considering this to be a big gap in my education. To the extent that I have a “bucket list,” reading these works has been on it.

The problem is that I’m just not self-disciplined enough to read the Great Books on my own. They require a sustained, concentrated commitment. Although I don’t need the prod of tests and quizzes, I do need the presence of a teacher and fellow learners, along with a set schedule.

That’s exactly what the Basic Program provides. The instructors are dedicated, gifted teachers in the Socratic tradition, and they facilitate dialogues among very bright fellow students who are excited about participating in this course of study.

In a notebook that I kept during 2020-21 to record assorted thoughts, ideas, and plans, I jotted down why I wished to undertake this considerable investment of time and attention. I concluded, with a somewhat dramatic, self-important flourish, that “I want to be an educated man.” I figured that four years of immersive study of the Great Books, guided and inspired by Basic Program instructors and fellow students, would help me achieve that objective.

Graduation

I will be writing more about the intellectual substance of being in this program later. But for now, let me fast forward back to the point where I’m in Chicago last month for our graduation festivities. Our weekend was a deeply satisfying way to finish the four-year journey, the 74th graduation ceremony in the Basic Program’s history. It was such a delight to meet many of my instructors and classmates in person for the very first time, after spending literally hundreds of hours together on Zoom.

We started with a Saturday dinner for our cohort, hosted by one of our classmates. Sunday morning and afternoon included an opening breakfast hosted by the Basic Program for donors to the class gift, followed by the graduation ceremony itself, and then an informal lunch with several classmates.

Although our online cohort of some 14-15 students greatly enjoyed each others’ contributions to our class discussions and had developed a genuine rapport, it remained to be seen how we would interact when we got together in-person for the first time. It turned out that we had little to worry about on that note. Graduation weekend was like meeting old friends.

Glorious failure

The Basic Program started as a welcomed and engaging focal point during the heart of the pandemic. It finished as a rewarding intellectual and personal experience, spent in the good company of a very special group of fellow learners and instructors.

But in one way, it was a glorious failure. Recall my notebook jotting that I wanted to enroll in the program to become “an educated man.” During our final quarter together and continuing into our graduation weekend, I found myself pondering that original objective. I realized that the greatest intellectual gift of the Basic Program was that it constituted a jumpstart, not a finish, to my education. 

Indeed, during these four years, I was constantly reminded of how much I didn’t know, thanks in part to my responses to our assigned readings, but mostly due to the richness of our class discussions and insights shared by others in the room. I can’t even begin to count how many times someone’s thoughtful comment, pointed observation, or shared piece of knowledge led me to think, omigosh, I wouldn’t have thought of that in a million years.

And so, I find myself looking forward to more learning adventures, including additional classes through the Graham School. They will provide rewards as sheer intellectual experiences, as well as lenses for examining contemporary life. In fact, the experience of this program has led me to conclude that deep reading and contemplation of important works can help us understand the unsettling and illiberal (i.e., intolerant and narrow-minded) condition of our broader society today. I’ll be sharing a few of those lessons in future postings.

Free online event: “The Dignity of an Intellectual Life for All,” Oct. 21, 1-3 pm.

The Dignity of an Intellectual Life for All

Friday, October 21, 2022, 1:00-3:00 p.m., Eastern Time, Online Format

Hosted by Suffolk University Law School (https://www.suffolk.edu/law/) and co-sponsored by:

Basic Program of Liberal Education for Adults, University of Chicago, Graham School https://graham.uchicago.edu/programs-courses/basic-program)

Harrison Middleton University (https://www.hmu.edu)

World Dignity University Initiative of Human Dignity and Humiliation Studies (https://www.worlddignityuniversity.org)

With a focus on Dr. Zena Hitz’s thought-provoking book, Lost in Thought: The Hidden Pleasures of an Intellectual Life (2020), this program will examine the value of embracing the liberal arts and humanities for their own sake and consider how a rich intellectual life for everyone enhances human dignity. The program opens with a conversation featuring Dr. Hitz, followed by a responsive panel comprised of four distinguished educators, with opportunities for Q&A.

Featured Speaker

Zena Hitz, Tutor, St. John’s College, Annapolis, MD, and author, Lost in Thought: The Hidden Pleasures of an Intellectual Life (Princeton, NJ: Princeton U. Press, 2020)  https://zenahitz.net

Guest Panelists

Joseph Coulson, President, Harrison Middleton University   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Coulson

Hilda Demuth-Lutze, English teacher (ret.), Chesterton High School, IN, and author of historical fiction                                               https://kingdomofthebirds.wordpress.com/about-the-author/

Amy Thomas Elder, Instructor, Basic Program of Liberal Education for Adults, University of Chicago, Graham School                https://graham.uchicago.edu/person/amy-thomas-elder

Linda Hartling, Director, Human Dignity and Humiliation Studies  https://www.humiliationstudies.org/whoweare/linda.php

Moderator

David Yamada, Professor of Law, Suffolk University Law School, Boston, MA https://www.suffolk.edu/academics/faculty/d/y/dyamada

UPDATE: A freely accessible recording of this very engaging program has now been posted to YouTube. Go here to watch it!

2022 side gig: Serving as a “Fellow in Ideas” at Harrison Middleton University

This year, I’m delighted to be doing an important “side gig” endeavor as a 2022 “Fellow in Ideas” at Harrison Middleton University (HMU), an online university devoted exclusively to the exploration of Great Books and Great Ideas.  Those selected as Fellows contribute reviews and essays to HMU’s publications and join in various discussion groups.

So far, my participation has included:

I look forward to taking part in more HMU activities to round out my fellowship experience during the fall.

Harrison Middleton University is a unique educational entity. Its strongest intellectual roots trace back to Great Books of the Western World, a series of books first published by the Encyclopedia Britannica in 1952, comprised mostly of full works by selected authors of the Western canon. HMU has obtained national accreditation through the Distance Education Accrediting Commission (DEAC). Whereas many DEAC-accredited members are for-profit institutions emphasizing vocational preparation, HMU is a non-profit, online university devoted solely to the liberal arts.

HMU’s work is especially needed during a time when independent inquiry, liberal learning, and the Great Books are on the decline in much of standard-brand higher education and under attack from the social and political extremes. It is a gift to be a year-long visitor to this stimulating, intelligent, and welcoming community.