After reading a series of articles lamenting the death of higher education and critical thinking in the age of ChatGPT, I tempered my despair with Simon Lewsen’s somewhat hopeful essay on the humanities in The Local, which is part of its higher education issue. With the reduction and elimination of humanities, classics, English, and language-related programs across North America, the academic landscape is bleak. But Lewsen, a writing instructor at the University of Toronto, wonders if we’re “misjudging the moment,” mistaking the “flux and turbulence” in higher education for an existential crisis. “In my own classroom, I’ve encountered surprising signs of renewed life in the humanities,” he writes, “which suggest that a renaissance could be possible, at least if people who care about this stuff can rise to meet the moment.” Our world has polarized, yes, but Lewsen suggests that politically dynamic classrooms and a more diverse, democratized university system could electrify places of learning again.

My students are surprised to discover that sophisticated thinkers, regardless of their political leanings, are ideologically promiscuous: in critiquing the U.S. carceral system, the socialist writer Elizabeth Bruenig draws on pre-modern Catholic thought, and in calling for a return to the traditional, pre-nuclear family, the conservative intellectual David Brooks points to queer culture, with its chosen families, as a contemporary model to emulate. In the humanities, right and left converge. Ideologies mutate and reconfigure, like molecules or strands of DNA. I’ve realized that, for students, this discovery is thrilling. It’s one of the unique pleasures that a humanities education used to offer—and could offer again.

More picks about higher education and the humanities

Socrates Would Be Pleased

Jay Miller | Aeon | August 15, 2025 | 4,068 words

“With a class of college students and inmates, teaching philosophy in prison is a rowdy, honest and hopeful provocation.”

What Happens After A.I. Destroys College Writing?

Hua Hsu | The New Yorker | June 30, 2025 | 6,207 words

“The demise of the English paper will end a long intellectual tradition, but it’s also an opportunity to reëxamine the purpose of higher education.”

Teachers Are Not OK

Jason Koebler | 404 Media | June 2, 2025 | 5,612 words

“AI, ChatGPT, and LLMs ‘have absolutely blown up what I try to accomplish with my teaching.’”

From the Encampments

Columbia Law Students for Palestine; CUNY Law Student Against Genocide; Maeve Vitello; Rita W. Wang; Mehrdad Dariush, Chisato Kimura, Chloe Miller, and Rachel Vogel; Alaa Hajyahia and Seetha Tan| The Law and Political Economy Project | May 2, 2024 | 4,342 words

“Student reflections on protests for Palestine.”

An American Education: Notes from UATX

Noah Rawlings | The New Inquiry | February 19, 2024 | 6,839 words

“Inside the ‘Forbidden Courses’ at the billionaire-backed University of Austin, the campus of the ‘anti woke’ commentariat.”

Misplaced Trust

Tristan Ahtone, Robert Lee, Amanda Tachine, An Garagiola, Audrianna Goodwin, Maria Parazo Rose, Clayton Aldern | Grist | February 7, 2024 | 5,380 words

“Stolen Indigenous land is the foundation of the land-grant university system. Climate change is its legacy.”

Can AI Unlock the Secrets of the Ancient World?

Ashlee Vance and Ellen Huet | Bloomberg Businessweek | February 5, 2024 | 3,688 words

“Almost 2,000 years ago, a volcano preserved Herculaneum’s vast library of scrolls but left them unreadable. A volunteer army of nerds has been racing to decipher them.”

Cheri has been an editor at Longreads since 2014.