University offers 'Simpsons' as Philosophy Class 235
joestump98 writes "I ran accross a story at CNN that says a local Michigan college, Siena Heights, is offering a philosophy class on our favorite cartoon - The Simpsons. The Catholic school says the class is about religion and philosphy in popular culture." And I thought Rocks for Jocks was a hilarious concept in wasting a college education. That said, I'd take that class. Have to make sure to watch my homework tonight.
Simpsons as a teaching tool (Score:3, Informative)
What's new about this is that an entire course is being dedicated to them.
Re:Simpsons as a teaching tool (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Simpsons as a teaching tool (Score:1, Offtopic)
I'm not sure about you, but every philosophy student I know has very little independent thought. They basically just spout quotes of whoever they liked reading. Philosophy classes do not inspire independent thought.
Wrong! (Score:1)
Re:Simpsons as a teaching tool (Score:1)
oprah? (Score:2)
and they say education in the us isn't going downhill...
worhtless? (Score:1)
Re:worhtless? Probably. (Score:3, Insightful)
More clearly than anything, it represents a real crisis in North American universities today: people think of them as valuable only insofar as they provide job training and a career boost. Departments like History, English, Religion and Philosophy once used to put undergraduates through serious courses that required them to struggle through real scholarship. They resented it at first, but came away with a substantial understanding of our intellectual roots, and of certain timeless questions, along with history's most elligible answers to those questions.
Fast forward to now, and you'll see core departments struggling to attract students in universities that are increasingly asking the departments to compete with one another for students and funding. The cheapest way to win that competition is not to hire an outstanding faculty, provide your students with individual attention, and make demanding courses which require lots of writing. The cheapest way is to pack a huge lecture hall using provocative course titles. Unfortunately, the students don't complain when the course itself is a half-baked piece of crap, designed primarily to stroke the ego of an aging professor trying to overcome his insecurity that he might no longer be "with it." They don't complain when the exams are on bubble sheets; "electronic grading" is, according to their insecure professor, the new, hip thing. The reason why they don't complain is because they don't know what they're missing. Once one department at a university resorts to this strategy, the other departments must respond in kind. It doesn't take long for things to get all fucked up. I've seen this first hand.
Please, students: if you actually want to learn something in college, do your research on a course before enrolling. Sadly, many of your options today are courses that will amuse you, but leave you just as ignorant as you were when the course began. One warning sign that you might be in for mere amusement is: an overly up-to-date or hip course title and topic.
When I was an undergraduate getting my degree in physics, my most important courses were in philosophy. I had to know Kant and Quine and Nietzche inside out, and there was nothing more intellectually rewarding than that. If you take philosophy classes, take some real ones. Only after that should you consider doing something philosophically frivolous like the Philosophy of the Simpsons.
But by all means, watch the Simpsons! It's about to start in 15 minutes! Spork
Re:worhtless? Probably. (Score:2)
First point about people who complain that some things are getting worse: Look, some things are getting worse. I gave you reasons for why I thought things were getting worse. You can't just dismiss them by your observation. I doubt you think that every aspect our world is as good as/better than it was before. My last post made me realize that I'm pretty convinced our universities have taken a turn for the worse.
That's not to say I want to resist the intrusion of popular culture into academia, or that I somehow don't like pop culture. I'll bet my car that you can't beat me in Simpsons trivia. And of course you need to study popular culture in media and communications classes. I also understand you can learn a lot by analyzing popular culture with academic care. In the early 90's my girlfriend published the first academic paper about Hillary Clinton jokes. It was a serious study and it was good.
Philosophy is not cultural studies, however. It is the study of reasoned argument about fundamental questions. Of course, one sometimes sees glimmers of reasoned argument about fundamental questions in popular culture, and the Simpsons has more such glimmers than most sitcoms. Still, there is just as much/little philosophical content as there is fundamental physics content. I hope you would agree that "Physics of the Simpsons" should not make a good GE course at a university that hopes all its students learn physics basics. While we're at it, let's have "Civil Engineering of The Simpsons," or how about "Accounting of The Simpsons." I guess I see "Philosophy of the Simpsons" as being equally misguided. If it doesn't seem that way to you, that might be because you never read a book by Kant or Quine.
You say I was "mistakenly implying that anyone is going to throw out Descartes 101 for Barney and Moe" but later go on to say "they are important cultural artifacts at least as worthy of study as your Kant and Nietzche." So it seems you would be comfortable with replacing the greats with pop shows, and that's exactly what I'm not comfortable with.
I worry that what underlies the attitude that "The Philosophy of The Simpsons" makes a fitting course for a university is the belief that philosophy courses aren't really about anything anyway, so we might as well dress them up with The Simpsons. This attitude dissolves very quickly when one reads a book by Hume or Russell, but too few people bother to do so.
Re:worhtless? (Score:1, Funny)
If the Simpsons was a major ... (Score:1)
Imagine if Nacho Eating was part of the Family Science Degree... i could be yet another degree holding unemployed member of america!!
Mmmmmmmm...forbidden doughnut... (Score:5, Funny)
Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm.....sacrilicious.....
save me jebus... (Score:3, Interesting)
This sound like it could be a great class and it would be a hoot to sit in on. One can always hope that the one of the questions on the final would be...
In 500 words or less describe the moral, ethical, and religous foundations in Homer's refrain of "Mmmmmmm donuts."
Hmmph.. (Score:5, Funny)
Won't somebody please think of the children..
Mmm.. Philosophy..
Re:Hmmph.. (Score:3, Funny)
"philosophiddly-diddly!" - Ned
"Philosophy? Ha Ha!" -Nelson
"God is Dead? Eeeeeexcellent..." - Mr. Burns
SuperID
Re:Hmmph.. (Score:2)
Re:Hmmph.. (Score:1)
Sheash, and i sometimes wonder why i have such limited respect for Tertiary Education.
Simpsons as Literature (Score:3, Interesting)
Catholic School Eh? (Score:1)
God is my favorite fictional character! -- Homer Simpson
Insights (Score:1)
God Bless the Simpsons (Score:2)
I can't name the number of times I've stopped and said "hey, this is just like the Simpsons when Homer..." about my own behaviour or the bahviour of my friends. D'oh!
Re:God Bless the Simpsons (Score:1)
Funny, yes. Inoffensive is stretching it, although those most offended are probably misinterpreting it in the first place.
Re:God Bless the Simpsons (Score:1)
the simpsons are full of satire
basically they are making fun of a lot of things gone wrong with US at one point or other
take for example mr. burns
Re:God Bless the Simpsons (Score:1)
Have you even seen the latest season? It is full of things in bad taste. A man commits suicide, marge is portrayed as a total fool, even dumber than homer, and homer finds a rotting and decaying corpse. Need I say more?
My story (Score:2)
The woman who worked there then proceed to explain to the youngster all about shark mating behaviour. My lady friend and I hardly made it out of there with breath left in our lungs, we laughed so hard.
(Anyone who doesn't understand, watch the whole run of the Simpsons until you hear Homer yelling "ZOOKEEPER! ZOOKEEPER! THOSE MONKEYS ARE KILLING EACH OTHER!")
Re:Aurora Borealis? (Score:1)
Wait! This is way more plausable than... (Score:2, Funny)
Check out various offerings from a google search [google.com]. No word on whether the class is still being offered.
Re:Wait! This is way more plausable than... (Score:2)
Re: Wait! This is way more plausable than... (Score:2)
Yeah, I was going out with this girl once (Score:1)
Other interesting classes (at UCSC) (Score:5, Interesting)
Here's a list of some of the interesting classes that are availabe from time to time
Understanding Drugs (Bioc 80) -- Yes, you talk about doing various drugs...
Lesbian and Gay World (CMMU 80F) -- I'm still trying to figure out why it's bad to think people have nothing wrong with them until they tell me their gay... Nevermind, can't remember the group that was spouting that off...
Hope/Crisis Capitalism (Econ 80A) -- I don't know, haven't taken it and don't know anyone who has...
Technothrillers (Film 80A) -- Watching, you guessed it, technothrillers
Intro to Horror Films (Lit 80T) -- Horror movies are your friends... From what I hear you watch a couple dozen horror films (as far back as like the 1890s IIRC)
Beatles Music (MUSC 80V)
Saturday Night Live (Theater 80O)
80's: Film And TV (Film 80) -- 80's: The decade that only one good thing came out of: mst3k [mst3k.com]
Psychophysic Music (Phys 80a) -- I don't know about this one
Muppet Magic (Thea 80L) -- 10 weeks of Jim Henson's Muppets, and why we should all bow down to him... Or something
Queer Theater (Thea 80T) -- It just struck me as funny... I guess it shouldn't seeing as how we have a high proportion of homosexuals here...
Disney (Thea 80N) -- The class I took. The only thing I remember from it is that they used a really neat looking camera setup to do framed shots for their early movies-- Hence why they were better than other stuff from the same era.. Oh, yeah, and my TA (with a speech impediment) saying "nubile" in regards to the Little Mermaid, I think...
And to think, you have to take 2 topical (80) courses to get out of here...
Hasta luego,
ex
Re:Other interesting classes (at UCSC) (Score:3, Insightful)
There have also been:
The Films of John Carpenter (A literature class)
The Gothic Imagination (Gothic literature through the ages)
TV Culture and Society
Science Fiction in Multicultural America
Also the class I taught in Winter 2000:
Kresge 80: Star Trek and Popular Culture.
Beyond the interesting classes, students are also given the opportunity to create their own study programs (with help and support of the faculty), and choose equally challanging exit requirements to fill in for a thesis or seminar. I chose to teach a class. UCSC is a great place to go if you realize real life doesn't mean sticking exclusivly to classics and hard sciences.
Re:Other interesting classes (at UCSC) (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Other interesting classes (at UCSC) (Score:3, Informative)
Modern Classic (Score:3, Interesting)
Besides that, the simpsons is funny as hell offers quotes for every occasion from "D'oh!" to "Ahhh the Navy, see the world and all the free gay sex you can handle." :-)
The simpsons first season is now on DVD [amazon.com].. I'm getting them all when they come out.
Other classes that actually exist: (Score:1)
Films of Keanu Reeves [slashdot.org]
Cloudwatching class (really!)
Sociology
Waste of a class? I think not. (Score:5, Informative)
For example, maybe Maggie is just being silent to be silent, or maybe that silence could be interpreted as a social protest. Sartre would certainly think so, anyway.
My point is simply that this show goes far beyond what it appears to be on the surface. Plain & Simple, anything that stimulates your mind and provokes positive thoughtstreams is not waste; to call it that shows how much you truly still have to learn.
Independently wealthy (Score:1)
Re:Waste of a class? I think not. (Score:2)
Or maybe that silence could be interpreted as the desire to avoid drastically changing the formula of one of Fox's cash cows. You think?
Hey, man... (Score:2)
For example, maybe Maggie is just being silent to be silent, or maybe that silence could be interpreted as a social protest. Sartre would certainly think so, anyway.
You gonna pass that around or are you just gonna sit there and smoke the whole thing yourself?
Poof! (Score:2, Funny)
I think not.
Therefore, you ARE not. Goodbye.
R. Decartes
Re:Poof! (Score:2)
Re:Poof! (Score:2)
Re:Waste of a class? I think not. (Score:5, Funny)
Or maybe she's silent because most babies don't talk?
Re:Waste of a class? I think not. (Score:2)
Re:Waste of a class? I think not. (Score:3, Informative)
Incidentally, she also talks in the episode where the kids are adopted by the Flanderses, and I _think_ there's a third as well, though I can't put my finger on it at the moment.
Re:Waste of a class? I think not. (Score:2, Insightful)
In the episode where they show Bart and Lisa as babies who always called Homer "Homer", the last scene is Maggie saying "Daddy".
Re:Waste of a class? I think not. (Score:2)
Re:Waste of a class? I think not. (Score:1, Troll)
Sorry, but I get more philosophical insight out of a good episode of spongebob squarepants than a simpsons episode.
It's entertainment people! entertainment....
next thing you'll know is people will start worshiping simsontology and hold matt groning as their leader.
The philolsophically interesting thing I see with all this is the correlation to the failing years of the roman empire when the people started studying silly-ass things and focusing on learning socially useless trades.... The parallels in aincent history with today are quite facinating.
Re:Waste of a class? I think not. (Score:2)
Plus its just so ridiculous sometimes its easy for an adult to watch as well.
Still what is so wrong with studying the philosphy of current culture?
Re:Waste of a class? I think not. (Score:2, Informative)
I think that this fragment of a quote pretty much sums up the entire point of the class. There always have been, and still are, some philosophers who write philosophical tomes which are quite clearly philosophy. But philosophy presented in the form of entertainment is no less worthy of consideration.
Consider, for example, "Candide" [literature.org] (by Voltaire) or "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenence". While they both take the form of a story, each is clearly a philosophical text as well. Likewise texts such as "Gulliver's Travels" and "Catch-22", while more focused on story, also contain plenty of social criticism, which is a form of philosophy.
Considering that "The Simpsons" is far more thoughtful than most of the rest of popular culture, I'm not at all surprised that someone decided to teach a class in it. Whether or not it lasts as part of the philosophical canon after it's off the air remains to be seen. It may not be good enough or philosophical enough to last, but I'm not surprised that it's being recognized in its time.
On a related note, Alan Moore (of "Watchmen" and "From Hell" fame, among other things) taught a class on comic books as literature at The University of California at Berkeley a few years back, and "Watchmen" is on the reading list for one Film/Rhetoric/English class [berkeley.edu] there. This is another example of a "cartoon" that's being taken seriously. It has been known to happen
Re:Waste of a class? I think not. (Score:3, Interesting)
So yeah, TV can influence real life, and as we all know the material is what you make of it. Reminds me of Finding Forrester when he says something like, "I hate it when critics talk about 'What did he really mean when he wrote this?'" You can read anything you want into the Simpsons. (And you can, you can always say "That reminds me of that Simpsons when...")
Wasting a college education? (Score:5, Interesting)
Modern Simpsons (Score:2)
Bleh, there's nothing philosophical about this season's (or the past two or three's) Simpsons episodes. They're just pointless. There's no plot, no jokes, nothing. I keep watching, in the vain hope that they'll improve, but they probably won't. That episode last week really was the Worst Episode Ever, totally dull and pointless. Whatever, rant over.
Re:Modern Simpsons (Score:2)
"Here are your messages:
`You have 30 minutes to move your car;'
`You have 10 minutes to move your car;'
`Your car has been impounded;'
`Your car has been crushed into a cube;'
`You have 30 minutes to move your cube.'"
(phone rings, Homer answers)
Homer: "Yello, Mr. Burns' office!"
Burns: "Is this about my cube?"
Re:Modern Simpsons (Score:1)
Re:Modern Simpsons (Score:2)
Yer forced to admit... (Score:3, Troll)
In all likelyhood, they're the equivalent of the underwater soap-carving courses that engineering students take to "satisfy" the arts requirement component of their curriculum.
In the story, who's speaking up about the course? A biology major -- a geek who is apparently too dim to recognize that a broad education is valuable, and has chosen to take a flakey course to satisfy a requisite with minimum effort.
Why on earth are the universities catering to this sort of limited, lazy thinking?
The job of the university should be to create a graduation class of people who are going to lead the advancement of the arts and sciences. To do so, these people are going to require a broad education, one that has challenged them on all fronts and forced them to think creatively and thoughtfully. They need to be people who are eternally curious, doggedly determined, and, above all, brilliant.
Serving up Simpsons swill as some sort of philosophy substitute is not doing anyone a favour.
Perhaps the standards have dropped too low. Maybe you don't have to be particularly smart to enter university any more: you just have to have money. Perhaps there's too much emphasis in the job market on post-secondary degrees. And the past three decade's emphasis on sciences as the be-all and end-all goal of education is certainly at fault: we need more technically-trained people (ie. college-level job training) than we need science/structure-trained people.
"The Simpsons and Philosophy: The D'oh! of Homer," indeed. Next up: "An Overview of Political Philosophies: The Travels of Xena, Warrior Princess."
Bah.
Re:Yer forced to admit... (Score:5, Insightful)
In all likelyhood, they're the equivalent of the underwater soap-carving courses that engineering students take to "satisfy" the arts requirement component of their curriculum.
I'm assuming you haven't taken this class, and you likely don't know the class' content other than seeing "The Simpsons" in the title. After 4 years at a university, I can tell you that you never know what a class is going to be like until you take it.
In the story, who's speaking up about the course? A biology major -- a geek who is apparently too dim to recognize that a broad education is valuable, and has chosen to take a flakey course to satisfy a requisite with minimum effort.
Again, you have no idea if the course is "flakey", or the intentions of the student. And isn't taking a philosophy class broadening his education?
Why on earth are the universities catering to this sort of limited, lazy thinking?
If you think all education that incorperates aspects of popular culture (especially intelligent, witty aspects) are "limited" and "lazy", I hope you enjoy living in your ivory tower, cut off from the rest of the world.
The job of the university should be to create a graduation class of people who are going to lead the advancement of the arts and sciences. To do so, these people are going to require a broad education, one that has challenged them on all fronts and forced them to think creatively and thoughtfully. They need to be people who are eternally curious, doggedly determined, and, above all, brilliant.
Actually, my point in going to college was to learn new things. I got a broad education, and learned a lot. I think I'm a better person for having gone to college, though I don't think I was necessarly meant to "lead the advancement of the arts and sciences". Regardless, a class on The Simpsons and Philosophy hardly brings down the system.
Serving up Simpsons swill as some sort of philosophy substitute is not doing anyone a favour.
It's not meant as a substitute; the university education is varied when you look deeply at a specific major course of study and the classes involved. Just because the simpsons is newer than some of your classical philosophers doesn't mean it doesn't belong as part of a wider course. I doubt this class is replacing one on something more "important".
Perhaps the standards have dropped too low. Maybe you don't have to be particularly smart to enter university any more: you just have to have money.
Anymore? You never needed to be particularly smart at many schools (including some ivy league schools). Money could, and still does, buy your way in. Don't fool yourself into thinking this is something new.
Perhaps there's too much emphasis in the job market on post-secondary degrees.
True.
And the past three decade's emphasis on sciences as the be-all and end-all goal of education is certainly at fault: we need more technically-trained people (ie. college-level job training) than we need science/structure-trained people.
Now you're just making things up. The liberal arts education has gotten more flack in the last 30 years than anything else on the university level. A science education is still largely seen as a "true" education.
"The Simpsons and Philosophy: The D'oh! of Homer," indeed. Next up: "An Overview of Political Philosophies: The Travels of Xena, Warrior Princess."
When I was in college, I created and taught a class on "Star Trek and Popular Culuture" as my exit requirement. You know what? The educational foundation of the school didn't crumble. There's room for the inclusion of pop culture in a university education.
Re:Yer forced to admit... (Score:2, Interesting)
Keep in mind that the educational institutions that accept this batch of unprepared students are also businesses. They have to cater to the needs of the students and thus offer inane courses that let them cast off the responsibility of attending college. Enter "Philosophy of the Simpsons"
Re:Yer forced to admit... (Score:1)
Courses like what? Ones that are based on contemporary media? This isn't Simpsons 101, a guide to Bart...it uses a modern satire to discuss religious & philosophical issues in a contemporary setting.
In all likelyhood, they're the equivalent of the underwater soap-carving courses that engineering students take to "satisfy" the arts requirement component of their curriculum.
Maybe, maybe not...you certainly have no real basis to assume that. Course titles are often deceiving.
In the story, who's speaking up about the course? A biology major -- a geek who is apparently too dim to recognize that a broad education is valuable, and has chosen to take a flakey course to satisfy a requisite with minimum effort
Hey, why don't you jump to a few *more* conclusions based oon a single sentence. I bet this geek is ugly too, and has bad hygiene, and only cares about biology. Good god man, i am amazed by your powers of perception through a few quoted syllables.
Why on earth are the universities catering to this sort of limited, lazy thinking?
Well, I would think to hopefully eliminate your sort of limited, lazy thinking. Satire, especially well-done, interesting satire is perhaps *the* hardest style of writing to pull off on a continual basis. Just as something being really old does not mean it is classic, being really new does not make it useless, limited, or lazy. *That* kind of thinking is what i'd hope college eliminates.
The job of the university should be to create a graduation class of people who are going to lead the advancement of the arts and sciences
Perhaps, or perhaps just to produce productive citizens capable of reasonable thought on their own.
To do so, these people are going to require a broad education, one that has challenged them on all fronts and forced them to think creatively and thoughtfully. They need to be people who are eternally curious, doggedly determined, and, above all, brilliant.
A broad education is certainly a good thing, though you seem to want it broad only in certain areas...nothing contemporary apparently. As for your list of traits, i would submit none of those are learned in college, they are either in a person before, or will not be. Education can encourage curiosity & feed it, focus determination, and allow brilliance to shine through, but it will not instill any of these if they aren't there to begin with.
Serving up Simpsons swill as some sort of philosophy substitute is not doing anyone a favour.
Right, and serving up that swill of the masses that shakespeare wrote (and that *is* what it was at the time) won't help anyone. Or that wanker alexander pope, or voltaire, or... I would suggest the majority of 'classical' education contains the swill of any age along with its loftier cream.
Again, this is not saying 'be like bart,' it is using a particularly entertaining subject to illustrate the same kind of philosophical questions that have ben asked throughout history. (And therein lies the beauty of the Simpsons...)
-Ted
Re:Yer forced to admit... (Score:1)
Re:Yer forced to admit... (Score:2)
Oh, come on. I don't know about what it is/was like at your school, but I barely had time for any electives while pursuing my EE Bachelor's. My parents gave me the best possible graduation gift - I didn't have to graduate. I got to take an extra term of whatever I wanted.
I took things that were mostly as far as possible from Engineering. Oh, sure, I took the 1/2 credit Holograms class, and I took the Fantasy as Literature class 'cause the Science Fiction one wasn't offered that term. But I also took Intro to Anthropology, Intro to Women's Studies (boy, that was fun, me being a white male middle-class heterosexual engineer), and Intro to Modern Dance (where I proved that I am an educatable dyslexic in the language of dance, but I showed up every day which was more than some dance enthusiasts did).
Perhaps these were fluff courses. Women's Studies was certainly low on intellectual rigor. But even if that were true (a) they certainly weren't required for an Engineering degree, and (b) they were no more fluff than the joke math and science courses the jocks and humanities types could get away with.
This really isn't that big of a deal (Score:2, Informative)
If anyone's interested, there's even a book, called The Simpsons and Philosophy - the D'oh! of Homer [amazon.com].
Football Scholars! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Football Scholars! (Score:1)
Religions of Star Trek (Score:1)
Description: [muhlenberg.edu]
REL 111 Topics in Religion: Religions of Star Trek
This course explores major themes in the study of religion using Star Trek as a primary source, along with more traditional, written texts. Selected excerpts from the original series, the Next Generation series, Deep Space Nine and Voyager will be viewed and discussed. Star Trek will be presented as a media forum for public debate on changing attitudes towards the role of religion in our culture over the past thirty years. It has presented constructions of meaning and value across cultures, highlighting themes fundamental to our understanding of religions. These themes include: the nature of the divine, the role of myth and ritual, evolution in both the spiritual and biological sense, the role of technology in our understanding of religious systems, attitudes toward "other" religions, and the transformative power of religious experience.
Meets general academic requirement R.
history (Score:2, Interesting)
We read books, studied the music, and looked at their impact on popular culture and the path of music development.
I even wrote a term paper on George Harrison's exposure and conversion to eastern philosophy and religion.
I guess the fundamental question on these kinds of classes is: are they just puff puff classes for an "easy A"? Or are they an interesting way to get young people to think about larger philosophical and societal question through subject matter they can really relate to?
I would be interested to see the philosophical context into which the professor inserts the simpsons. what would the reading list be like for this class?
not the first time (Score:2, Informative)
The Tao of Doh! (Score:2, Funny)
Innovation in education (Score:2, Informative)
Think about it. The Simpsons is arguably one of the most popular shows of all time. Not only is it one of the longest-running shows currently on television, its been one of the most consistently popular shows of all time, across ethnic lines. All during a period of great competition from other networks: other cartoon series have tried and failed to duplicate The Simpson's popularity (King of the Hill and The Family Guy readily spring to mind as competition on the same network.)
Now, remember how the Simpsons developed? They were originally an animated short on The Tracey Ullman Show, produced by a small group of people, not the standard fare of corporate media development. So not only do we have this incredible, remarkable program, but the program developed from a different structure then typical programming.
Now, all of these traits are remarkable individually, but when combined, the show is truly unique and remarkable.
There might be a meaning hidden in those facts that would be worth study from a marketing, sociological, and philosophical point of view.
Same topic, different source. (Score:3, Informative)
UC Berkeley has taught Simpsons before... (Score:2, Interesting)
Also available is SOUTH PARK: A SATIRE OF SOCIETY and SEINFELD AND OTHER COMEDIC EXPRESSIONS.
ancient philosophy (Score:1)
QED
Re:ancient philosophy (Score:2, Insightful)
Because their entertainment was based upon a richer and more interesting culture than ours.
Other such similar classes (Score:3, Funny)
The Simpsons as college material (Score:3, Funny)
Homer: Sometimes I think we're the worst family in town
Marge: Maybe we should move to a larger town?
--The Simpsons "Theres no disgrace like home"
Nikkos
Simpsons as relevant as ever (Score:2, Interesting)
One of my favorite Simpsons moments... (Score:2)
Anyone remember what episode that was? I don't think Wittgenstein's ever been mentioned on American television aside from that one gag.
Re:One of my favorite Simpsons moments... (Score:1)
The X-Files episode. Homer was telling Scully and Mulder what he was doing the night he saw the "alien":
"The evening started in the gentleman's club, where we were discussing Wittgenstein over a game of backgammon."
"Mr Simpson, it's a felony to lie to the FBI."
"We were sitting in Barney's car eating packets of mustard. You happy now?"
Re:One of my favorite Simpsons moments... (Score:1)
Re:One of my favorite Simpsons moments... (Score:1)
Shades of PCU (Score:1)
Saint Flanders (Score:2, Informative)
Also, check out
From Davey & Goliath to Homer and Ned [christianitytoday.com]. I'll but you didn't expect to find it there.
Academic trick :) (Score:2, Troll)
At my university, (UC Riverside) there is a course on Star Trek! I think it focuses on ethinc issues or something.
Also a course in any Comp Lit/English department (Score:1)
One of the books.. (Score:1)
Young man... (Score:1)
Or listen to it [moviewavs.com]
Irony? (Score:2)
Seriously though?
Value of a Simpsons class? None. (Score:2)
Literature, philosophy, blah blah blah aren't civics lessons, and they don't put food on the table. They're there to help you appreciate the so-called finer things in life, and, honestly, well-concieved and -executed humor is one of the finer things. So what if there isn't some tangible value? There isn't supposed to be one.
Link for further research (Score:2, Informative)
Is The Simpsons secretly christian propaganda? (Score:2)
On the other hand, considering that the Rev. Lovejoy and Flanders seem to be Protestants, maybe this Catholic college just thinks the mockery is appropriate...
Great for learning the culture (Score:2)
I Love Lucy and The Simpsons.
Oh, what a wonderfully warped wife I have now... ;) In any case, I think they were particularly good choices given the immense influence they've had on our society as well as the reflection of the society itself.
We studied Simpsons the first year it came out... (Score:2)
Re:(Sighs) (Score:1)
>Will this insanity never end?!
Postmodern studies was one of the most interesting classes I did at University during an engineering degree. I got assigned punk to study closely which was fascinating. In the 70's punk was considered dross, but because of punk we have the ethic, "anyone can do it". Apart from the most banal of entertainment, most have deeper themes and narrative written through them if you are prepared to look. Most often we dont notice them as they are an expected part of narrative, that we only notice when they are missing. A bad movie usually contains some lack of narrative we are expecting to make the story complete.
Personally I think the name Homer Simpson is a synonym for "Homo Sapien". I would sign up for this philosophy class in a heartbeat.
macom--
Re:(Sighs) (Score:1)
Is his father's middle name Simpson too? Why not Smith? or Gazooks?
mocom--
The Simpsons is a smart show (Score:1)
And don't forget religion... the writers for the Simpsons are constantly mocking the lame protestant church that the Simpsons and Ned constantly visit. One of my favorite episodes was when Homer finally became smart (after the removal of a crayon from his brain) and in his spare time he proved that God did not exist
The Simposons' have come a long way since the "Don't have a cow man" days.
Re:The Simpsons is a smart show (Score:2, Funny)
Homer using church to skip town since PBS was hunting hime down.
His church tossed him on a plane and Homer was forced to become a missionary on a island paradise. (by the way, during the whole episode Homer referred to Jesus as "Jebus.")
Homer, of course, brought the island people western culture (and casinos). Soon enough the island paradise had gone to crap. Island folks began gambling so they could strike it rich and to an island paradise (since they no longer lived in one).
Eventually the island folk were forced to adopt Homer's religion in order to be forgiven for there sins (which they never had until homer came along).
Re:(Sighs) (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:(Sighs) (Score:2)
Perhaps they should call the Simpsons course the Tao of D'oh ...