How to Be Intoxicated
College is when we first get drunk. Euripides’ The Bacchae can help us learn how to do it right.
College is when we first get drunk. Euripides’ The Bacchae can help us learn how to do it right.
Rob Goodman The Chronicle of Higher Education Dec 2014 10min Permalink
On the way to a reading, an academic stumbles into a mysterious infrastructure.
"For some reason he couldn’t put his finger on he was feeling happy. Naturally it had been a relief to come in out of the rain—though this particular brand of happiness seemed unrelated to anything as simple as relief. No, there was something about being in the tunnel that was making him feel very happy, almost ecstatically so. Against the wall just inside the door someone had arranged cleaning implements—several brooms, a bucket with a mop in it, a pile of rags—but other than that the tunnel was empty. The walls at this end had been painted with the green, glossy paint beloved of institutions the world over, the paint having been applied in what seemed like a spirit of gay abandon. The smooth concrete floor was splashed with it, and it depended in hardened drips from a series of thin pipes running lengthwise along the ceiling."
Kathryn Davis The Harvard Advocate Dec 2014 10min Permalink
A brutal assault and the struggle for justice at the University of Virginia.
Note 12/5/14: Rolling Stone has stated that they now doubt details of the facts reported in "A Rape on Campus."
More information is available in T. Rees Shapiro's "U-Va. Fraternity to Rebut Claims of Gang Rape in Rolling Stone" from The Washington Post.
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Sabrina Rubin Erdely Rolling Stone Nov 2014 40min Permalink
“My Vassar College Faculty ID affords me free smoothies, free printing paper, paid leave, and access to one of the most beautiful libraries on Earth. It guarantees that I have really good health care and more disposable income than anyone in my Mississippi family. But way more than I want to admit, I’m wondering what price we pay for these kinds of ID’s, and what that price has to do with the extrajudicial disciplining and killing of young black human beings.”
Kiese Laymon Gawker Nov 2014 10min Permalink
On Leon Botstein and the future of Bard College, which he has run for four decades.
Alice Gregory New Yorker Sep 2014 25min Permalink
The survivors who “have built the most effective, organized anti-rape movement since the late ’70s.”
Vanessa Grigoriadis New York Sep 2014 25min Permalink
Sex, lies and fraud alleged at West Virginia University.
Nona Willis Aronowitz, Tony Dokoupil NBC News Sep 2014 10min Permalink
Tony Ma will bet you as much as $600,000 to train your student for college acceptance. If the student gets into their top choice school, Ma takes the cash. Rejected? He gets nothing.
Peter Waldman Businessweek Sep 2014 15min Permalink
A group of female lovers take on a singular identity.
"We live in the most coveted spot on campus: the first in a row of bungalows at the top of a wooded hill. The yard is pine needles and dirt. The walls are red brick and thick like Collins’ skull. Between us, we’ve read Wuthering Heights 23 times. But we are sure Collins lied about her number. Watching Veronica Mars with sub-titles is the most reading we’ve ever seen her do."
Molly Bridgeforth Word Riot Mar 2014 Permalink
Rich students complete their college degrees; working-class students usually don’t. How one school is trying to intervene.
Paul Tough New York Times Magazine May 2014 35min Permalink
An investigation into Boston’s off-campus housing.
The fire that killed a Boston University student in a house filled with 13 other people and only one exit.
Examining the laws around off-campus housing and their lack of enforcement.
How the giants in the student rental trade do business.
Boston Globe May 2014 1h5min Permalink
An investigtion into higher education’s treatment, and often punishment, of mentally ill students.
Katie J.M. Baker Newsweek Feb 2014 25min Permalink
Inside the White Student Union of Towson University.
Wes Enzinna Vice May 2013 20min Permalink
The possibilities and pitfalls of massive open online courses (MOOCs).
Nathan Heller New Yorker May 2013 35min Permalink
How social psychologist Diederik Stapel committed and rationalized an audacious academic fraud, and what his lies reveal about the culture of scientific research.
Yudhijit Bhattacharjee New York Times Magazine Apr 2013 20min Permalink
An overachiever on what he did and didn’t learn at Princeton.
Walter Kirn The Atlantic Jan 2005 35min Permalink
On the Adderall days of college.
Molly Young n+1 Jan 2008 Permalink
Amidst the football-obsessed culture of small-town Christian colleges in Kansas, a player is killed at a party.
Rolf Potts Sports Illustrated Nov 2012 35min Permalink
On Cecilia Chang, the St. John’s fundraiser who committed suicide after being convicted of fraud, and the university administrators who benefited from her crime.
Steve Fishman New York Feb 2013 20min Permalink
The story of three friends from Texas and the obstacles they face trying to get a college degree in an age of economic inequality.
Jason DeParle New York Times Dec 2012 20min Permalink
A week in the author’s life when it became impossible to control the course of events.
Jo Ann Beard New Yorker Jun 1996 30min Permalink
Memories of a college courtship.
Lena Dunham New Yorker Aug 2012 Permalink
A college president on the bizarre experience of being informed by NBC News that he had hired a war criminal to teach French.
Sanford J. Ungar New York Jul 2012 20min Permalink
A Yale student on why nearly a quarter of her classmates will end up working for Wall Street.
Marina Keegan The Yale Daily News Sep 2011 15min Permalink
On the enduring political influence and entrenched racism of the Greek system at the University of Alabama.
Jason Zengerle The New Republic Feb 2002 15min Permalink