Public Lecture: The humanities: past, present - and future?
Wednesday 8 October 2025, 6:30pm to 8:00pm
Venue
LUMS Lecture Theatre 17, LancasterOpen to
All Lancaster University (non-partner) students, Alumni, External Organisations, Postgraduates, Public, Staff, UndergraduatesRegistration
Free to attend - registration requiredRegistration Info
https://www.trybooking.com/uk/FGJI
Event Details
The lecture will explore the shifting role of the humanities in universities and society, and what role they might play in the future.
The humanities: past, present - and future?
‘The humanities are in crisis!’ It’s a familiar cry: sometimes a cry of alarm, sometimes a cry of despair, always a cry of pain. But do we know what we mean by ‘the humanities’? And why do they always seem to be in a state of crisis?
In this lecture, Stefan Collini takes a long historical view, tracing the evolution of the relevant categories from the nineteenth century onwards. For a long time, ‘the Arts’ and ‘the Sciences’ appeared to co-exist quite comfortably in British universities, but as universities expanded and new disciplines established themselves this rough division became less and less practicable. The rise of the social sciences, in particular, could leave traditional subjects such as History, Philosophy, or Literature looking vulnerable and embattled. Larger social and economic changes cast further doubt on the ‘usefulness’ of such subjects and on the employability of their graduates. As a result, the public discourse about ‘the humanities’ always seems to have a defensive and self-justifying tone to it, always fending off imagined attacks while at the same time exaggerating the life-transforming value of such study.
But is this inevitable? Professor Collini will point to ways in which the humanities might be understood in terms that are simultaneously less defensive and less grandiose. The need to extend and deepen human understanding about the matters which humanities disciplines study will not go away, but what will be their place in the university of the future?
Contact Details
Name | Helen Jackson |