FirmaFan
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I'd love to hear the answer to your question!
Okay, way off topic, but here it goes. For those of you who don't know, the question I asked was, in modern literature classes, when learning about what books "actually" mean, why don't we just ask the author who wrote it? Well, one of the authors of the book we were studying got wind of our class and what was being taught about it. Turns out it was nothing like what she had meant when she wrote it and, understandably furious, wrote a letter to the dean of the college protesting the class. To appease the very angry author, the dean responded by saying that it was simply a small, general ed class required by all students, but was actually a meaningless course and should not be considered a threat to her work. What a thing for the dean of a college to say. It was admitted that the course that I was being FORCED to take (it was a requirement for all students if you wanted to attend the school), a class I also PAYED for in college tuition, was meaningless. I already had a fundamental hatred of general ed courses (why am I taking US history when I am a biology major, I would always ask), but in that instant, my hatred was entirely justified.


























