World Cultures: Difference between revisions

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Created page with " Cosmopolitanism How to carry yourself in global professional society around many different peoples, without compromising your Christian or American values Exposure to world literature and cultures International relations, geography, post-colonialism, area studies ... for the conservative evangelical Understanding modern institutions and academia Political philosophy"
 
 
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After years of being dragged through classical and Christian studies, many students feel sort of adrift at the end. What was it all for? Just going off to college or trade school like anybody else, then joining the American professional world?


I would submit that good students who spent so much time studying classical culture and Christian culture should spend a year or two studying studying a foreign culture. Ideally, this would take the form of missionary internships overseas, while following a curriculum that takes the cultural and intellectual traditions of that target society very seriously. This training could be a useful time of preparation for many different paths the youth might pursue: whether they decide to stay longer and seek some work in that land, or return to pursue further academics, politics, or a professional vocation at home.


After all, what was all the Christian education for? Preparing people who can make disciples of all nations.


"The leaves of the tree are for the healing of the nations."


== Goals ==
How to carry yourself in global professional society around many different peoples, without compromising your Christian or American values


Exposure to world literature, languages, and foreign cultures


International relations, geography, post-colonialism, area studies ... for the conservative evangelical


Understanding modern institutions and the global role of academia and NGOs
Cosmopolitanism


Understanding political philosophy and geopolitics.
How to carry yourself in global professional society around many different peoples, without compromising your Christian or American values


== Liberal Arts Overseas: Mission Bureaus ==
Exposure to world literature and cultures


Cities as global cultural centers?
International relations, geography, post-colonialism, area studies ... for the conservative evangelical
Anglosphere: The United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand

France

Germanic

Nordic

Baltic States

Portuguese States

Italian

Balkans

Greece & Turke

Sinosphere

Indosphere

Russian World

Central Asia

Caucusus

Hispanosphere

The Islamic World

Iran

Japan

Korea

Sub-Saharan Africa

Caribbean

East Indies

South Pacific


Indochina
Understanding modern institutions and academia


Himalayan
Political philosophy

Latest revision as of 04:40, 20 December 2025

After years of being dragged through classical and Christian studies, many students feel sort of adrift at the end. What was it all for? Just going off to college or trade school like anybody else, then joining the American professional world?

I would submit that good students who spent so much time studying classical culture and Christian culture should spend a year or two studying studying a foreign culture. Ideally, this would take the form of missionary internships overseas, while following a curriculum that takes the cultural and intellectual traditions of that target society very seriously. This training could be a useful time of preparation for many different paths the youth might pursue: whether they decide to stay longer and seek some work in that land, or return to pursue further academics, politics, or a professional vocation at home.

After all, what was all the Christian education for? Preparing people who can make disciples of all nations.

"The leaves of the tree are for the healing of the nations."

Goals

How to carry yourself in global professional society around many different peoples, without compromising your Christian or American values

Exposure to world literature, languages, and foreign cultures

International relations, geography, post-colonialism, area studies ... for the conservative evangelical

Understanding modern institutions and the global role of academia and NGOs

Understanding political philosophy and geopolitics.

Liberal Arts Overseas: Mission Bureaus

Cities as global cultural centers? Anglosphere: The United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand

France

Germanic

Nordic

Baltic States

Portuguese States

Italian

Balkans

Greece & Turke

Sinosphere

Indosphere

Russian World

Central Asia

Caucusus

Hispanosphere

The Islamic World

Iran

Japan

Korea

Sub-Saharan Africa

Caribbean

East Indies

South Pacific

Indochina

Himalayan