Amalgamation causes unrest at University of Toronto


Get this--uproar at a university that actually has something to do with the university!

Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Science at the University of Toronto has proposed sweeping changes to U of T's largest faculty, which will see six humanities programs consolidated into one school.

The new School of Languages and Literatures is being considered as a way to offset the faculty's $55 million of debt. The new school, or SLLUT (School of Languages and Literatures at the University of Toronto, as to it is so affectionately referred on dissenting online forums), will merge the existing Italian, German, East Asian Studies, Spanish and Portuguese, and Slavic languages departments, as well as the Centre for Comparative Literature, which was founded by Northrop Frye.

Many students, as well as faculty at the University of Toronto, are opposed to the amalgamation, anticipating an intellectual "step backwards."

"U of T used to have a reputation for being very conservative, and it's about to have that reputation again," said Linda Hucheon, professor at the Centre for Comparative Literature. "We will try to make a case for not getting rid of a major discipline within the university. "We're not going down without a bit of a fight."

Students have set up petitions, websites, and a Facebook group opposing the changes. Final approval for the new school will be sought in the fall.


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