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Ads for soft drinks and fashion
magazines have crept onto Chinese campuses.(File Photo) Photo
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BEIJING, March 10 -- Ads for soft drinks and fashion magazines have crept onto
Chinese campuses - not only spoiling the ambiance but undermining the very
essence of education in the arts and sciences.
Fashion Maker, a young advertising company owned and
operated by a team of college undergraduates, has bought up ad space in the
dining halls of 46 colleges and universities in Shanghai.
Fashion Maker has also covered 40 colleges in other
cities with advertisements and is approaching others for ad space, according to
the Jiefang Daily on Tuesday.
Indeed, these young people are admirable for their
entrepreneurship. Their ambition, however, has been misdirected to halls of
learning.
Universities are not proper places for commercial
ads.
Defined by English statesman Benjamin Disraeli as "a
place of light, of liberty and of learning," a university should be a home to
liberal pursuits in humanities and sciences, a temple of the Muses.
The Chinese term for university is Daxue. Da means
"large or great," and xue means "learning." A Daxue per se is a place for
studies on great, elevating and enlightening subjects. Commercial
advertisements, on the contrary, do not fall into the category of great or
enlightening subjects.
Some may dismiss this as exaggeration. They may thus
question the efficacy of wholesale bans. That's no more than a partial truth.
There are, tragically, quite a few colleges and
universities that are infatuated with opening themselves to waves of
commercialism.
Prestigious colleges and universities overseas, by
contrast, have more confidence in their role as home to the mind in an age of
money. For them, it is not necessary to boycott the presence of ads. Thanks to
their time-honoured tradition, the presence of commercial advertising on their
campuses is virtually impossible.
"Elite universities in the US, such as Yale and
Princeton, have most impressive campuses," said Professor Sun Xiangchen,
vice-dean of the school of philosophy at Fudan university. "The spaces are
tranquil and solemn, steeped in history and ideas of enduring value."
Professor Sun was a visiting scholar from 2003 to
2004 at Yale University. He described with delight the neo-gothic Common Room of
the Graduate School of Art and Science, the lunch times and coffee breaks there,
when students, teachers and scholars shared their views and thoughts in refined
conversations.
"All these would be nullified, if you raise your eyes
and see an ad for Coca Cola on the wall of the Common Room," he said. His words
remind me of Irish poet W. B. Yeats, who wrote in his letters, "I wonder anybody
does anything at Oxford but dream and remember, the place is so beautiful. One
almost expects the people to sing instead of speaking. It's all ... like an
opera."
The beauty would be damaged, if this opera were
interrupted by the jarring notes of commercial ads. "Education takes place not
only in lecture rooms," Sun added. "But in daily campus life as well."
Since every part of a university space is significant
for education in daily life, the space of dining halls should not be seen as a
somewhat "worldly" space on campus. Like libraries or lecture rooms, dining
halls should not be commercialized at will.
If students listened to lectures on literature,
politics and the sciences in auditoriums - and then were beguiled through ads
presenting cheap pleasures of mass consumption at their refectory tables - the
"being" of universities would be turned into a "misbeing" of self-contradiction.
When ads occupy dining halls, it would be very
difficult to hold the line at libraries and lecture rooms.
The self-contradiction would thus lead to the
self-destruction of universities as places of undisturbed learning.
(Source: Shanghai Daily)