UNFORGETTABLE
TEACHERS: BRETT BOURBON ‘Let’s Challenge the
Concept’
CHIPPING AT WALLS: A fresh
look at lit.
Dagmar Logie
when brett bourbon first
walked into the classroom with his jeans and shaggy
mop-top, he looked more like a bewildered father trying
to find a PTA meeting than an English professor teaching
a class for seniors writing an honors thesis. But there
he was—and there we were, trying to make sense
of the philosophy titles he rattled off. Nietzsche?
Wittgenstein? What was the man doing? These were far
from the novelists we had envisioned on our reading
list. And what were all those geometric shapes called
“concepts” he squiggled on the chalkboard?
Couldn’t he just give us an outline?
But Brett, much as I hated to admit it, started to
chip away at the walls I stubbornly clung to as a bibliophile
attuned to absorbing written wisdom. Until then, most
English classes had been well within my comfort zone.
It was easy to rephrase a book’s idea. “But
what do you think?” Brett asked. “What
are your ideas?” Maybe things weren’t
as set in stone as we believed. “Let’s challenge
the concept,” he said.
I’ve had plenty of great profs, but Brett—who
prefers to be called by his first name and once invited
us over for a homemade meal—prodded me to look
up from the books and find some wisdom of my own.