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Excerpt from: An Apology For Going To College The girl who is not a slave to books, who selects her courses judiciously and gives them a right and proper amount of strength, is not to be confounded with the girl whose independence is mere indifference or egotism. Not such do I admire, and, for all my pet schemes to reform my college, not such am I. I only maintain that we have a right to ourselves, that we should be masters of our books and preserve our serenity. There is no profit where there is no pleasure.... | ![]() Read Full Text |
Document Information
Title: | An Apology For Going To College | |
From: | Out Of The Dark | |
Creator: | Helen Keller (author) | |
Date: | 1920 | |
Format: | Article | |
Publisher: | Doubleday, Page & Company, New York | |
Source: | Available at selected libraries | |
Location: | pp.83-106 | |
Keywords: | Advocacy; Autobiography; Blind; Deaf; Deaf-blind; Education; Educational Institutions; Feminism; Helen Keller; Higher Education; Ideologies; Institutions; Radcliffe College; Schools; Sensory Disability; Women; Women & Gender | |
Topics: | ||
Note: | McClure’s Magazine, June, 1905. |