Axing art history from the curriculum is 'educational vandalism'

Axing art history from the curriculum is 'educational vandalism'
The tourist hordes flock to the Parthenon because of the achievement it represents. (Image: Maria Slade)
Maria Slade
Trudging up the Acropolis amid the tourist hordes and the 32-degree heat recently, I wondered why I was bothering. Until I looked up.Two-and-a-half millennia later, the ruins of the Parthenon still lord it over Athens, a majestic reminder of the cultural revolution that gave rise to democracy and Western society as we know it.The Athenians rebuilt the Acropolis in the 5th century BC as a monument to their achievements, including establishing the polis, the earliest known system of self-rule.Classical Greek art embodied these ideals, using faith...

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