Losing your faculties? 'Hybrid' talents can create their own destiny

As a 25-year-old journalism and communication major, I've been wrestling with mixed feelings since hearing about Fudan University's cuts to liberal arts enrollments.
I chose the humanities simply because I loved them since childhood — devouring novels, obsessing over historical intrigues, and chasing answers to philosophical questions like "Who am I?" These weren't just academic interests. Reading The Dream of the Red Chamber taught me to decode human relationships, while studying communication theories helped me dissect viral social media phenomena. To me, the humanities aren't just school disciplines — they're tools for understanding humanity itself.
Yet Fudan's decision makes practical sense, and that's what stings. With China urgently needing tech talent in fields like AI and semiconductors, adjusting enrollment ratios seems logical. As their president noted, society doesn't need that many liberal arts graduates, and trimming "less relevant" programs sounds reasonable.
