Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Peucinian Society


 * The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review).  No further edits should be made to this page.

The result was a train wreck. This AfD is only two days old, but it is evident that there is no way that consensus can be determined from it. The nominator's first contribution was to start this discussion, and virtually all of the participants have few or no edits outside this topic. Accordingly, I am closing this discussion and relisting it. Blueboy96 17:16, 28 March 2008 (UTC)

Peucinian Society
( [ delete] ) – (View AfD) (View log) The article on the Peucinian Society does not meet Wikipedia standards: In that the "Subject fails to meet the relevant notability guideline." Were the peucinian society among the "nation's foremost literary societies" then perhaps it would warrant a page, but in actuality it is a newly revitalized and obscure student club at a very small liberal arts college. The Society is unfortunaely not one of the among the "nation's foremost literary societies" and thus does not warrant inclusion in Wikipedia.Furthermore the article violates a number of wikipedia guidlines: Thus I recommend that the article be deleted. (Cowan50 (talk) 18:38, 26 March 2008 (UTC)) — Cowan50 (talk • contribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.
 * 1) Lack of Neutrality
 * 2) Questionable Clarity
 * 3) Factual Errors


 * Keep I live in Sydney, Australia and am a life-long devotee of Henry Longfellow and his work. In reading his literature, memoirs and biographies, I have encountered the Peucinian Society on several occasions. Thus, I would submit not only does the Wikipedia page meet the “relevant notability standard” but it should in no way even be ‘’’considered’’’ for deletion. I remain completely befuddled as to the supposed grounds for deletion; nonetheless, I would much prefer to discuss what I know about the society. In my opinion, the Peucinian Society is just as, if not more, essential than Longfellow’s entry itself inasmuch as the society had such profound and lasting effect on so many of America’s most influential writers and statesmen. I have come across numerous sources that verify the society’s existence in 20th century and am more than willing to go back through my research in order to provide these to Wikipedia, if it so desires. It should be noted that I am not familiar with the contemporary membership of the society, but I am convinced that this is an extremely exciting and informative entry. Therefore, I must vote emphatically and unequivocally for this entry to be ‘’’preserved’’’.Miltiades58 (talk) 05:35, 28 March 2008 (UTC)Miltiades Harris — Miltiades58 (talk • contribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.


 * KeepIt should be kept for the following reasons: I think my arguments would be much more persuasive if I conceded my right to anonymity. My name is David Klingman, PhD and I am an historian living in New Orleans, LA. I recently have held posts at Tulane University and Louisiana State University, focusing on 20th Century U.S. History, U.S. Labor and Race Relations, U.S. Culture and Music, Louisiana History and Latin American History. At the risk of sounding pretentious, I consider myself a leading authority on literary societies and their effect on the development of the nation’s elite colleges. The Peucinian Society is doubtless one of considerable importance that did in fact endure in the 20th century. Having studied these associations for the better half of my academic career, I find the claim that this society is an obscure club to be entirely erroneous.  Contrary to what the previous entry alleges, the society did not cease to exist in the late 19th century; it simply divorced itself from Bowdoin College and continued to flourish with chapters in Brunswick, Portland and Harpswell.  Furthermore, after reading the article, I simply do not view it as an “advertisement;” there seems to be sufficient number of citations, and the majority of the article concentrates on the history, which could not be presented more accurately. Given my expertise, I feel impelled to correct the record and recommend that this page be kept.
 * I think Wikipedia would be doing its readers a great disservice in deleting this page. This is my life’s work. Readers ought to be aware of the illustrious history of this association and other similar bodies. 129.81.64.172 (talk) 05:37, 28 March 2008 (UTC)David Klingman — 129.81.64.172 (talk • contribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.


 * Delete for two reasons. First, the article is an advertisement, not an encyclopedia-entry: hence its consistently biased point of view and its numerous factual misrepresentations. Second, despite its longeur, the article lacks substance. Here's a flavor of the bias and inaccuracies:
 * (1) "In the late nineteenth century, the Peucinian Society went through a relative period of dormancy [sic], erroneously considered, even by the college itself, to be completely defunct. It continued to persist throughout the 20th Century..."
 * The sources that purport to support this claim are: (a) "College Literary Societies: Their Contribution to Higher Education in the United States, 1815-1876" and (b) "Joshua Chamberlain: The Soldier and the Man." But Chamberlain only attended Bowdoin from 1848 and 1852, and was its president from 1871 - 1883. He died in 1914. It is thus doubtful that his biography gives evidence that the Peucinian Society existed throughout the 20th Century. It is even more unlikely that "College Literary Societies: Their Contribution to Higher Education in the United States, 1815-1876" confirms (1). There are, moreover, very good reasons to think that the Society went "completely defunct" in the early 1880s, viz. the Bowdoin College archive's assertion that this is the case and the fact that there exist no Peucinian Society records from after 1877. (1) is simply false.


 * (2) "The Peucinian Society is one of the nation's foremost literary societies and the oldest student organization at Bowdoin College."


 * But given, as the foregoing discussion makes clear, that the Society ceased to exist c. 1880 and was only recently reestablished, (2) is misleading. If a group of my American buddies and I started emulating the practices of a bronze age Druid Cult, you would rightly deny my claims to being the oldest religion in the United States. Similarly, if we met to discuss the drafting of the United States Constitution and called ourselves the "Second Continental Congress" it would not follow that we were the nation's premier legislative body. What both of these actions would entail is that my buddies and I were attemping to self-promote. (2) is false and biased.


 * (3) "In 1880 the libraries of the Peucinian Society and its former rival, the Athenean Society [sic], were merged, after which the two societies officially became one and has [sic] endured under the name 'The Peucinian Society.'"


 * It is true that the Athenaean and Peucinian Societies merged their libraries in 1880. Unfortunately, it is also true, as evidenced by my analysis of (1), that the two societies went defunct in 1880. And this supports a radically different interpretation of the merger; the Peucinian Society and the Athenean Society didn't merge in order to unite their two traditions. Rather, the merger marked the end of both Societies. Thus the suggestion, made in (3) and elsewhere in the entry, that the two Societies were oncetime rivals who became allies is wrong. Instead, the Bowdoin archives get it right: "After a period of relative dormancy, the surviving libraries of the Peucinian and Athenaean societies were merged in 1880. Following this, the Peucinian Society was considered officially defunct." What happened to the Peucinian and Athenaean Societies is something analogous to if the libraries of two distinct political parties in the Confederate States of America were merged after the civil war. Surely, we wouldn't want to say of the two parties that they "officially became one" - they were rivals to the end! (3) is thus misleading, and it seems clear that the reason it is included in the entry is in order to promote the prestige of (a.k.a. advertise) the organization. Here is how the Peucinian Society's Wikipedia entry uses this deception to misleadingly enhance the reputation of Peucinian:


 * (4) "Famous alumni of the Peucinian and Athenean [sic] tradition include...Nathaniel Hawthorne, 19th century American novelist and short story writer."


 * Hawthorne attended Bowdoin from 1821 - 1825, during which time he was a member of the Athenaean Society. Also, during that time, the Athenaeans and the Peucinians supported different candidates in the incredibly contentious Presidential election of 1824. As Peter Balakian, a Hawthorne historian, puts it: "Of the college's two literary societies, the Athenian [sic] Society to which Hawthorne belonged was the more liberal and democratic; its members were Jacksonians who rejected the conservative traditions of their New England forefathers. Its rival, the Peucinian Society, was composed of a more scholarly constituency (of which Longfellow was a member)..." It should also be noted that Hawthorne died sixteen years before the Peucinian and Athenaean libraries merged, rendering the Peucinian Society's claim on his membership all the more farcical. The most important point, however, is that (3) and (4) indicate that the Wikipedia entry for the Peucinian Society is an elaborate set-up; misrecognitions are inserted one place only to support falsities introduced elsewhere. I repeat: an advertisement, not a piece of scholarly research.


 * (5) "The Peucinian Society is comprised of the most intellectually enthusiastic minds within the Bowdoin community."


 * Even were this true, it is quasi-normative wishy-washiness that has no business in an encyclopedia. Insofar as they can, however, signs point to its being false. Specifically, the article cites, as evidence of (5)'s truth, the Catalogue of the members of the Peucinian Society (read: the CURRENT catalogue of members of the Peucinian Society). Unfortunately, the only remotely objective way to test whether the current Peucinian Society roster comprises the "most intellectually enthusiastic minds within the Bowdoin community" is to cross-check it with the Deans List...


 * To round out this line of criticism, I should be clear that (1) - (5) serve merely to give a FLAVOR of the article's polemical quality. Deleting these passages will not fix the entry, and any impartial reviewer will recognize that the article's tone and style are inappropriate throughout.


 * I also noted that the article lacks substance. However (and this is further support of my point re: bias and inaccuracy), the article attempts to conceal its vapidity through the liberal use of fluff (e.g. "Meetings of the Peucinian were held in alphabetical rotation in our private rooms. Contributions were levied on neighboring rooms for tables and chairs, and members gathered around the tables"). Cutting through all of this we are left with an entry that is half about a literary society, at a small liberal arts college, that has been defunct since the 1880s, and half about a newly established society that has usurped the older society's name and, with considerable distortions, its history. If there is a worthy Wikipedia entry here, it can only be got at by starting afresh. 22:02, 27 March 2008 (UTC) WilliamPitts — Preceding unsigned comment added by WilliamPitts (talk • contribs) 14:02, 27 March 2008 — WilliamPitts (talk • contribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.

Arbitrary section break

 * Update: check out the discussion page on the article: Talk:Peucinian Society. There is clearly no consensus on the facts surrounding this "society".  Furthering the argument that this article be deleted.    (Cowan50 (talk) 18:44, 26 March 2008 (UTC)) — Cowan50 (talk • contribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.
 * Numerous citations have been added since those criticisms were made. The convoluted language has been revised as well. This should be noted as a reason to keep the entry.139.140.166.28 (talk) 04:57, 27 March 2008 (UTC) — 139.140.166.28 (talk • contribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.


 * Whoever added the below comment from the IP address 139.140.194.233, needs to sign in as a registered user in order to vote in this discussion, and sign the comment under their user name. See the guidelines on how to discuss Articles for Deletion - Articles for deletion. (Cowan50 (talk) 01:14, 27 March 2008 (UTC)) — Cowan50 (talk • contribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.
 * "Unregistered or new users are welcome to contribute to the discussion, but their recommendations may be discounted, especially if they seem to be made in bad faith."Articles for deletion Hence, given that my comments are in good faith, I do not need to be a registered user to "vote."
 * On the issue of voting: "The debate is not a vote; please make recommendations on the course of action to be taken, sustained by arguments."Articles for deletion 139.140.194.233 (talk) 04:36, 27 March 2008 (UTC) — 139.140.194.233 (talk • contribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.


 * "Start your comments or recommendations on a new bulleted line (that is, starting with *), and sign them by adding  to the end. If you are responding to another editor, put your comment directly below theirs, making sure it is indented (using multiple *s)."  it's not that you can't make comments, but you must sign them regardless.  (Cowan50 (talk) 00:19, 28 March 2008 (UTC)) — Cowan50 (talk • contribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.


 * KeepWhile the article demands a certain degree of editing and revision, it undoubtably deserves to be included in Wikipedia and consequently should not be deleted. The history of the Society and the prominence of many of its former members are of pertinent historical interest to both Bowdoin College and the heritage of the United States. Peucinian's place as one of the oldest literary societies rightfully denote its "foremost" status and its inclusion in this encyclopedia. Numerous other "obscure" literary societies at other elite American colleges maintain entries in Wikipedia. For example, the Jefferson Literary and Debating Society at the University of Virginia has an article, and the Peucinian entry is consistent with its format.Jefferson Literary and Debating Society It should be noted that, at present, there is no recommendation for deletion on the Jefferson entry. Finally, the Society's article adds to important body of knowledge on collegiate literary societies in the United States, often a prime breeding ground for influential politicians, writers and thinkers. It would do a profound disservice to this community to delete from it one of its oldest and foremost members. Thus I recommend that the article be preserved. 139.140.194.233 (talk) 04:36, 27 March 2008 (UTC) — 139.140.194.233 (talk • contribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.


 * Comment This AFD has been added to the Organizational AFD category. -Optigan13 (talk) 06:07, 28 March 2008 (UTC)


 * Keep The article do has a lot of issues, mostly concerning to WP:NPOV, but it does not fail any of the guidelines showed on the nomination. Just a fast check at google returns a lot of hits, even if we take off all the wikipedia ones. Samuel Sol (talk) 12:18, 28 March 2008 (UTC)

Reasons to preserve: I would like to refute two claims against the author of this page, although I admit my surprise at and failure to comprehend the vehemence with which these people are opposing this article’s preservation. One can only hope that they are equally passionate in their assault upon other literary societies. Indeed, I cannot help but question their motives, as they continue to make blatant personal attacks on the society’s members, addressing them with disturbing and unspeakable phrases, surely injuring their own credibility and character. Nevertheless, while I regard the first two points of their most recent entry as completely absurd, I am obliged to offer a response for the sake of history and dignity. Let me state, first, that the citations posted on the article are absolutely accurate. The offensive allegations are no more than personal attacks. For, having argued that there are insufficient citations, when they are presented with proper citations, they proceeed to question the accuracy of these. Yet, in respect of the first book, Joshua Chamberlain: The Soldier and the Man, while it is true that Chamberlain passed away in 1914, the author discusses Peucinian in great detail, in fact stating that the Society continued to thrive into the 20th century. By the same token, another publication, College Literary Societies: Their Contribution to Higher Education in the United States, 1815-1876, in the passages which discusses the association in a number of passages, once again clearly stating that the society persisted beyond the 19th century. I can only, therefore, attribute the careless and uncritical assertions to the fact that these ignorant attacks were based solely on the title that presupposes a of 1876. Nevertheless, are they so ignorant as to suppose that the author cannot include statements beyond this date in his book? It has been repeatedly emphasized, time and again, by faculty and students alike, that there is ample evidence of the society persisting independently of the college and thriving for many decades without collegiate affiliation. This claim has also been supported by several local historians in Maine. As for the comparisons to the Druid Cult and the Continental Congress,” I would contend that, since the society’s dormancy in the 20th century was so brief and each of its original traditions has been carefully preserved, these analogies are completely false. Indeed, if one belonged to an institution that emerged from the Druid Cult, restoring it after only a couple decades of dormancy and meticulously preserving its original constitution and substantive traditions, then one does in fact have the right to claim succession to that historical association. Therefore, the comparison is specious insofar as the Druid Cult is much older and has had no period of “dormancy.” Regardless, the article cannot be deleted, if only because the Peucinian Society was founded just eleven years after the establishment of Bowdoin College itself, and thus remains historically synonymous with the very inception of Bowdoin. Finally, once again, I am deeply offended by the claim that this article is merely a ploy for “self promotion.” The author has made every effort conform to Wikipedia policies in crafting an article that is both informative to readers about an historical organization that has engaged some of the most potent literary and political minds in American history. This cannot be dismissed as bias; it is fact.Emily444 (talk) 14:39, 28 March 2008 (UTC)Emily444 — Emily444 (talk&#32;• contribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.


 * The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.