This Maryland Freshman is dealing fine with life on the field, but off the field he has no idea what hit him. Who in the world thought it would be a good idea for him to take a “Women’s Literature” class in the modern university?
Davin Meggett never anticipated such an adverse situation so early in his career at Maryland. After being thrown into it “cold turkey,” his palms moistened, his stomach quivered and he questioned whether he might embarrass himself in front of an audience.
The toughest part of Meggett’s freshman season had nothing to do with entering a football game late in the fourth quarter Oct. 25 and hauling in a 31-yard reception in the final minute to help set up a game-winning field goal on this season’s most memorable drive. Meggett’s agitation instead stems from the mere thought of the syllabus for his toughest class: women’s literature.
“Female slavery? What?” Meggett said. “Female slavery after slavery, or something like that. It’s awkward. I’m more nervous for that class than I am on the football field. Football is not hard. People try to make it seem hard.”
If Meggett starts against Virginia Tech, he said he would keep the same tempered attitude, adding: “Just play ball. Isn’t any different from playing ball when you were young, when you were in middle or high school. It’s real simple.”
As for reading “Beloved” and discussing other classics in women’s literature?
“Difficult,” Meggett said, sighing. “Too many perspectives, too many ideologies. Too much stuff. I just have to get through it.”
I don’t think this class would make too much more sense to me than to Meggett.