This article examines how Georgetown University’s historical landscape, architectural environment, and institutional ethos shape the formation of a distinctive cross-cultural pedagogical identity within the study of Slavic linguistics. Drawing on the author’s situated experience at the intersection of Slavic intellectual traditions and American academic culture, the study argues that the university’s physical and cultural environment functions as an active pedagogical agent rather than a neutral backdrop to learning. The article analyzes Georgetown’s campus as a layered historical text in which architecture, geography, and institutional memory structure habits of intellectual discipline, cultural empathy, and critical inquiry. Particular attention is given to the role of Jesuit pedagogy, the spatial organization of classrooms and libraries, and the university’s location within Washington, D.C., where academic study intersects daily with diplomacy, policy, and global governance. These factors are shown to shape the study of Slavic languages as an inherently ethical, historical, and civic practice. Through an examination of classroom dynamics, architectural symbolism, and archival infrastructure, the article demonstrates how two educational mentalities—Eastern European philological rigor and American interdisciplinary openness—enter into sustained dialogue. This encounter produces a pedagogical environment that fosters intellectual bilingualism: the capacity to combine historical depth with contemporary relevance, and disciplinary precision with moral responsibility. The study concludes that Georgetown’s pedagogical landscape enables Slavic linguistics to be taught not merely as a technical discipline, but as a form of cultural literacy grounded in memory, power, and ethical reflection. In this setting, the classroom becomes a resonant space where language study contributes to the formation of scholars capable of navigating complex intercultural and geopolitical realities.
Darya Spiridonov (Wed,) studied this question.