The Revolution of the Dons
This sensitive and lively 1968 history made an important contribution to our understanding of the relationship between higher education and social change in nineteenth-century England, showing how the internal life of an ancient university was affected by historic events extrinsic to it. The role that university was required to play in society was being forced to evolve: no longer a finishing school for the aristocracy, universities were becoming a place of professional training for the middle classes. This required a new generation of dons to relate tradition to the ideals of the modern world. By showing how Cambridge managed to preserve its aristocratic values without losing its influence in an increasingly industrial and professional society, Dr Rothblatt explores the larger question of a university's impact upon social change. This fascinating work combines historical scholarship with a perceptive appreciation of the social functions of higher education in an industrialised world.
Product details
No date availablePaperback
9780521283700
328 pages
0.41kg
Table of Contents
- Preface to the Cambridge University Press edition
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I. A Problem of Social Change:
- 1. Closed scholarships, the grammar schools and social mobility
- 2. Educational costs and social mobility
- Part II. The Problem Resolved:
- 3. Secondary ends
- 4. Prophet or sceptic
- 5. Ecce homo
- 6. Donnishness
- 7. The idea of a college epilogue
- Appendices
- Index.