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The Modern University and its Discontents

The Modern University and its Discontents

The Modern University and its Discontents

The Fate of Newman's Legacies in Britain and America
Sheldon Rothblatt, University of California, Berkeley
March 2006
Available
Paperback
9780521025010

    This is a study of how the internal culture of British and American universities has been shaped over the course of two centuries in relation to external factors such as government, the economy, society and culture. John Henry Newman's classic work, The Idea of a University provides entry and exit points for this study of the modern university. This series of explorations highlights on-going paradoxes and dilemmas in the history of universities as they moved from the edge of society to the center of modern democratic states and market economies.

    • The book offers a unique intellectual dialogue between the past and the present
    • An account of university history in its fullest social and cultural context, and with international comparisons
    • By one of the leading historians of education and the acclaimed author of the classic study The Revolution of the Dons

    Reviews & endorsements

    "Rothblatt's historical meditations are stimulating reading about professional institutions and higher education in the era of their modern formulations." Michael J. Moore, The North Carolian Historical Review

    "In this philosophically sophisticated, historically enlightening analysis, Rothblatt provides new insight into the perennial debate about the basic function of the university." E.G. Rozycki, Choice

    "Readers will find these essays...rewarding. He makes wonderful use of individual examples, drawing out the larger meaning of the small details. He connects the history of universities with intellectual and social history in challenging and fruitful ways....readers will find excellent historical accounts of particular subjects..." Julie Reuben, Journal of Social History

    "...Sheldon Rothblatt...offers a profound reconsideration of some main themes in the development of British and, to a lesser extent, American universities. The result is an informative and provocative rethinking of what might be called the deep structures of British and American universities." Thomas William Heyck, Victorian Studies

    "Rothblatt's sensitively written work provids a glimpse into academia. For this, it is relevant to anyone associated with higher education." Jennifer Ford, Libraries & Culture

    See more reviews

    Product details

    March 2006
    Paperback
    9780521025010
    476 pages
    228 × 153 × 32 mm
    0.71kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. The idea of the idea of a university and its antithesis
    • 2. 'Consult the Genius of the Place'
    • 3. 'The first undergraduates, recognizable as such'
    • 4. Failure
    • 5. Historical and comparative remarks on the 'federal principle' in higher education
    • Interlude: General introduction to chapters six and seven
    • 6. Supply and demand in the writing of university history since about 1790:
    • 1. 'The awkward interval'
    • 7. Supply and demand in the writing of university history since about 1790:
    • 2. The market and the University of London
    • 8. Alternatives:
    • 1. The importance of being unattached
    • 9. Alternatives:
    • 2. Born to have no rest
    • Index.
      Author
    • Sheldon Rothblatt , University of California, Berkeley