The University in RuinsHarvard University Press, 1996 M05 1 - 238 pages It is no longer clear what role the University plays in society. The structure of the contemporary University is changing rapidly, and we have yet to understand what precisely these changes will mean. Is a new age dawning for the University, the renaissance of higher education under way? Or is the University in the twilight of its social function, the demise of higher education fast approaching?We can answer such questions only if we look carefully at the different roles the University has played historically and then imagine how it might be possible to live, and to think, amid the ruins of the University. Tracing the roots of the modern American University in German philosophy and in the work of British thinkers such as Newman and Arnold, Bill Readings argues that historically the integrity of the modern University has been linked to the nation-state, which it has served by promoting and protecting the idea of a national culture. But now the nation-state is in decline, and national culture no longer needs to be either promoted or protected. Increasingly, universities are turning into transnational corporations, and the idea of culture is being replaced by the discourse of "excellence." On the surface, this does not seem particularly pernicious. |
From inside the book
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... intellectual culture . " Thus , as for Fichte and Humboldt , the University is a community : “ an assemblage of learned men " ( 101 ) whose communication is dedicated to their internal pursuit of intel- lectual culture . And intellectual ...
... intellectual . For Guillory as for Bourdieu , an other to the system is thus unthinkable ; a given action is only a move within the system , whose meaning resides in its effect within the rules of that system . The problem with this ...
... intellectual life of the whole of Western society ... increasingly being split into two polar groups , " the " literary intellectuals ” and the “ sci- entists . " The Two Cultures and a Second Look ( Cambridge : Cambridge Uni- versity ...
Contents
The Idea of Excellence | 21 |
The Decline of the NationState | 44 |
The University within the Limits of Reason | 54 |
Copyright | |
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