Reviews
For over two centuries, universities—both the idea of them and how they actually function in the world—have occupied a salient position in modern society, especially in the United States. In this thoughtful and engagingly provocative book, Chad Wellmon offers an account of how this state of affairs came to be, and how we might (and should) move beyond it.
Serious, personal, and deeply learned, After the University is one of the most interesting and thought-provoking books on higher education to appear in recent years. Chad Wellmon challenges readers to reconsider how universities have come to privilege credentials and measurable outcomes over the practices of disciplined study. Readers may not agree with every aspect of his diagnosis, but the book's real achievement lies in how powerfully it reframes the questions that now confront higher learning. It should be on the bookshelf of anyone interested in US higher education.
Book Details
Table of Contents
Introduction: An Autobiography of Higher Learning
Section I: From Universitas to "the University"
1. Knowledge Institutions: Guild, Factory, Social System
2. From Corporation to Social
Table of Contents
Introduction: An Autobiography of Higher Learning
Section I: From Universitas to "the University"
1. Knowledge Institutions: Guild, Factory, Social System
2. From Corporation to Social System
3. The University Factory
4. The Student, Striving, and External Goods
Interlude I: The University, Technology, and the Magic of Credentials
Section II: Going Professional: The Modern University
5. Democracy, Progress, and the University
6. Efficiency, Social Reform, and the Higher Learning
7. An Alternative Vision: W. E. B. Du Bois and the Ends of Knowledge
Interlude II: General Education, Curriculum Reform, and the Dream of Unity, or, What Is Missing?
Section III: The Rise, Fall, and Rise of Human Capital Theory
8. Access to What? The Belief in Higher Education and Human Capital
9. Human Capital and the University
10. The California Master Plan: Human Capital Theory Made Manifest
11. The New Left, the Liberal Counterrevolution, and Meritocracy
12. The Higher Faith and Student Credit
13. The Educational Revolution and an African University
Interlude III: August 11, 2017, Moral Clarity, and the Other University
Conclusion: The University is Not Enough
Notes
Index