Unmaking the Public University: The Forty-Year Assault on the Middle Class

Unmaking the Public University: The Forty-Year Assault on the Middle Class

by Christopher Newfield
Unmaking the Public University: The Forty-Year Assault on the Middle Class

Unmaking the Public University: The Forty-Year Assault on the Middle Class

by Christopher Newfield

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Overview

An essential American dream—equal access to higher education—was becoming a reality with the GI Bill and civil rights movements after World War II. But this vital American promise has been broken. Christopher Newfield argues that the financial and political crises of public universities are not the result of economic downturns or of ultimately valuable restructuring, but of a conservative campaign to end public education’s democratizing influence on American society. Unmaking the Public University is the story of how conservatives have maligned and restructured public universities, deceiving the public to serve their own ends. It is a deep and revealing analysis that is long overdue.

Newfield carefully describes how this campaign operated, using extensive research into public university archives. He launches the story with the expansive vision of an equitable and creative America that emerged from the post-war boom in college access, and traces the gradual emergence of the anti-egalitarian “corporate university,” practices that ranged from racial policies to research budgeting. Newfield shows that the culture wars have actually been an economic war that a conservative coalition in business, government, and academia have waged on that economically necessary but often independent group, the college-educated middle class. Newfield’s research exposes the crucial fact that the culture wars have functioned as a kind of neutron bomb, one that pulverizes the social and culture claims of college grads while leaving their technical expertise untouched. Unmaking the Public University incisively sets the record straight, describing a forty-year economic war waged on the college-educated public, and awakening us to a vision of social development shared by scientists and humanists alike.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674256583
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 04/30/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 408
Sales rank: 1,021,967
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Christopher Newfield is Professor of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

Table of Contents

Contents Introduction I. The Meaning of a Majoritarian Society 1. The Three Crises and the Mass Middle Class 2. Declarations of Independence II. The War on Equality 3. The Discrediting of Social Equality 4. The Market Subsitute for Cultural Knowledge 5. From Affirmative Action to the New Economy 6. The Battle for Meritocracy 7. Diversity in the The Age of Pseudointegration III. Market Substitutes for General Development 8. Facing the Knowledge Managers 9. English¿s Market Retreat 10. The Costs of Accounting 11. The Problem with Privatization 12. The Failure of Market Measures 13. Hiding the Cultural Contribution 14. The Half-Suffocation of University Reform IV. The University and its Enemies 15. The Blame-Academia Crowd: Culture War after 9/11 Conclusion: Powers of the One Hundred Percent Appendix: Flaws of the ¿Liberal Bias¿ Campaign Notes Index

What People are Saying About This

In a crowd of recent works dedicated to the changing university and its place in society, Newfield's rich, cogently argued and readable book stands out. This is that rare thing, truly critical history: a solidly researched book that is at once a fine example of the sort of scholarship that the American university still makes possible and a serious argument about the university.

David L. Kirp

Newfield's argument is original, his evidence varied and rich, and his historical narrative coherent. He situates the university in its broadest social context, and shows that the 'culture wars,' far from being a sideshow, have in fact cleverly been fomented by conservatives to reshape the values of the university, the world-view of its graduates, and the economy which it significantly shapes and which shapes it.

David L. Kirp, author of Shakespeare, Einstein, and the Bottom Line: The Marketing of Higher Education

Anthony Grafton

In a crowd of recent works dedicated to the changing university and its place in society, Newfield's rich, cogently argued and readable book stands out. This is that rare thing, truly critical history: a solidly researched book that is at once a fine example of the sort of scholarship that the American university still makes possible and a serious argument about the university.
Anthony Grafton, author of The Footnote: A Curious History

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