The image of the university is tarnished: this book examines how recent philosophies of education, new readings of its economics, new technologies affecting research and access, and contemporary novelists' representations of university life all describe a global university that has given up on its promise of greater educational equality.

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The image of the university is tarnished: this book examines how recent philosophies of education, new readings of its economics, new technologies affecting research and access, and contemporary novelists' representations of university life all describe a global university that has given up on its promise of greater educational equality.

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1. Introduction

2. Academic Barbarism: Practice and Transmission

3. Academic Barbarism, Universities and Inequality

4. Academic Barbarism and the Literature of Concealment: Roberto Bolaño and W. G. Sebald

5. Aaron Swartz, New Technologies and The Myth of Open Access

6. Academic Barbarism and the Asian University: The Case of Hong Kong

7. Conclusion

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The image of the university is tarnished: economists argue that modern universities foster 'meritocratic extremism'; educationalists say they perpetuate inequality; novelists describe for us the 'barbaric rituals' of academics and philosophers say universities are engaged in 'practices of barbarism'. This book examines how these aspects of the modern university have transformed its educational philosophy and modes of transmission to the extent that the university fosters a form of academic barbarism. New theories of barbarism have emerged alongside a philosophical discourse that is redefining identity in terms of the posthuman and the beastly. Our philosophers are attempting to rescue back what remains of the human as barbarism takes hold. This book examines how recent philosophies of education, new readings of the economics of the university, new technologies affecting research and access, and contemporary novelists' representations of university life are all describing a global university that has given up on its promise of greater educational equality.

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“O'Sullivan demonstrates that academic freedom has little meaning if grossly unequal systems dictate  who enters and who is barred from the academy. This is a fierce, and timely, defence of the continuing relevance of the idea of the modern university. Despite daunting changes to the global landscape, O'Sullivan reminds us that universities are still only worth the name if they are productive of enlightenment.” (Graham Allen, University College Cork, Ireland)

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Product details

ISBN
9781137547606
Published
2016-02-29
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan
Height
216 mm
Width
140 mm
Age
Research, P, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet

Biographical note

Michael O'Sullivan is Associate Professor in English at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. He has worked for universities in Ireland, the UK, the US, Japan and Hong Kong. He has published widely in education, literary studies and philosophy.