"Written with verve, this short book does a good job of contextualizing area studies within a historical sociology of the vicissitudes of academic life."<b>---Mary Taylor Huber, <i>Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning</i></b>
"[<i>Seeing the World</i>] offers a novel perspective to understand the historical and contemporary role of US research universities in shaping and reshaping American and global societies. . . . A must-read book for anyone working or studying within the US higher education system. It will help current students, scholars, and administrators better understand their role within the American university’s knowledge-producing system.—Lipon Mondal,<i> International Journal of Comparative Sociology</i>"
"This is a vital book. The debate about the role of universities in global understanding starts here. This short book is full of insights about how the world has shaped American universities and how universities have shaped what we think about the world."—Jeremy Adelman, Princeton University
"With extensive interviews and other data, Seeing the World explains critical variations in understanding area studies and the mechanisms that enable their interdisciplinary reproduction in leading US universities. This book should not only clarify thinking about the international missions of US universities, but also improve how their globalizing knowledge networks function in practice."—Michael D. Kennedy, Brown University
"Seeing the World combines impressive ambition and empirical depth with a powerful comparative approach to make a significant contribution to our understanding of area studies."—Jason Owen-Smith, University of Michigan