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Status Envy - The Politics of Catholic Higher Education (Paperback)
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Status Envy - The Politics of Catholic Higher Education (Paperback)
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The debate within Catholic educational circles on whether church
sponsored colleges and universities perpetuate mediocrity by giving
too great a priority to the moral development of students instead
of scholarship and intellectual excellence continues in this book
by sociologist Anne Hendershott. She asserts that part of the
reason for the crisis of faith within Catholic colleges is due to
status envy--the desire to compete with the top colleges in the
country. Catholic universities are generally not rated as
top-notch. They are viewed as having a lower status than secular
institutions, which, of course, creates resentment. Catholic
universities, in turn, become more secular as they become consumed
with status concerns. Detailing how this resentment manifests
itself on campuses, Hendershott explains faculty and administrative
attempts to distance universities from Catholic ideas and
curriculum. Some have distanced themselves so far from their
Catholic origins that the church no longer recognizes them as
Catholic institutions. The author questions whether even determined
Catholic universities will be able to avoid the pressures to become
more secular. Hendershott, who clearly sympathizes with the
original mission of Catholic universities, leads the reader through
the earliest signs that Catholic colleges were beginning to lose
their way in the 1960s, up through the ongoing issues of feminism
and homosexuality and their impact. In focusing on these secular
issues, colleges are denying exposure to the traditional Catholic
views on subjects such as homosexuality, women's ordination, and
abortion. Like all culture wars, the interaction among people
defines the situation. The campus is a reflection of the greater
culture between those who assert that there are no truths, only
readings--and those who believe that the truths have been revealed
and require constant rereading and application. It is a conflict
between those dedicated to the negation of the authority of
Scripture and the hierarchy of the church, and those proposing a
renaissance of the Catholic intellect and a renewed appreciation of
the church itself.
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