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The New Southern University - Academic Freedom and Liberalism at UNC (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R1,078
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The New Southern University - Academic Freedom and Liberalism at UNC (Hardcover, New)
Series: New Directions in Southern History
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The creation of the "modern university" dates back to the early
1900s when American professors fashioned for their institutions a
mission of social service and defined themselves as truth-seekers
whose expertise would bring social benefits. These academics also
introduced a new idea to the American public: academic freedom. In
1925, University of North Carolina President Harry Woodburn Chase
proclaimed, "What the university believes with all its heart, is
that a teacher has a right to state the honest conviction to which
he has come through his work, that he has the right of freedom of
speech in teaching just as any other citizen has that right under
the constitution." The forging of this new identity and the
introduction of academic freedom did not come without internal and
external struggles, however. Perhaps in no other region was the
university-trained intellectual's new identity met with more
suspicion and scrutiny than in the South, a region historically
resistant to change. A close examination of one of the leading
southern universities, the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill (UNC), during these years reveals the ambitions of this new
generation of professors, the reactionary logic of their critics,
and the confused attempts of school leaders to use academic freedom
to help the school navigate through these transformative decades.
Between world wars, UNC emerged as a modern university that
championed academic freedom and the expertise of its faculty. This
expertise would, in theory, help lift the state and indeed the
entire South out of poverty and place it on the road to progress.
From the outset, university leaders understood that explaining and
defending academic freedom was the key to gaining public support,
thereby setting an example for other southern universities. In To
Carry the Truth: Academic Freedom at UNC, 1920-1941, Charles J.
Holden examines academic freedom through a contextualized
intellectual history of the movement's origin at one school. Holden
explores how academic freedom worked over time and reveals the
fault lines between the goals of academic freedom and what was
really possible. To Carry the Truth will be of interest to
historians of higher education, of the South, and of the law. This
project is being considered for UPK's New Directions in Southern
History series. Charles J. Holden is Aldom-Plansoen Distinguished
Professor of history at St. Mary's College of Maryland. He is the
author of In the Great Maelstrom: Conservatives in Post-Civil War
South Carolina (South Carolina) and has contributed to several
other publications, including North Carolina Historical Review and
Maryland Historical Magazine.
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