The rise of corporatism in the North American University was
charted by Bill Readings in the mid nineteen-nineties in his book
"The University in Ruins." The intervening years have seen the
corporate university grow and extend to the point where its
evolution into a large business corporation is seemingly complete.
Rolfe s book examines the factors contributing to the
transformation of the university from a site of culture and
knowledge to what might be termed an information factory, and
explores strategies for how, in Readings words, members of the
academic community might continue to dwell in the ruins of the
university in a productive and authentic way.
Drawing on the work of critics and philosophers such as Barthes,
Derrida, Lyotard and Deleuze, " The University in Dissent" suggests
that this can only be achieved subversively through the development
of a community of philosophers who are prepared to challenge,
critique and subvert the mission statement of the university of
excellence from within, focusing on how scholarly and academic
thought and writing might develop in this new post-Enlightenment
era.
Summarising, contextualising and extending previous
understandings of the rise of corporatism and the subsequent demise
of the traditional aims and values of the university, Rolfe
assesses the situation in contemporary UK and international
settings. He recognises that changes to the traditional idea of the
university are inevitable and explores some of the challenges and
consequences of this shift in the academic world, suggesting how
academics can work with change, whilst at the same time seeking to
undermine its worst excesses.
This timely and thought provoking book is a must-read for all
academics at University level, as well as education policy
makers.
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