"Making the University Matter investigates how academics situate themselves simultaneously in the university and the world and how doing so affects the viability of the university setting. The university stands at the intersection of two sets of interests, needing to be at one with the world while aspiring to stand apart from it. In an era that promises intensified political instability, growing administrative pressures, dwindling economic returns and questions about economic viability, lower enrollmentsand shrinking programs, can the university continue to matter into the future? And if so, in which way? What will help it survive as an honest broker? What are the mechanisms for ensuring its independent voice? Barbie Zelizer brings together some of the leading names in the field of media and communications studies from around the globe to consider a multiplicity of answers from across the curriculum on making the university matter, including critical scholarship, interdisciplinarity, curricular blends of the humanities and social sciences, practical training and policy work. Essays are organised into the following six sections: - On Teaching and Learning - Models of Intellectual Engagement - Making Intellectual Work Public - Economies of Knowledge - Institutionalization and Technology - Default Settings and Their Complications The collection is introduced with an essay by the editor and each section has a brief introduction to contextualise the essays and highlight the issues they raise"-- Provided by publisher.
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ix | |
Introduction: Pondering the university's future |
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1 | (12) |
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PART I On teaching and learning |
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13 | (40) |
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Introduction: Models of teaching and learning |
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15 | (2) |
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1 The life of the university |
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17 | (6) |
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2 The problem of general education in the research university |
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23 | (8) |
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3 The university (or college) keeps us honest |
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31 | (10) |
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4 Rethinking doctoral education and careers |
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41 | (12) |
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PART II Models of intellectual engagement |
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Introduction: Against McCollege |
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53 | (2) |
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5 University in the age of a transnational public sphere |
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55 | (9) |
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6 Surviving through engagement: the faculty responsibility to defend liberal education |
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64 | (9) |
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7 Monks, managers, and celebrities: refiguring the European university |
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73 | (11) |
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8 Universities and globalization: models and countermodels |
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84 | (9) |
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PART III Making intellectual work public |
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93 | (38) |
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Introduction: Closing the gap between the philosophical and the practical |
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95 | (2) |
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97 | (7) |
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10 iPhones and eyeshades: journalism and the university's role in promoting a dynamic public sphere |
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104 | (9) |
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11 Making art matter: navigating the collaborative turn |
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113 | (9) |
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12 Metaphor and institutional crisis: the near-death experience of Antioch College |
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122 | (9) |
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PART IV Economies of knowledge |
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131 | (42) |
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Introduction: Resistances and affordances of the economic "bottom line" |
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133 | (2) |
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13 Post-neoliberal academic values: notes from the UK higher education sector |
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135 | (9) |
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14 Claims of time(s): notes on post-welfare public reason |
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144 | (10) |
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15 The entrepreneurial university: or, why the university is no longer a public space (if it ever was) |
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154 | (8) |
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162 | (11) |
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PART V Institutionalization and technology |
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173 | (42) |
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Introduction: Assessing the influence of institutional and technological change |
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175 | (2) |
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17 The institutional transformation of universities in the era of digital information |
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177 | (9) |
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18 How to read hypertext: media literacy and open access in higher education |
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186 | (8) |
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19 Lost in abundance? Reflections on disciplinarity |
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194 | (12) |
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20 Another plea for the university tradition: the institutional roots of intellectual compromise |
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206 | (9) |
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PART VI Default settings and their complications |
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215 | (34) |
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Introduction: Politics by default and choice |
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217 | (2) |
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Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt |
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21 Models of transnational scholarly "cooperation": a site of geopolitical struggles? |
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219 | (9) |
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22 Legal education and the rise of rights consciousness in China |
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228 | (8) |
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23 The academic career pipeline: not leaking but pouring |
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236 | (5) |
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24 Producing cosmopolitan global citizens in the US academy |
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241 | (8) |
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Index |
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249 | |
Barbie Zelizer is Professor of Communication and holds the Raymond Williams Chair of Communication. A former journalist, Zelizer's work focuses on the cultural dimensions of journalism, with a specific interest in journalistic authority, collective memory, and journalistic images in times of crisis and war. She is also co-editor and founder of the journal Journalism: Theory, Practice, and Criticism (Sage) and has served on the editorial boards of numerous book series and journals, including Journal of Communication, Communication Theory, Critical Studies in Media Communication, Rhetoric and Public Affairs, Popular Communication, and Critical and Cultural Studies in Communication. Zelizer has lectured widely both internationally and nationally, and her essays on the media have appeared in The Nation, Newshour with Jim Lehrer, Newsday, and other publications. Author and editor of seven books and some 40 articles and book chapters, Zelizer's work has been translated into French, Hebrew, German, Portuguese and Japanese.