from Book Reviews
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 June 2019
This ambitious book begins and ends its argument with reflections on the nature of the contemporary research university in the US. With a focus on the nimbleness (or lack thereof) of the research university to react to rapid changes in the higher education environment, Wellmon reflects on the cultural logic of its unique “capacity to produce and transmit a knowledge that is distinct and carries with it the stamp of authority” (3). He sees this capability as the legacy of the ethos of the German university as it took shape around 1800 in Berlin, which then influenced the American university in the nineteenth century. While the study's focus is on the developments that led to the establishment of the German research university, it clearly invites comparison with our current moment and seeks to stimulate reflection on what the role of the university is in the twentyfirst century. As free or low-cost courses (e.g., MOOCs) enabled by the technology of the internet flood the education market, Wellmon is skeptical of the unbridled celebration of these forms of outsourcing education, primarily because their model lacks the “formative practices and intellectual virtues that constitute the core of the research university” (272). The historical study of the emergence of the research university can play a vital role, Wellmon hopes, in interrogating the epistemic norms and infrastructures of the current research university and its ability to ground a particular form of scientific authority and its underlying ethic, its “most central features: a set of norms, practices, and virtues central to modern knowledge” (274–76).
Wellmon argues that the experiment of the Berlin university was prompted by the information overload as result of the Enlightenment's popularization of knowledge evidenced in the proliferation of printed texts and the concern over its “focus on the technical and practical utility of all knowledge” (5). He points to critics like J. G. Fichte, who called for the German university to distinguish itself from this broad cultural trend. Wellmon traces the long arc of the organization of knowledge, starting with Aristotle's episteme involving logical necessity and truth, the medieval focus on the written word, discipline and doctrine describing the process of instruction and its results, and the humanist development of textual practices in light of new print technologies and the early modern conception of “new science” (Francis Bacon).
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