《失去的希望:20世纪60年代的美国大学》艾伦·施雷克著(书评)

IF 0.1 4区 历史学 Q3 HISTORY
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Older schools were becoming larger in size and function, new campuses were being established, and enrollments were rising rapidly. This was especially notable in New York, where Gov. Nelson Rockefeller promoted the extensive expansion of the State University system. These developments led to substantial changes in the student population, both economically and socially. And the professoriate, too, was changing. Traditionally, college faculties had been composed primarily of men from backgrounds of wealth and privilege; now women and men of more diverse backgrounds were aspiring to careers in higher education. However, by the early 1970s support for colleges and universities had diminished, public institutions faced serious cuts to their budgets, and the \"golden age\" was over. Ellen Schrecker chronicles these developments in her extensively researched and well-written book, The Lost Promise: American Universities in the 1960s. Schrecker attributes the decline in public and political support for universities to student unrest and protest and the participation of some faculty members who joined with them. The protests began with the Free Speech Movement at the University of California at Berkely, but soon other issues dominated. Activist students and faculty were increasingly involved in the Civil Rights Movement and in protests against the war in Vietnam. Antiwar activities included protests against the military draft, the presence of ROTC programs [End Page 226] on campuses, and against government grants for defense-related research. For the most part, the earliest activities were nonviolent, but that began to change, and civil disobedience became more common. Disruptions of classes on campus and civil disobedience off campus not only diminished public respect for higher education but also caused serious rifts among faculty. While universities have never really recovered from the damage caused by this period of turbulence, there have been some positive achievements, especially the introduction of new areas of study and the ultimate acceptance of some of the scholarly contributions of radical academics. Those of us in higher education who lived through these times will find much in this book that is familiar, and it will evoke some unpleasant memories. While many nonradical faculty members agreed with many of the goals of the students and their radical colleagues, they did not condone the methods employed. Workdays could be very stressful. Many New Left faculty and graduate students, so convinced of their righteousness, had little tolerance for more moderate faculty and students, and so treated them with disdain. Schrecker seems to be more concerned with the difficulties encountered by the radical faculty than with those of the more moderate faculty who were trying to perform the tasks expected of their profession. Not only was working at the university trying, but so too was attending a professional association meeting. Schrecker indicates that radical scholars attempted to put their stamp on professional associations, but she downplays the tensions at the annual meetings of those organizations. She specifically mentions the 1969 meeting of the American Historical Association, where, she claims, despite fears of some leaders of the association, there were no disruptions at the business meeting. I am not sure what she would consider a disruption, but I attended that meeting, and I distinctly recall an altercation for possession of a floor microphone. While the prospects for higher education at the beginning of the 1960s indeed were quite bright, Schrecker sees it as more idyllic than it actually was. Certainly, there were more academic...","PeriodicalId":56163,"journal":{"name":"NEW YORK HISTORY","volume":"22 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2023-06-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Lost Promise: American Universities in the 1960s by Ellen Schrecker (review)\",\"authors\":\"\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/nyh.2023.a902925\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Reviewed by: The Lost Promise: American Universities in the 1960s by Ellen Schrecker Ivan D. Steen (bio) The Lost Promise: American Universities in the 1960s By Ellen Schrecker. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2021. 621 pages, 23 b&w illus., 1 table. $35.00 cloth; $24.99 e-pub. The 1960s was a decade of turbulence for America. Mercifully, the efforts of Sen. Joseph McCarthy and others to find a Communist in every nook and cranny were drawing to a close, but the Civil Rights Movement and the war in Vietnam now dominated public attention. For America's colleges and universities, this decade began in a positive vein and with great hope for the future. There was substantial public and political support for higher education, and it was an era of considerable growth, especially for public institutions. Older schools were becoming larger in size and function, new campuses were being established, and enrollments were rising rapidly. This was especially notable in New York, where Gov. Nelson Rockefeller promoted the extensive expansion of the State University system. These developments led to substantial changes in the student population, both economically and socially. And the professoriate, too, was changing. 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Antiwar activities included protests against the military draft, the presence of ROTC programs [End Page 226] on campuses, and against government grants for defense-related research. For the most part, the earliest activities were nonviolent, but that began to change, and civil disobedience became more common. Disruptions of classes on campus and civil disobedience off campus not only diminished public respect for higher education but also caused serious rifts among faculty. While universities have never really recovered from the damage caused by this period of turbulence, there have been some positive achievements, especially the introduction of new areas of study and the ultimate acceptance of some of the scholarly contributions of radical academics. Those of us in higher education who lived through these times will find much in this book that is familiar, and it will evoke some unpleasant memories. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

《失去的希望:20世纪60年代的美国大学》作者:艾伦·施莱克芝加哥:芝加哥大学出版社,2021。621页,23张黑白插图。, 1表。布35.00美元;e-pub 24.99美元。20世纪60年代是美国动荡的十年。幸运的是,参议员约瑟夫·麦卡锡(Joseph McCarthy)和其他人在每个角落和缝隙里寻找共产主义者的努力已经接近尾声,但民权运动和越南战争现在占据了公众的注意力。对于美国的学院和大学来说,这十年的开始是积极的,对未来充满希望。高等教育得到了公众和政治的大力支持,这是一个相当大的增长时代,特别是对公共机构而言。老的学校在规模和功能上都变得更大了,新的校园正在建立,入学人数也在迅速增加。这在纽约州尤为显著,州长纳尔逊·洛克菲勒(Nelson Rockefeller)推动了州立大学系统的广泛扩张。这些发展导致了学生群体在经济和社会方面的重大变化。教授的身份也在改变。传统上,大学教员主要由来自富裕和特权背景的男性组成;现在,背景更加多样化的男女都渴望进入高等教育领域。然而,到20世纪70年代初,对学院和大学的支持减少了,公共机构面临着严重的预算削减,“黄金时代”结束了。Ellen Schrecker在她的著作《失去的希望:20世纪60年代的美国大学》中记述了这些发展。Schrecker将对大学的公众和政治支持的下降归因于学生的骚乱和抗议,以及一些加入他们的教师的参与。抗议活动始于加州大学伯克利分校的言论自由运动,但很快其他问题占据了主导地位。激进的学生和教师越来越多地参与到民权运动和反对越南战争的抗议活动中。反战活动包括抗议征兵,反对ROTC项目在校园的存在,以及反对政府对国防相关研究的资助。在大多数情况下,最早的活动是非暴力的,但这种情况开始改变,公民不服从变得更加普遍。校园内的课堂中断和校园外的公民不服从不仅降低了公众对高等教育的尊重,还造成了教师之间的严重分歧。虽然大学从未真正从这段动荡时期造成的损害中恢复过来,但也取得了一些积极的成就,特别是引入了新的研究领域,并最终接受了激进学者的一些学术贡献。我们这些受过高等教育、经历过这些时代的人会在这本书中发现很多熟悉的东西,也会唤起一些不愉快的回忆。虽然许多非激进的教师同意学生和他们的激进同事的许多目标,但他们不能容忍所采用的方法。工作日的压力可能会很大。许多新左派的教师和研究生深信他们是正义的,对更温和的教师和学生几乎没有容忍度,因此对他们不屑一顾。Schrecker似乎更关心激进的教员所遇到的困难,而不是那些试图完成他们的专业所期望的任务的较为温和的教员。不仅在大学工作很辛苦,参加专业协会会议也很辛苦。Schrecker指出,激进的学者试图给专业协会打上自己的烙印,但她淡化了这些组织年会上的紧张局势。她特别提到了1969年美国历史协会(American Historical Association)的会议,她声称,尽管该协会的一些领导人很担心,但在那次会议上,商务会议没有受到干扰。我不知道她会怎么看待干扰,但我参加了那次会议,我清楚地记得有一次因为拥有地板麦克风而发生的口角。虽然20世纪60年代初高等教育的前景确实相当光明,但施莱克认为它比实际情况更像田园诗。当然,有更多的学术……
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Lost Promise: American Universities in the 1960s by Ellen Schrecker (review)
Reviewed by: The Lost Promise: American Universities in the 1960s by Ellen Schrecker Ivan D. Steen (bio) The Lost Promise: American Universities in the 1960s By Ellen Schrecker. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2021. 621 pages, 23 b&w illus., 1 table. $35.00 cloth; $24.99 e-pub. The 1960s was a decade of turbulence for America. Mercifully, the efforts of Sen. Joseph McCarthy and others to find a Communist in every nook and cranny were drawing to a close, but the Civil Rights Movement and the war in Vietnam now dominated public attention. For America's colleges and universities, this decade began in a positive vein and with great hope for the future. There was substantial public and political support for higher education, and it was an era of considerable growth, especially for public institutions. Older schools were becoming larger in size and function, new campuses were being established, and enrollments were rising rapidly. This was especially notable in New York, where Gov. Nelson Rockefeller promoted the extensive expansion of the State University system. These developments led to substantial changes in the student population, both economically and socially. And the professoriate, too, was changing. Traditionally, college faculties had been composed primarily of men from backgrounds of wealth and privilege; now women and men of more diverse backgrounds were aspiring to careers in higher education. However, by the early 1970s support for colleges and universities had diminished, public institutions faced serious cuts to their budgets, and the "golden age" was over. Ellen Schrecker chronicles these developments in her extensively researched and well-written book, The Lost Promise: American Universities in the 1960s. Schrecker attributes the decline in public and political support for universities to student unrest and protest and the participation of some faculty members who joined with them. The protests began with the Free Speech Movement at the University of California at Berkely, but soon other issues dominated. Activist students and faculty were increasingly involved in the Civil Rights Movement and in protests against the war in Vietnam. Antiwar activities included protests against the military draft, the presence of ROTC programs [End Page 226] on campuses, and against government grants for defense-related research. For the most part, the earliest activities were nonviolent, but that began to change, and civil disobedience became more common. Disruptions of classes on campus and civil disobedience off campus not only diminished public respect for higher education but also caused serious rifts among faculty. While universities have never really recovered from the damage caused by this period of turbulence, there have been some positive achievements, especially the introduction of new areas of study and the ultimate acceptance of some of the scholarly contributions of radical academics. Those of us in higher education who lived through these times will find much in this book that is familiar, and it will evoke some unpleasant memories. While many nonradical faculty members agreed with many of the goals of the students and their radical colleagues, they did not condone the methods employed. Workdays could be very stressful. Many New Left faculty and graduate students, so convinced of their righteousness, had little tolerance for more moderate faculty and students, and so treated them with disdain. Schrecker seems to be more concerned with the difficulties encountered by the radical faculty than with those of the more moderate faculty who were trying to perform the tasks expected of their profession. Not only was working at the university trying, but so too was attending a professional association meeting. Schrecker indicates that radical scholars attempted to put their stamp on professional associations, but she downplays the tensions at the annual meetings of those organizations. She specifically mentions the 1969 meeting of the American Historical Association, where, she claims, despite fears of some leaders of the association, there were no disruptions at the business meeting. I am not sure what she would consider a disruption, but I attended that meeting, and I distinctly recall an altercation for possession of a floor microphone. While the prospects for higher education at the beginning of the 1960s indeed were quite bright, Schrecker sees it as more idyllic than it actually was. Certainly, there were more academic...
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NEW YORK HISTORY
NEW YORK HISTORY HISTORY-
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