ABSTRACT

Based in sociologist Zygmunt Bauman’s theory of liquid modernity, this volume describes and critiques key aspects and practices of liquid education--education as market-driven consumption, short life span of useful knowledge, overabundance of information--through a systematic comparison with ancient Greek paideia and medieval university education, producing a sweeping analysis of the history and philosophy ofeducation for the purpose of understanding current higher education, positing a more holisitic alternative model in which students are embedded in a learning commutity that is itself embedded in a larger society. If liquid modernity has left a vacuum where, according to Bauman, the pilot’s cabin is empty, this volume argues that no structure is better positioned to fill this vacuum than the university and outlines a renewed vision of social transformation through higher education.

 

 

chapter

Introduction

part |11 pages

Exordium

part |39 pages

Narratio

chapter |22 pages

Liquid Modernity

chapter |15 pages

Liquid Education

part |87 pages

Confirmatio

chapter |20 pages

Liquefied Authority

chapter |20 pages

Liquefied Culture

chapter |23 pages

Liquefied Reason

chapter |22 pages

Liquefied Structure

part |42 pages

Reprehensio

chapter |4 pages

Introducing the Inferno

chapter |13 pages

Emaciated Education

chapter |6 pages

Consuming Education

chapter |7 pages

Educational Anxiety

part |15 pages

Conclusio