ABSTRACT

Why is it important to have a revolutionary critical pedagogy? What are the new inter/disciplinary engagements possible within the university? What will it be like to live and learn in this university of the future?

Drawing on these essential questions, this volume explores the political future(s) of the university. It does not take a simplistic recourse to the tenets of liberal democracy but seeks a more engaged positioning of the university space within everyday practices of the social. It cross-examines the history of this ‘ideal’ university’s relationship with the banal everyday, the ‘apolitical’ outside and what exceeds intellectual reason, to finally question if such historicizing of the university is necessary at all.

Along with its companion The Idea of the University: Histories and Contexts, this brave new intervention makes a compelling foray into the political future(s) of the university. It will be of interest to academics, educators and students of the social sciences and humanities, especially education. It will also be of use to policy-makers and education analysts, and be central to the concerns of any citizen.

chapter |38 pages

Introduction

What ‘use’ is the liberal ruse? Debating the ‘idea’ of the university

part I|52 pages

Beyond nostalgias

part III|66 pages

Imagining an ‘other’ university

chapter 9|26 pages

Between disciplines and interdisciplines

The university of in-discipline

part IV|60 pages

Drafting manifestos for change

chapter 10|11 pages

The commoditization of education

chapter 12|9 pages

The university in question

chapter 13|23 pages

Revolutionary critical pedagogy

Staking a claim against the macrostructural unconscious 1