The Politics of Research
264 pages, 6 x 9
Paperback
Release Date:01 Jul 1997
ISBN:9780813524191
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The Politics of Research

SERIES: Millenial Shift
Rutgers University Press
"Eloquent, provocative, and timely, these essays provide a thoughtful, undoctrinaire defense of the centrality of the humanities to higher education--and society--at the millennium."--Cora Kaplan, University of Southampton The crisis in the humanities and higher education intensifies daily. The partisan din drowns out the voices of those thinkers who have resisted the seductions of strong ideology. Against the tendencies of the extreme attacks on higher education from the right and the counterattacks from the left, many academics would prefer to get beyond critical fashions and easy slogans. In this collection, leading scholars demonstrate how the current furor threatens the critical analysis of culture, so vital to a healthy society. They explore the historical sources of the crisis, the relations between politics and research, the responsibilities and possibilities of the academic intellectual, the structure of the institution of the university, the functions and achievements of the humanities, and the development of interdisciplinarity as a catalyst for change. This volume is a necessary resource for understanding the current crisis and for transforming the academy as we approach the twenty-first century. The contributors are Jonathan Arac, Lauren Berlant, Peter Brooks, Roman de la Campa, Myra Jehlen, Stanley Katz, Richard Kramer, Dominick LaCapra, George Levine, Ellen Messer-Davidow, Helene Moglen, Bill Readings, and Bruce Robbins. E. Ann Kaplan is the director of The Humanities Institute at the State University of New York at Stony Brook
George Levine is Emeritus Professor at Rutgers University. His work has focused on Victorian fiction, George Eliot, and Darwin and his relation to the novel and, more recently, on the relation of science to literature and aesthetics, and secularism.

E. Ann Kaplan is an American professor, author, and director. She currently teaches English at the Stony Brook State University of New York, and is the founder and director of The Humanities Institute at Stony Brook University.
Part One. Politics of the institution and the public intellectual. Theory after theory: institutional questions / Bill Readings ; Research without a theory: working in academia / George Levine ; The scholar-teacher, the university, and society / Stanley N. Katz ; From what subject-position(s) should one address the politics of research? / Dominick Lacapra ; Cultural studies, globalization, and neo-liberalism / Román de la Campa
Part 2. The politics of interdisciplinarity. Less disciplinary than thou: criticism and the conflict of the faculties / Bruce Robbins ; Shop window or laboratory: collection, collaboration, and the humanities / Jonathan Arac ; History beside the fact: what we learn from a true and exact history of Barbadoes / Myra Jehlen
Part 3. Politics and pedagogy. Feminism and the institutions of intimacy / Lauren Berlant ; How can we keep on doing this?: reflections on graduate education in the humanities / Peter Brooks ; Not to hear the Italian symphony / Richard Kramer
Part 4. Politics and research. Losing their edge: radical studies from the seventies to the nineties / Helene Moglen ; Dollars for scholars: the real politics of humanities scholarship and programs / Ellen Messer-Davidow
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