Gentlemen and Scholars: College and Community in the Age of the University

Gentlemen and Scholars: College and Community in the Age of the University

by W. Bruce Leslie (Editor)
Gentlemen and Scholars: College and Community in the Age of the University

Gentlemen and Scholars: College and Community in the Age of the University

by W. Bruce Leslie (Editor)

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Overview

Historians have dubbed the period from the Civil War to World War I "the age of the university," suggesting that colleges, in contrast to universities, were static institutions out of touch with American society. Bruce Leslie challenges this view by offering compelling evidence for the continued vitality of colleges, using case studies of four representative colleges from the Middle Atlantic region u Bucknell, Franklin and Marshall, Princeton, and Swarthmore. A new introduction to this classic reflects on his work in light of recent scholarship, especially that on southern universities, the American college in the international context, the experience of women, and liberal Protestantism's impact on the research university.

According to Leslie, nineteenth-century colleges were designed by their founders and supporters to be instruments of ethnic, denominational, and local identity. The four colleges Leslie examines in detail here were representative of these types, each serving a particular religious denomination or lifestyle. Over the course of this period, however, these colleges, like many others, were forced to look beyond traditional sources of financial support, toward wealthy alumni and urban benefactors.

This development led to the gradual reorientation of these schools toward an emerging national urban Protestant culture. Colleges that responded to and exploited the new currents prospered. Those that continued to serve cultural distinctiveness and localism risked financial sacrifice. Leslie develops his argument from a close study of faculties, curricula, financial constituencies, student bodies, and campus life. The book will be valuable to those interested in American history, higher education, as well as the particular institutions studied.

"This book continues the story started by Veysey's Emergence of the American University. Its innovative approach should encourage scholars to study colleges and universities as parts of local communities rather than as freestanding entities. Leslie's findings will substantially revise currently accepted accounts of the history of education in the late nineteenth century."--Louise L. Stevenson, Franklin and Marshall College


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781351310628
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 01/16/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 318
File size: 6 MB

About the Author

Bruce W. Leslie

Table of Contents

Introduction 1 Four Colleges and Their Communities Part One Colleges and Communities, 1865-1890 2 Rural Piety and Urban Wealth 3 When Professors Had Servants 4 “What Knowledge Is of Most Worth?” 5 Students as Gentlemen Part Two Convergence and Cosmopolitanism, 1890-1917 6 Piety versus Prosperity in the Protestant College 7 Presidential Power and Academic Autonomy 8 Knowledge Fit for Protestant Gentlemen 9 “The Side Shows Have Swallowed Up the Circus” Part Three Emergence of the Modern American College 10 The Age of the College 11 The College in the Social Order
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