Making Sense of the University
A Manifesto for our Times
Debaditya Bhattacharya(Author)
Cambridge University Press
Will be published approx. on 31. July 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
300 pages
978-1-009-72232-2 (ISBN)
Description
Debating the 'publicness' of the public university provokes the following questions: what lies in common between the university and the communities it excludes? What is the place of non-secular knowledges within the secular-modern instance of the university? How does the university solidarise with publics that never find place within it? Does academic freedom imply freedom against public opinion? This book looks at the current fortunes of the public university in India to call for a deep historical examination. It argues that perhaps the university's pursuit of 'thought' has not been as successful as we have imagined. The history of the public university might give us a cue for understanding the rise of authoritarian tendencies across the world.
Reviews / Votes
'Making Sense of the University is a daring and indispensable adventure in critical thought and historical inquiry. With enormous theoretical power and acute historical analysis, Debaditya Bhattacharya guides us through the history of contradictions that define the university and holds public universities in India accountable for decisive failures of justice and vision. With remarkable acuity, Bhattacharya gives us a way to think about institutional histories and radical democratic theory. This book compels us to understand the university as the institutional support for the desire for what has been unknown, insisting on an affirmative vision that calls for an end to repression and incursion. This book is unprecedented, brilliant, and indispensable.' Judith Butler, author of Gender Trouble 'The university is commonly thought of as the place where 'sense' - that is, things like knowledge and understanding - are produced. This provocative and intensely argued book invites us, instead, to 'make sense of the university' itself at a time when universities are under attack in much of the world. Structured as an interrogation of the idea of the public university and its relationships with community, secularity, solidarity and freedom, this book will not only intrigue and challenge but also inform and inspire anyone who has thought seriously about higher education and its institutional frames.' Satish Deshpande, author of Contemporary India: A Sociological View 'Why are universities being destroyed everywhere? This relentlessly thoughtful and innovative volume offers answers. Political and historical analysis are artfully combined to identify ways in which the university (and the idea of public good on which it depends) can be revalued, defended and salvaged. The argument exemplifies a strategic view of knowledge and knowing to which it points. This is a major intervention that deserves to be influential.' Paul Gilroy, author of The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness 'This brilliant critique of the Indian university is informed by an alternative vision of what higher education might be. It is indeed 'a manifesto for our times' that is a vital read for anyone, anywhere concerned about the future of the university.' Joan W. Scott, author of Knowledge, Power, and Academic FreedomMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge
United Kingdom
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Illustrations
Worked examples or Exercises
ISBN-13
978-1-009-72232-2 (9781009722322)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Book
approx. 07/2026
Cambridge University Press
€136.40
Not yet published
Person
Debaditya Bhattacharya is Assistant Professor Department of English, Faculty of Humanities and Languages at Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi. His areas of interest include contemporary literary and cultural theory, histories of Indian higher education, classical philosophy, renaissance studies, film studies, philosophy of technology, ethics and politics.
Content
Note to the Reader: A Prefatory Appendix; Introduction: Thinking the University as a Just Institution; 1. The Touch of Community: University, Plague and Death; 2. The Sound of Secularity: Caste-ing Myth in the University; 3. The Gaze of Solidarity: Whose Place in the Sun is the University?; 4. A Taste of Freedom: Science, Speech and the 'State' of the University; Conclusion: The University, Acronymized!; Bibliography; Index.