
The Knowledge Contract
Politics and Paradigms in the Academic Workplace
David B. Downing(Author)
University of Nebraska Press
Will be published approx. on 1. November 2005
Book
Hardback
326 pages
978-0-8032-1730-0 (ISBN)
Description
The Knowledge Contract intervenes in the ongoing debates about the changing conditions of higher education in America, with a special focus on English studies and the humanities. This highly original study integrates three crucial concerns: the economic restructuring of higher education, the transformation of disciplinary models of teaching and research, and the rise of the academic labor movement. Whereas most contemporary critiques of higher education have focused on the impact of global economic forces, The Knowledge Contract adds a new dimension to the discussion by addressing the tensions between disciplinary and nondisciplinary forms of academic work. David B. Downing draws on several traditions of scholarship: histories of the university, sociological studies of education, critiques of disciplinary and interdisciplinary forms of work, histories of academic capitalism and the labor movement, and field-specific analyses of the history of English studies. Building on his analysis, Downing develops alternative possibilities to the dominance of disciplinary forms of labor and offers scenarios for creating more equitable working and learning conditions for faculty and students.
Reviews / Votes
"Both timely and provocative, this compelling book by David B. Downing succeeds in the very difficult task of relating the internal organization and subject matter of an academic field to the sociology of the profession." Marc Bousquet, the founding editor of Workplace: The Journal for Academic Labor "The Knowledge Contract takes up one of the most important topics in the humanities--the university and its current prospects. Its central innovation is its examination of Thomas Kuhn's conception of paradigms. Along the way, Downing takes up current issues facing the university, such as diversity, cosmopolitanism, globalism, and academic labor." Jeffrey Williams, co-editor of The Norton Anthology of Theory and CriticismMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
Lincoln
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Cloth over boards
Dimensions
Height: 237 mm
Width: 161 mm
Thickness: 30 mm
Weight
671 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-8032-1730-0 (9780803217300)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
11/2005
University of Nebraska Press
€26.99
Available for download
Person
David B. Downing is a professor of English at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. He is the editor of Changing Classroom Practices: Resources for Literary and Cultural Studies and the coeditor of Beyond English, Inc.: Curricular Reform in a Global Economy, among other books. He edits the journal Works and Days.
Content
1: Working Outside (and Beside) the Knowledge Contract;2: Professions, Disciplines, and Paradigms: Reconstructing Academic Labor within the Nonmodern University; 3: Paradigms Performed and the Kuhnification of the Humanities; Chapter 4: Radical Diversities and the Cosmopolitan Self: The Disciplinary Intellectual Confronts the Multivalent University; 5: Pragmatic Interventions: The Lure of Method and the Rise of Disciplinary Labor; 6: The "Mop-up" Work of Theory Anthologies: Theorizing the Discipline and the Disciplining of Theory; 7: Beside Disciplinary English: Integrating Reading and Writing be Reforming Academic Labor; 8: Imagining Future Users: Visions of Work in the Reconfigured University