
Student Revolt in 1968
France, Italy and West Germany
Ben Mercer(Author)
Cambridge University Press
Published on 7. October 2021
Book
Paperback/Softback
312 pages
978-1-108-73595-7 (ISBN)
Description
Student Revolt in 1968 examines the origins, course and dissolution of student protest at three universities in the 1960s - the Freie Universitaet Berlin in West Germany, the campus of Nanterre in France, and the Faculty of Sociology at Trento in Italy. It traces how student revolts over space, speech, sociology and cultural democratisation catalysed a dynamic protest movement within universities in the mid-1960s that expanded dramatically beyond the University in 1968. Differing visions of democratisation - mass access to education, the dissolution of high culture, the democratic control of the university - clashed and competed in a radical revaluation of the meaning of university education and democratic culture. The study also evaluates the most ambitious experiments in higher education in the 1960s - the 'Critical Universities' of West Berlin and Trento - which sought to establish democratic control of higher education before dissolving in the politics of social revolution, and offers a new and clear-sighted perspective on the 1960s
Reviews / Votes
'Exciting for its transnational approach alongside keen attention to local specifics, Ben Mercer's study explores the widely varied, contradictory, and transforming meanings of democracy and democratization in the student protest in West Berlin, Nanterre, and Trento. Mercer opens up the narrative of '68' as it has been written and rewritten, contemporaneously across weeks and month - and ultimately across decades - challenging simple terms of 'successes' and 'failures'.' Belinda Davis, Rutgers University 'An ambitious, original and subtle investigation of the student movement in three European universities - Nanterre, Trento and the Free University of Berlin - which sheds new light on questions of political and cultural democratisation in the 1960s. Just when you thought that there was nothing new to say about 1968, Ben Mercer makes this must-read intervention.' Robert Gildea, University of Oxford 'A thoughtful analysis of student protest around 1968 in three major Western European countries. Mercer's comparative study will be a welcome addition to many syllabi on the Global 1960s and essential reading for students and scholars of democratization after 1945.' Anna von der Goltz, Georgetown UniversityMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Illustrations
Worked examples or Exercises
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 17 mm
Weight
455 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-108-73595-7 (9781108735957)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Book
11/2019
Cambridge University Press
€129.70
Article not available at the moment
Person
Ben Mercer is Lecturer in the School of History at the Australian National University, Canberra. He is the author of numerous journal articles including in French Politics, Culture & Society, the Journal of the History of Ideas and the Journal of Modern History and a contributor to The Oxford Handbook of European History, 1914-1945 (2016).
Content
Introduction: history, myth and memory of 1968; Part I. Education and Culture: 1. The 'devouring monster': the university in the 1960s; 2. 'New managerial class' or 'social doctor'? The ambiguities of sociology; 3. 'Books for all': the democratisation of high culture; 4. 'Knowledge is over': the intellectual politics of 1968; Part II. The Politics of Revolt: 5. 'The space of autonomy must be created': the politics of democracy; 6. 'We represent nothing': the crisis of representation; 7. 'We began to talk': the seizure of speech; Part III. Crisis of the University: 8. 'Question, doubt and criticise': free speech at the Free University; 9. 'Student power': Vietnam at Trento; 10. 'An asylum for delinquents': the space of revolt at Nanterre; 11. 'A golden ghetto': the Critical University.