
John Stuart Mill and the Idea of the University
Including a New Edition of J.S. Mill's Inaugural Address
Oxford University Press
Will be published approx. on 19. November 2026
Book
Hardback
176 pages
978-0-19-791796-1 (ISBN)
Description
John Stuart Mill's Inaugural Address as Rector of the University of St Andrews, delivered in 1867, is one of the great statements of the principles that should underpin a liberal higher education. This volume makes Mill's ambition for the university freshly available at a critical juncture in thinking about what higher education is for: its underpinning principles, its scope, and its social purposes.
A new edition of Mill's text is paired with an expanded version of a lecture by Helen Small, 'The Liberal University and Its Enemies', delivered at St Andrews to mark the 150th Anniversary of the Inaugural Address. The lecture examines the intellectual, ethical, and aesthetic basis of Mill's idea of the university, making the case for his relevance today amid significant cultural, economic, and political pressures on the university.
This book is a key contribution to debate about what universities are for. It grapples with the question of what universities should teach, how much they should teach, and why they should be broad in their coverage. The text contains:
-a new edition of the Inaugural Address, with detailed notes and bibliography
-a reconstruction of Mill's original audience, showing why his encouragement to 'keep, at all risks, your minds open' struck a chord with students, professors, and a wider public
-Helen Small's 'The Liberal University and Its Enemies'
A new edition of Mill's text is paired with an expanded version of a lecture by Helen Small, 'The Liberal University and Its Enemies', delivered at St Andrews to mark the 150th Anniversary of the Inaugural Address. The lecture examines the intellectual, ethical, and aesthetic basis of Mill's idea of the university, making the case for his relevance today amid significant cultural, economic, and political pressures on the university.
This book is a key contribution to debate about what universities are for. It grapples with the question of what universities should teach, how much they should teach, and why they should be broad in their coverage. The text contains:
-a new edition of the Inaugural Address, with detailed notes and bibliography
-a reconstruction of Mill's original audience, showing why his encouragement to 'keep, at all risks, your minds open' struck a chord with students, professors, and a wider public
-Helen Small's 'The Liberal University and Its Enemies'
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Illustrations
1 Figure
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 138 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-19-791796-1 (9780197917961)
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Helen Small is Merton Professor of English Language and Literature at the University of Oxford. Her books include The Value of the Humanities (OUP, 2013) and The Long Life (2007) which was winner of the Truman Capote Award for Literary Criticism, 2008 and the British Academy Rose Mary Crawshay Prize, 2008.
Content
- Inaugural Address
- The Liberal University and its Enemies
- The Liberal University and its Enemies