The University of Utopia: Radicalising Higher Education
- Location:
- University of Lincoln
- Date(s):
- 4 June 2009 00:00
What is the Conference about?
Thomas More’s Utopia (1516) sets out, for the first time, the paradox
of the modern (new) world: the possibility of abundance (freedom) in a
society of scarcity (non-freedom); and the dangers that are inherent in
this paradoxical situation for the development of the emergent
capitalist society.
More suggests the universality of education as a way of resolving this
paradox. For the humanist More, the highest pleasures are those of the
mind, and true happiness depends on their realization. On More’s
fantasy island, Utopia is a universal school for all its citizens,
where all civic life is education. Citizens attend public lectures in
the morning, participate in lively discussions during meal-times, and,
in the evening, receive formal supervision from scholars. (Meiksins
Wood, 1997).
In 1953, with the publication of The University of Utopia, the
educational philosopher Robert Hutchins extended More’s allegory to a
liberal humanist reappraisal of higher education. Anticipating the
vocationalist critique of contemporary higher education, Hutchins wrote
‘The object of the educational system, taken as a whole, is not to
produce hands for industry or to teach the young how to make a living.
It is to produce responsible citizens’ (p.3). Hutchins’s views have
been repeated and endorsed in the increasing volume of critical
literature on the commercialisation of higher education.
However this critical literature has struggled to provide any
convincing alternatives to ‘academic capitalism’ (Slaughter and Leslie,
1997). This absence of any radical alternative, occurs not because of
a lack of imagination, but by virtue of the nature of liberal-humanism
itself. For Zizek (2002) liberal humanism ‘precludes any serious
questioning of the way in which this liberal democratic order is
complicit in the phenomena it officially condemns, and, of course, any
serious attempt to imagine a different socio-political order’ (167).
What this amounts to, for Zizek, is ‘a prohibition on thinking… the
moment we question the liberal consensus we are accused of abandoning
scientific objectivity and recourse to outdated ideological positions’
(168).
The aim of this conference is to recover the freshness of More’s
critique, while going beyond Hutchins's liberal fundamentalism, in
order to imagine some real radical futures for higher education. The
conference addresses the problem of inventing a form of radicality that
confronts the same paradox that emerged in Tudor England, and continues
to undermine the progressive development of the postmodern world.
Why come to the conference?
The conference will be of interest to all staff in further and higher
education who are concerned about the future direction and role of the
changing university within the emerging global knowledge economy.
Register online now at: www.lincoln.ac.uk/conferences/ <file://www.lincoln.ac.uk/conferences/>
The university of utopia
Keynote Speakers:
- Professor Ron Barnett, Institute of Education: “The Utopian University: Challenges and Prospects”
- Professor Antonia Darder, University of Illinois: “Breaking Silence: A Study into the Pervasiveness of Oppression”
Thematic Workshops:
- Patrick Ainley, Joyce Canaan: “The Student Experience”
- Stefano Harney, Fred Moten: “Academic Labour”
- Cath Lambert, Mike Neary, Elisabeth Simbuerger: “Teaching in Public”
- Dennis Hayes, Terence Karran: “Academic Freedom”
Register online now at: www.lincoln.ac.uk/conferences/
- Website:
- http://www.lincoln.ac.uk/conferences/
- Contact Name:
- Aileen Morris
- Contact Telephone:
- 01522 837359

