Review
This book was awarded the Kevin Brehony Prize for the best first book in History of Education by the History of Education Society UK (2014).
"This is an original, well researched and cogently argued book which throws new light on an old topic. Anyone interested in nineteenth-century universities, or in the politics of curriculum change more generally, would profit from reading it." - Dr. Christopher Stray, Swansea University
"The movement to reform the curriculum and examination system of Oxford University in the sixty years following the French Revolution has traditionally been seen as a radical and liberalising endeavour to bring a medieval institution into the modern era and one that was staunchly opposed by die-hard conservatives. Ellis's revisionist account turns this traditional view on its head. In a compelling and a highly original analysis based on much new material, she paints the radicals as the real conservatives, moved to reform primarily by a growing generational conflict within the university that pitted juniors against seniors and threatened to subvert Oxford's establishment mission to inculcate its charges in the right principles of church and state. In this new reading, Tractarianism becomes the powerful culmination of an evolving youthful rebellion, and the calls from the 1830s to make Oxford more like the Humboldtian German universities a conservative device by nervous dons to regain control who demonised Newman and his friends as a threat to masculinity. A contribution to the history of youth and gender as much as the history of higher education, this is a book that anybody interested in nineteenth-century Britain and the so-called Age of Reform will want to read." - Professor Laurence Brockliss, Magdalen College, Oxford
"The histories of Oxford and Cambridge are extremely important, not only as histories of scholarship, although those histories could be written as well, but also because they, along with the public schools, as Heather Ellis points out in her introduction to this stimulating book, played an "important role in shaping the attitudes and outlook of the British elite". Changes within the ancient universities have been often considered as the result of liberalizing spirits, moved by the impulses of the French Revolution, to bring these institutions into the modern world. Ellis offers quite a different view. The cohesiveness of the British elite has been exaggerated too often, and Ellis attends to conflict between generations as the dynamic that drove reform as senior members of the university sought to restrict and restrain the unsettled spirits of junior members: "The growing tension between undergraduates and their tutors deserves to be taken seriously as a factor influencing the nature and timing of reform at Oxford"." - William C. Lubenow, Stockton College of New Jersey
"[...] the book is original and ground-breaking [...] Rather than simply relying on the prevailing, determinist account, Ellis offers an attractive and largely convincing alternative: 'generational conflict' between the senior and junior members of the university [...] In developing this account of reform at Oxford, Ellis has made a useful contribution to our knowledge and understanding of the history of education. Her book also provides an insight into the attitudes to gender and masculinity in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century oxford. It also further erodes the idea that there were easily defined 'unreformed' and 'reformed' periods in British society in this period. " - William Gibson, Oxford Brookes University, in: English Historical Review
Product Description
This book offers a fresh interpretation of a series of ground-breaking reforms introduced at the University of Oxford in the first half of the nineteenth century. Innovations such as competitive examination, a uniform syllabus and a broad range of degree subjects are often seen as products of the reforming zeal of early nineteenth-century Britain. By cont
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