Teachers and Scholars: A Memoir of Berkeley in Depression and War

Teachers and Scholars: A Memoir of Berkeley in Depression and War

by RobertNisbet (Author)

Synopsis

The University of California at Berkeley is today best known as a great research center and popularly remembered as a locus of campus unrest in the 1960s. This memoir by the eminent sociologist and historian of ideas Robert Nisbet views Berkeley from a different perspective. Teachers and Scholars is a fascinating picture of Berkeley as it was a half a century ago in its move to become the most important center of learning west of the Mississippi. Nisbet recounts his years there as student and teacher, and offers vivid portraits of Berkeley's professors and personalities.

Between the Great Depression and entry into World War II, Berkeley was a unique window on a Western world in turmoil. All the ideologies of the time-liberalism, socialism, populism, and fascism-impinged on the life of the campus. In Nisbet's view, the thirties was the last decade of the old Berkeley -a school that conceived its primary mission as that of teaching. Although research was expected of every faculty member, its chief importance was widely held to be in its elevating effect on undergraduate instruction.

In the shift from teaching to research, some have argued that Berkeley has lost community and consensus while others claim that the university has only enriched itself. Nisbet finds much to respect and criticize in both views. His vision permits him to compare and contrast the Berkley experience with other schools such as Harvard, Chicago, and Stanford. Rich in intellectual and social history, Teachers and Scholars is vitally pertinent to the educational questions and controversies of our own time.

$62.54

Quantity

10 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 226
Edition: Reprint
Publisher: Transaction Publishers
Published: 30 Mar 2013

ISBN 10: 1412851777
ISBN 13: 9781412851770

Media Reviews
Anyone connected with California-as alumnus, student, or faculty member-will revel in a new book called Teachers and Scholars. . . . [Nisbet's] memoir is a charming reminder of such loyalty, not only to a university but also to the ideas of a free society. --William K. Muir, California Monthly Rober Nisbet's memoir of the University of California's golden age begins in 1932, when he arrived in Berkeley as a freshman. He stayed through graduate school in sociology and became an assistant professor until World War II cut short his career at Cal. Simultaneously . . . Berkeley ceased to be a paradise. This touching, often elegantly written book argues, like Henry May's earlier account, that Berkeley was a special place in the 1930s. . . . [T]he author offers rare insight into a time which, he insists, marked a transition between an older-style American university created in the early 1900s and the graduate student-oriented research university that emerged after World War II. --W. J. Rorabaugh, History of Education Quarterly What we can learn from this memoir is . . . the importance of teaching in universities, portraits of some great teachers, and the transformative effect of World War II on universities. . . . This 'Memoir of Berkeley in Depression and War' is a nostalgic visit to the past. --Robert R. Sherman, Educational Studies This memoir is a delightful account of a scholar's affection for the University of California at Berkeley. . . . Today Berkeley is among the outstanding research universities of the world; but for Nisbet in the 1930s, it was a collection of great teachers who, despite earned scholarly reputations, were devoted to undergraduate teaching. --Rosemary Park, Change
-Anyone connected with California-as alumnus, student, or faculty member-will revel in a new book called Teachers and Scholars. . . . [Nisbet's] memoir is a charming reminder of such loyalty, not only to a university but also to the ideas of a free society.- --William K. Muir, California Monthly -Rober Nisbet's memoir of the University of California's golden age begins in 1932, when he arrived in Berkeley as a freshman. He stayed through graduate school in sociology and became an assistant professor until World War II cut short his career at Cal. Simultaneously . . . Berkeley ceased to be a paradise. This touching, often elegantly written book argues, like Henry May's earlier account, that Berkeley was a special place in the 1930s. . . . [T]he author offers rare insight into a time which, he insists, marked a transition between an older-style American university created in the early 1900s and the graduate student-oriented research university that emerged after World War II.- --W. J. Rorabaugh, History of Education Quarterly -What we can learn from this memoir is . . . the importance of teaching in universities, portraits of some -great- teachers, and the transformative effect of World War II on universities. . . . This 'Memoir of Berkeley in Depression and War' is a nostalgic visit to the past.- --Robert R. Sherman, Educational Studies -This memoir is a delightful account of a scholar's affection for the University of California at Berkeley. . . . Today Berkeley is among the outstanding research universities of the world; but for Nisbet in the 1930s, it was a collection of great teachers who, despite earned scholarly reputations, were devoted to undergraduate teaching.- --Rosemary Park, Change
Author Bio
Robert Nisbet (1913-1996) was Albert Schweitzer Professor Emeritus of the Humanities at Columbia University, USA. Some of his books include The Sociological Tradition, History of the Idea of Progress, and Metaphor and History.