University Press of America
Pages: 522
Trim: 8¾ x 11¼
978-0-7618-5132-5 • Paperback • May 2010 • $94.99 • (£73.00)
978-0-7618-5133-2 • eBook • May 2010 • $90.00 • (£69.00)
Bruce A. Kimball is a historian of education and a professor in the School of Educational Policy and Leadership at Ohio State University. A noted authority on the history of liberal arts education, he has also published extensively on the history of the professions and professional education in the United States.
Chapter 1 Preface
Chapter 2 Introduction: The Disputed Origins
Chapter 3 Section I: Debates in Antiquity
Chapter 4 Section II: Late Antiquity and Middle Ages: Christian Appropriation, Codification, and Female Imagery
Chapter 5 Section III: In the modernus University, 1100s -1500
Chapter 6 Section IV: The Humanist and Collegiate Traditions
Chapter 7 Section V: Humanist, Scholastic, and Sectarian Strains in the Colonial College
Chapter 8 Section VI: Intellectual and Social Challenges to the College, 1790s-1850s
Chapter 9 Section VII: Struggle between the University and the College, 1860s-1900s
Chapter 10 Section VIII: Experimentation and Search for Coherence, 1910s-1930s
Chapter 11 Section IX: The "Emerging Curricular Blueprint" of the Mid-Twentieth Century
Chapter 12 Section X: Approaching the Past in the New Millennium
Chapter 13 Glossary of Names
Chapter 14 Index
Indispensable both for its historical depth and its broad range of diverse views on the history - and the future - of liberal education.
— Herman Sinaiko, professor in the humanities, University of Chicago
Essential reading for anyone interested in clarifying the notion of liberal education in the modern university.
— Phillip Sloan, professor of liberal studies, University of Notre Dame
Kimball knows this territory exceedingly well and has succeeded here in bringing together a rich collection of sources, thoughtfully selected and interestingly juxtaposed. A timely and most valuable contribution.
— Francis C. Oakley, president emeritus, Williams College
Absolutely indispensable both to the study and the revival of liberal education. There is nothing like it presently available.
— Eva Brann, St. John's College, Annapolis