Although this is the first time I worked on the thesis in a single document, I had to split it up again to upload it. The following should link to each section of the thesis draft.
Introduction (incomplete - just a potential first draft beginning of it)
Chapter One: knowledge and technology 1939-1965
Chapter Two: knowledge and the nation 1945-1957
Chapter Three: knowledge and revolution 1967-1975
Chapter Four: knowledge economy 1980-1989
Chapter Five: knowledge and property 1986-1996
Conclusion not yet written
Epilogue not yet written
Bibliography
This is a full-ish second-ish draft. It is my hope to complete a final draft in August (ish). Please feel free to send me comments, suggestions, feedback etc.
Research blog on Australian history especially the history of knowledge, higher education, work and combatting inequality
Monday, 17 January 2011
Thursday, 6 January 2011
Knowledge, legitimacy, republicanism
"Until philosophers are kings or the kings and princes of this world have the spirit and power of philosophy, and political greatness and wisdom meet in one, and those commoner natures who pursue either to the exclusion of the other are compelled to stand aside, cities will never have rest from their evils, -- nor the human race as I believe,-- and then only will this our State have a possibility of life and behold the light of day."
-- Plato's Republic, c.380 BC
"Kings can become philosophers; or else philosophers Kings. Let once society be most rightly constituted,- by victorious Analysis."
-- Thomas Carlyle, The French Revolution, 1837
Tuesday, 4 January 2011
University, democracy and politicised knowledge
"The link between our postwar democracy and the traditional university - a link that seems almost attractive - is coming t an end. Two tendencies are competing with each other. Either increasing productivity is the sole basis of a reform that smoothly integrates the depoliticised university into the system of social labor and at the same time inconspicuously cuts its ties to the political, public realm. Or the university asserts itself within the political system."
- Jurgen Habermas, 1967
Monday, 3 January 2011
Thesis wordle
Wordle of my thesis to date. I thought it might reveal lots of things I hadn't realised about my research. But no. It is immensely predictable.
Tuesday, 21 December 2010
Piracy article
To my nerdy friends interested in copyright (you know who you are) I very much enjoyed reading this chapter by Ramon Lobato today:
The six faces of media piracy: global film distribution from below
The six faces of media piracy: global film distribution from below
Sunday, 19 December 2010
Knowledge foundation for democracy not egalitarianism
In 1958, British sociologist Michael Young published a very odd book, The Rise of the Meritocracy 1870-2033. It was wildly popular, largely on the strength of the word he invented – the word ‘meritocracy’, a combination of Latin and Greek that his friends said would never work. It did. The book sold millions of copies and was translated into several languages, including Japanese, even though the story really only makes sense in Britain and its Empire. The book imagined itself to have been written in 2033, as an essay describing the declining influence in the 19th century of the power of the aristocracy, substituted by the rise of a system that privileged individuals with intelligence.
The story resonates with the ideals expressed about the early universities in Australia. While they were expressions of high culture and the ideal education of the upper class gentleman, the founders of Australian universities – in particular William Charles Wentworth – expressed the ardent desire that those universities would ensure that students of talent, regardless of birth, race or religion (sometimes even gender) were given the opportunity the hone their intellectual skills in the universities. That this group of citizens might, in Wentworth’s view, form a new, Antipodean aristocracy reveals the tension embodied in the concept. This is what Michael Young’s book highlighted. Meritocracy was not only egalitarian, it defined a new source of legitimacy for ruling and, in the intelligensia, a new ruling class. Their education supplied the substance with which people would rule themselves, since birth no longer granted that right. Knowledge was the foundation for democracy, though not (in Young’s imagined future) for egalitarianism.
Labels:
democracy,
Introduction,
Legitimation
Monday, 13 December 2010
Whitlam
"Everybody in Australia is entitled, without cost to the individual, to the same educational facilities, whether it be in respect of education at the kindergarten or tertiary stage or the post-graduate stage"
Gough Whitlam, 1953.
Gough Whitlam, 1953.
Labels:
citizenship,
Free Education,
Whitlam
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