The University: Exalted Institution and Ruined Organization

Loading...

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Repository Usage Stats

11
views
61
downloads

Citation Stats

Attention Stats

Abstract

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>The university has risen over nearly a thousand years, growing from a tiny Western outcrop between church and state into a great global behemoth—key to culture, action, and stratification. Even as it has grown and flourished, the university has been shadowed by relentless attacks. We seek here to explain the seeming paradox. Our starting point is a distinction between institution and organization. The university institution is defined by religious-like cultural claims regarding the comprehensibility of the universe and the comprehending capacities of the humans within it; university organizations represent manifestations of those commitments in the real world. The institution is buffered from attacks: it shares a cultural base with Western and now world society, and its claims transcend scuffles with everyday forms of understanding. University organizations are exposed to attacks: each instance of the great institution fails to fulfill its magnificent promises, especially as those promises aggrandize over the Modern Period under decentralized conditions. The attacks reasonably call attention to the gulf between myth and reality, clustering around students and professors, who operationalize the promise of comprehending capacities, and research and teaching, which operationalize the promise of comprehensibility. But they are often hyperbolic in tone, as a series of exhibits from Europe and the U.S. over several centuries shows. The exhibits underscore two main themes: attacks focus on specific organizational failures, not on the overall institution of the university; and attacks focus on those aspects of university organization that link most directly to the great institution, i.e., the sediments of comprehensibility and comprehension—students, professors, teaching, research. The exhibits furthermore suggest common determinants of attack—grand claims, lax standards, and multitudinous interpreters. In aggregate, the attacks convey a profound sense of crisis; but one by one, they reveal exaggeration and embellishment. Notwithstanding its millennium in the rising sun, the university as an institution is not inviolable. It has been challenged before in times of revolution, and its triumph is contingent on the endurance and extension of the Western-origin cultural mantle. Were that mantle to crumble—as may be happening now—the thunder of attacks might be the clamorous prelude to the silence of demise.</jats:p>

Department

Description

Provenance

Subjects

Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1007/s11024-025-09604-z

Publication Info

Frank, DJ, DS Smith and JW Meyer (n.d.). The University: Exalted Institution and Ruined Organization. Minerva. 10.1007/s11024-025-09604-z Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/33437.

This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.

Scholars@Duke

Smith

Daniel Scott Smith

Assistant Professor of Sociology

I study pluralism, innovation, and authority in science using computational tools. My empirical settings are both historical and contemporary, ranging from scientific peer review and publications to patents and legislation.


Unless otherwise indicated, scholarly articles published by Duke faculty members are made available here with a CC-BY-NC (Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial) license, as enabled by the Duke Open Access Policy. If you wish to use the materials in ways not already permitted under CC-BY-NC, please consult the copyright owner. Other materials are made available here through the author’s grant of a non-exclusive license to make their work openly accessible.