Hypertext as Subversive? – David Kolb, Bates College
Vol 2 (2000) The University Culture Machine Hypertext as Subversive? David Kolb Introduction Universities are said to be places of critical discussion and evaluation that train new cognitive…
Vol 2 (2000) The University Culture Machine Hypertext as Subversive? David Kolb Introduction Universities are said to be places of critical discussion and evaluation that train new cognitive…
Vol 2 (2000) The University Culture Machine The Future of the Humanities: Experimenting Samuel Weber Do the Humanities have a future? Is there a place for the study…
Vol 2 (2000) The University Culture Machine Banality, Book Publishing, and the Everyday Life of Cultural Studies Ted Striphas Thirty-nine years ago, Penguin Books published Lady Chatterley’s Lover, a…
Vol 2 (2000) The University Culture Machine Cultural Politics and the Crisis of the University Henry A. Giroux Introduction What is surprising about the current attack on education,…
Vol 2 (2000) The University Culture Machine Why Read? Diane Elam Academics in the humanities spend a high percentage of their time reading. The obvious results of this…
Vol 2 (2000) The University Culture Machine Beautiful Knowledge, or, Reproducing the University Again? Walter Benjamin and the Institution of Knowledge Graham MacPhee Ruins jutting into the…
Vol 2 (2000) The University Culture Machine Belonging without Belonging: Deconstruction, Literature and the Institution Stephen Jarvis The story ought to be simple enough, and it would seem…
Vol 2 (2000) The University Culture Machine Frontiers: Of Literature and Philosophy Geoffrey Bennington This is a frontier. Here and now, here we are crossing it now, something is…
Vol 2 (2000) The University Culture Machine Stay! Speak, Speak. I Charge Thee, Speak: An Interview with J. Hillis Miller by Wang Fengzhen & Shaobo Xie 'Stay! Speak, speak. I…
Vol 2 (2000) The University Culture Machine Intellectual Courage: An Interview to Jacques Derrida by Thomas Assheuer Translated by Peter Krapp Q: Monsieur Derrida, you have always been politically engaged…