State, society, and university in Germany, 1700-1914

Bibliographic Information

State, society, and university in Germany, 1700-1914

Charles E. McClelland

Cambridge University Press, 1980

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Note

Bibliography: p. [358]-373

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This is a comprehensive history of the German university system in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. It examines the evolution of the universities from their moribund state in 1700 to their rise to the pinnacle of world prestige and scientific leadership in 1914. In contrast to traditional university histories published in Germany, Professor McClelland's book surveys the entire university system. It explores the influence of political, social and economic forces that helped to shape the growth, reform and scholarly excellence of the late nineteenth-century 'research university'. It thus uncovers the motivating forces behind the change of the system of higher education to meet the needs of the expanding German society. The book will be of interest to historians of education and particularly to the many historians of modern Germany.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Introduction
  • Part I. The eighteenth century: 2. The first eighteenth-century reform
  • 3. The second eighteenth-century reform movement
  • Part II. The Humboldt era: 4. Revolutionary upheavals and the rise of Berlin
  • Part III. The German universities and the revolution Wissenschaft, 1819-1866: 5. The professoriate and the research ethic, 1819-1866
  • 6. Students, finances, and politics, 1819-1866
  • Part IV. Universities in the German Empire: 7. The expansion of the universities
  • 8. The universities, state, and society, 1866-1914
  • 9. Conclusion.

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