The Higher Learning in America
Softcover
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Description
In The Higher Learning in America, Thorstein Veblen offers a penetrating critique of the modern university's subordination to business principles, administrative control, and pecuniary ambition. Written in his characteristically ironic, densely analytical prose, the book situates higher education within the institutional transformations of industrial capitalism. Veblen contrasts disinterested inquiry with vocational utility and managerial efficiency, exposing how the pursuit of prestige, endowments, and corporate-style governance distorts scholarship's proper aim. Veblen, the Norwegian-American economist and social theorist best known for The Theory of the Leisure Class, brought to this work both academic experience and outsider skepticism. His uneasy career in American universities sharpened his sensitivity to hierarchy, credentialism, and the commercialization of knowledge. As a founder of institutional economics, he understood education not as an isolated cultural good but as a social institution shaped by economic habits and power. This book is recommended for readers interested in the history of universities, educational reform, sociology, and critiques of capitalism. Though written in 1918, its arguments remain strikingly contemporary wherever scholarship is measured by market value rather than intellectual integrity.
Book Information
Main Genre
Specialized Books
Sub Genre
Economics
Format
Softcover
Pages
136
Price
10.90 €
Description
In The Higher Learning in America, Thorstein Veblen offers a penetrating critique of the modern university's subordination to business principles, administrative control, and pecuniary ambition. Written in his characteristically ironic, densely analytical prose, the book situates higher education within the institutional transformations of industrial capitalism. Veblen contrasts disinterested inquiry with vocational utility and managerial efficiency, exposing how the pursuit of prestige, endowments, and corporate-style governance distorts scholarship's proper aim. Veblen, the Norwegian-American economist and social theorist best known for The Theory of the Leisure Class, brought to this work both academic experience and outsider skepticism. His uneasy career in American universities sharpened his sensitivity to hierarchy, credentialism, and the commercialization of knowledge. As a founder of institutional economics, he understood education not as an isolated cultural good but as a social institution shaped by economic habits and power. This book is recommended for readers interested in the history of universities, educational reform, sociology, and critiques of capitalism. Though written in 1918, its arguments remain strikingly contemporary wherever scholarship is measured by market value rather than intellectual integrity.
Book Information
Main Genre
Specialized Books
Sub Genre
Economics
Format
Softcover
Pages
136
Price
10.90 €



