Digitale Bibliotheek
Sluiten Bladeren door artikelen uit een tijdschrift
 
<< vorige    volgende >>
     Tijdschrift beschrijving
       Alle jaargangen van het bijbehorende tijdschrift
         Alle afleveringen van het bijbehorende jaargang
           Alle artikelen van de bijbehorende aflevering
                                       Details van artikel 7 van 69 gevonden artikelen
 
 
  Becoming Rafinesque: Market Society and Academic Reputation in the Early American Republic
 
 
Titel: Becoming Rafinesque: Market Society and Academic Reputation in the Early American Republic
Auteur: Durrill, Wayne K.
Verschenen in: American nineteenth century history
Paginering: Jaargang 9 (2008) nr. 2 pagina's 123-140
Jaar: 2008-06
Inhoud: This article focuses on how knowledge came to be valued in conflicting ways in the American Republic during the 1820s and 1830s - one based on a market model that considered knowledge to be a commodity for sale, and another that produced cultural value through social connections created in new academic institutions. Constantine Rafinesque, who taught at Transylvania University in Kentucky, and his research in the natural sciences serve as an example of the first sort of scholarship. His life also illustrates how a market society could lead to dandies, like Rafinesque himself, even in academia, and how that threatened both new middle class social proprieties and a system of clubby social relations that had come to dominate America's colleges and universities in the early nineteenth century.
Uitgever: Routledge
Bronbestand: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

                             Details van artikel 7 van 69 gevonden artikelen
 
<< vorige    volgende >>
 
 Koninklijke Bibliotheek - Nationale Bibliotheek van Nederland