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Sub-brand to go here. Imagining the university. Ronald Barnett Guest lecture, University of Alberta Monday, 11 April, 2011. Centre for Higher Education Studies. This talk. ‘ Imagining the University ’ - an examination of the idea itself
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Sub-brand to go here Imagining the university Ronald Barnett Guest lecture, University of Alberta Monday, 11 April, 2011 Centre for Higher Education Studies
This talk • ‘Imagining the University’ • - an examination of the idea itself • What is it to imagine the university? • What is the role of/ the possibilities for the imagination? • - and its limitations
Feasible utopias • Identifying possibilities • Not neutral • But value-laden • Utopian – probably will not be reached • But not out of reach • Already instances embryonically visible • Empirical warrant (G&D)
A critical project of the imagination • Large role for the imagination • Concept of ‘the imaginary’ • Taylor – building on traditions, collective sediments • Sartre – more one of building the future; of willing the future • A critical project – identified shortcomings in the present • Articulation of imaginative concepts - critical standards
Responsible anarchism • The imagination and responsibility have a complex set of relationships • The imagination should, firstly, be anarchic; it should fly, unconstrained, to envision new possibilities and to find a new language (new ‘conceptual grammars’ – Morley) • Guided by responsibility, responsiveness to counter-values, new ideas are created, imagined; searching for a poetry of the university • But then this imagination needs to be restrained by ‘responsibility’ in/to the real world • The anarchic imagination has to be responsible; even poets have to live in the real world • (This amounts to an exercise in ‘imaginative critical realism’ – being real and being critical but also being imaginative.)
Undue pessimism? • Unremitting bleakness of contemporary scholarship • ‘Commodification’ • ‘Neo-liberalism’ • ‘Quality regimes’ • ‘Managerialism’ • ‘Performativity’ • ‘The regulative/ evaluative state’ • Not undue optimism • Believe matters could go better – grounded optimism • Positive possibilism • But what is possible? Not likely but possible • Feasible utopia – feasible but utopian. Contains a pessimism; but a muted pessimism.
(Some) Ideas of the university • The metaphysical university • The research university • The entrepreneurial university • The postmodern university • The bureaucratic university • The networked university • The liquid university • The therapeutic university • The souless university • The ecological university
Reading the university • The historic • The ideological • The actual • The emerging • The imagined • The dystopian • The utopian
The historic university (past being) • The metaphysical university • The civic university • The service university • The research university
The ideological (present being) • The entrepreneurial university • (The enterprise university) • The accessible university (the ‘open’ university) • The European university • The global university • The postmodern university
The actual • The bureaucratic university • The corporate university • The marketised university • The commodified university • The capitalist university • The performative university
The emerging university • The borderless university • The networked university • The liquid university [Bauman] • The supercomplex university • The therapeutic university
The dystopian university • The soulless university • The subservient university • The selfish university • The self-important university NB Problem – the dystopian university has already arrived (the ideological and the actual)
The utopian university • The anarchic university/ the iconoclastic university • The authentic university • The dialogical university • The ecological university • The translucent university • The chrestomathic university (Young) • The perverse university • The foolish university (Kavanagh) • The wise university (Maxwell) • The virtuous university (Nixon) • The theatrical university (Parker)
Confronting the real world • Gap between the real and the possible • To imagine is to strike for freedom • NB Heidegger – ‘to leap ahead’ • But what is ‘the real world’? • Overlain with interests, always on the move • There is no ‘pure’ university • And, of course, our ideas are suspect.
Imaginative limits • The imagination – necessary but not sufficient condition of transformation • Can be put to furthering pernicious features – ideological • Can trap us into an extension of the present • But utopias, even feasible utopias, are utopian – unlikely ever to be realised • So a deep pessimism under the optimism • But feasible utopias extend and deepen the level of responsibility of the university • Since they are feasible, their failure is an ethical failure • And so builds in some momentum for change – perhaps.
Criteria of adequacy • Range (theory/ ideas/ practice/ policy) • Depth (structures/ experience/ ideas) • Feasibility (power/ organization) • Ethics (flourishing – human/ organizational/ societal/ global) • Continuing possibilities/ emergent properties • Severe tests, but they will extend imaginative ideas
The Ecological University • Sees itself within and as part of a global ecology • Does what it can to enable the world to flourish (not just to ‘sustain’ it) • Has a care/ concern (H) for the world • Is active/ is engaged with the world; reaches into the world • Puts its knowledges to work in the interests of the world This imaginary university passes muster against all of the tests of adequacy (previous slide)
And what of corporate strategies? • A form of hopeful fictions • At their best, they lift us out of the present, of the familiar • They open up vistas, hardly imagined possibilities • Heidegger’s ‘being possible’ • They confront the present and open new spaces • They are fictions because their role is not to offer specific goals but to tell stories – ‘narratives’ • They are characterised by daring, by boldness. [‘Dare to Progress’] • They are full of hope for the future, no matter how challenging the future – which is unknown – may be.
Conclusion • Our contemporary ideas of the university are hopelessly impoverished 1 They are unduly limited 2 They are propping up agendas of marketisation and surveillance and are not seriously addressing the challenges of the twenty-first century • We need to imagine the university anew • We need lots of imaginative ideas – and daring, bold thinking; identifying the best in all possible worlds: ie, utopian thinking • But there is a responsibility on the imagination – to identify feasible ideas of the university – ie, feasible utopias • Feasible utopias are neither unduly optimistic nor unduly pessmistic • - but hold out critical standards against which to test emerging ‘universities’ and to steer us towards positive possibilities – positive possibilism. • The university just could help us towards a better world – • The imagination isn’t a sufficient condition – but it is a necessary condition. Institute of Education University of London 20 Bedford Way London WC1H 0AL Tel +44 (0)20 7612 6000 Fax +44 (0)20 7612 6126 Email info@ioe.ac.uk Web www.ioe.ac.uk