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Knowledge Worlds

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<i>Knowledge Worlds</i> reconceives the university as a media complex through which knowledge is made, conveyed, and withheld. Reinhold Martin argues that the material infrastructures o...
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  • 16 March 2021
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What do the technical practices, procedures, and systems that have shaped institutions of higher learning in the United States, from the Ivy League and women’s colleges to historically black colleges and land-grant universities, teach us about the production and distribution of knowledge? Addressing media theory, architectural history, and the history of academia, Knowledge Worlds reconceives the university as a media complex comprising a network of infrastructures and operations through which knowledge is made, conveyed, and withheld.

Reinhold Martin argues that the material infrastructures of the modern university—the architecture of academic buildings, the configuration of seminar tables, the organization of campus plans—reveal the ways in which knowledge is created and reproduced in different kinds of institutions. He reconstructs changes in aesthetic strategies, pedagogical techniques, and political economy to show how the boundaries that govern higher education have shifted over the past two centuries. From colleges chartered as rights-bearing corporations to research universities conceived as knowledge factories, educating some has always depended upon excluding others. Knowledge Worlds shows how the division of intellectual labor was redrawn as new students entered, expertise circulated, science repurposed old myths, and humanists cultivated new forms of social and intellectual capital. Combining histories of architecture, technology, knowledge, and institutions into a critical media history, Martin traces the uneven movement in the academy from liberal to neoliberal reason.

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Price: $40.00
Pages: 384
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: 16 March 2021
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231189835
Format: Paperback
BISACs: EDUCATION / Philosophy, Theory & Social Aspects, DESIGN / History & Criticism, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Media Studies, ARCHITECTURE / Criticism, ARCHITECTURE / Buildings / Public, Commercial & Industrial, ARCHITECTURE / History / Modern (late 19th Century to 1945), ARCHITECTURE / History / Contemporary (1945-)
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In this remarkable book, Reinhold Martin completely redefines what architectural history can do. The modern university emerges here as a media complex made not only of brick and stone but also of acoustic tiles and lighting fixtures, electric wires and handheld bells, lecterns and seminar tables. In a narrative that spans from the late Enlightenment to the twentieth century, Martin demonstrates with painstaking precision how this machinery functioned to suppress some voices and amplify others. What the machinery of higher education ultimately produced, it turns out, were spirits and ghosts of various kinds—of liberalism, neoliberalism, humanism, and that thing called the ‘Western canon.’ We are still haunted by those ghosts today, and this astoundingly original book tells us how we got here.
Reinhold Martin is professor of architecture in the Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation at Columbia University, where he directs the Temple Hoyne Buell Center for the Study of American Architecture. He is the author of The Organizational Complex: Architecture, Media, and Corporate Space (2003); Utopia’s Ghost: Architecture and Postmodernism, Again (2010); and The Urban Apparatus: Mediapolitics and the City (2016).

Preface
Introduction: Knowledge and Technics
Prologue, c. 1800
Part I. Figures
1. Student Bodies and Corporate Persons
2. Greek Lines: The Geometry of Thought
Part II. Temporalities
3. Bricks and Stones: Time-Based Media
4. Sources: A Political Ecology of Cultivation
Interlude, c. 1900
Part III. Voices
5. Diffuse Illumination: The Silence of the Universal
6. The Dialectic of the University: His Master’s Voice
Part IV. Symbols
7. Frontier as Symbolic Form
8. Technopoesis: Human Capital and the Spirit of Research
Epilogue, c. 2000
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index