Readers sympathetic to Fred Inglis (¡°Trained obedience¡±, Features, 28 August) and Marina Warner (¡°Attempts to ¡®gag and silence¡¯ academics are commonplace¡±, News, 11?September) and their fears for the independence of academics amid a marketised higher education sector should read Paul Goodman¡¯s The Community of Scholars (1962). Goodman observes that the ¡°peculiar disease of modern administration is that it replaces in a formal and functionless way, the community of scholars itself¡±, turning teachers and students into ¡°company men¡± and ¡°grade-seekers¡±. Universities are run like banks; college presidents act like chief executives; education is considered a ¡°brand good for selling and buying¡± like any other. Particular attention should be paid to the author¡¯s final chapter, ¡°A simple proposal¡±, as it was a key influence on the free universities movement.
Martin Levy
University of Bradford
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