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Overview

This volume brings together leading thinkers who offer reflections on the place of Western civilization in the academy, at a time when there is indifference or even antipathy toward the study of the West at most institutions of higher learning. Alternative narratives—including multiculturalism, diversity, and sustainability—have come to the fore in the stead of Western civilization. The present volume is designed to explore the roots, extent, and long-term consequences of this educational climate: How and why did undergraduate education turn its back on what was once an important component of its mission? To what extent has such change affected the experience of undergraduates and the ability of colleges to educate citizens of a constitutional republic? What are the likely individual and social outcomes of such a shift in educational priorities? The volume’s theme is, and will continue to be, the subject of national scholarly and media attention.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781498517553
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 09/03/2015
Pages: 154
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Bradley C. S. Watson is Philip M. McKenna professor of politics and co-director of the Center for Political and Economic Thought at Saint Vincent College.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction:Reclaiming the Vanishing West

Bradley C. S. Watson

Part I: The Western Achievement
  1. Abounding Anomalies: On the Fragility of the Western Achievement
Steven H. Balch
  1. The Rise of the Universities and the Revolution of the Middle Ages
Toby Huff
  1. One Civilization Among Many? Academic Reflections on the West and the Rest
Daniel P. Mahoney
Part II: Western Civilization and Liberal Learning

  1. Life Under Compulsion: Rejecting the Glorious Liberty of the Children of God

Anthony Esolen

  1. Learning to Be Free: The Connection between Liberal and Civic Education
Patrick J. Deneen
  1. Can Virtue be Taught? Western Civilization and Moral Formation
Robert C. Koons
Part III: The Western Canon
  1. Classics and Not Hog-Wash

Anthony O’Hear

  1. Democracy’s Hope: Fanny Price in Jane Austen’s MansfieldPark

Norma Thompson

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