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Socrates Project Lecture: Spirit of 68: Remembering the University in Revolutionary Times

Council Chambers, Gilmour Hall 111

04/04/2018, 7:00 pm - TO - 9:00 pm

Organizer: MacPherson Institute for Leadership, Innovation and Excellence in Teaching

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On April 4, award winning professor Dr. Robin D.G. Kelley will lecture at McMaster on the role of the university during revolutionary times.

This event is co-sponsored by the Socrates Project, Paul R. MacPherson Institute for Leadership, Innovation and Excellence in Teaching and Office of the Dean of Humanities with Henry Giroux taking a lead in the planning.

Abstract:

“In light of the 50th anniversary of 1968 (on the very day commemorating 50 years since Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s, assassination), I revisit the campus insurgencies of that period and suggest that the neoliberal university is partly a consequence of their defeat—not just in the U.S. but around the world. When the Cold War liberal state dramatically expanded land grant universities in the 1950s and 60s, it did not anticipate mass resistance. Students and some faculty rejected the close ties between the emerging national security state and the university and the most radical movements to democratize America actually began on campuses by exposing the university’s liberal conceits and its role in the expansion of U.S. imperialism. Genuine struggles to transform both the university and society, as well as the university’s relationship to society, ultimately failed or were captured, resulting in greater diversity of bodies and curriculum while consolidating state and corporate power over the university. At the moment when anti-imperialist, anti-racist, anti-poverty, feminist, gay, nationalist, and Marxist insurgencies erupted on university campuses half a century ago, the Fordist/Keynesian welfare/warfare state had already begun to collapse. I then make a plea to try and recover the ‘spirit’ of ’68, the spectre of (an unfinished) revolution haunting the current order. There is much we can draw from this moment if we are to remake the university and the world.”

Free event, open to the public, no registration required, and seating is first-come first served.

With support from:
The Office of the Vice President of Research
The Office of the Dean of Humanities
The Macpherson Institute
McMaster Centre for Scholarship in the Public Interest