WORK
The Uses of the University
Kerr's 1963 published Godkin Lectures — revised through five editions over forty years — that introduced the <em>multiversity</em> and remains the foundational analytical text on American higher education.
The Uses of the University began as Kerr's April 1963 Godkin Lectures at Harvard and grew, through five successive editions over four decades, into the single most influential analysis of the modern research university. The book's central contribution was not a prescription but a diagnosis: the American university had become a multiversity, an institution of irreducible internal contradictions held together by mediation rather than mission. Each revised edition added a chapter that updated the diagnosis for the pressures of a new era — political upheaval in the late 1960s, commercialization in the 1980s, digital technology in the 2000s — producing a longitudinal record of how the institution changed while remaining structurally the same.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The original 1963 lectures were delivered at the peak of American confidence in higher education. Federal research funding had tripled in a decade. The California Master Plan had just been adopted. Kerr himself had presided over the University of California's expansion from two campuses to nine.
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