
Students ripped up their university exam papers in protest against established authority and in rejection of formal qualifications; a progressive sociologist assigned his students the storming of a public office as field-work; avant-garde writers, street theatre and poets moulded a bohemian sub-culture was dramatically reshaping university life.
Students ripped up their university exam papers in protest against established authority and in rejection of formal qualifications; a progressive sociologist assigned his students the storming of a public office as field-work; avant-garde writers, street theatre and poets moulded a bohemian sub-culture was dramatically reshaping university life.
探花直播1960s was a period of joy, music and optimism. By the early 1970s, there was a huge change in the economic and educational climate.
David Fowler
This was 1960s Britain, when radical students dramatically tipped the power balance of education. Their movement: bold, polemical and revolutionary, transformed the university system conclusively.
探花直播 of Cambridge historian Dr David Fowler is an academic with special interest in youth movements and student protest of the 1960s and 鈥70s.
He will be discussing student sit-ins, lock-outs and their impact in a talk entitled 探花直播Creative Campus on Thursday 20 October, 5.30-6.30pm, at Mill Lane Lecture Rooms as part of Cambridge 探花直播鈥檚 Festival of Ideas.
探花直播Festival of Ideas is the UK鈥檚 only arts, humanities, and social science festival and this year offers over 160 free events to participants of all ages between October 19-30.
Dr Fowler, who teaches in the interdisciplinary Faculty of Human, Social and Political Science, has formerly argued that 鈥 探花直播Beatles were capitalists鈥, stating that a clear distinction should be made between 鈥榩op culture鈥 which is media driven, and 鈥榶outh culture鈥 which he describes as organically driven.
Despite his argument sparking an indignant backlash of musical patriotism, it cannot be denied that a dark chasm existed between the rock 鈥榥鈥 roll life of 探花直播Beatles and the Rolling Stones and their fainting teenage fans.
In his new book, 探花直播Creative Campus: Student Protest and the Remaking of British Culture in the Global 1960s, Fowler seeks to re-define the interpretation of 鈥榊outh Culture鈥 during the 1960s and 1970s.
Not largely documented in historical literature, Fowler uses sources uncovered at British universities such as Cambridge, Oxford, Essex, York and Queen鈥檚 Belfast in Northern Ireland. His book is an analysis of the motivations, methods and consequences of both prominent and underground student movements. 探花直播research throws light on a fascinating topic. Ideas disseminated by students during this period completely transformed the education system, posing challenging questions examining the interaction between youth and culture. These questions still hold huge importance and relevance today, as students are back in the spotlight of the media and universities come under further intense scrutiny.
Post-war Britain saw a huge increase in the number of young people going to university, doubling during the 1960s alone. This new cohort included more women, working-class and lower middle-class students than ever before, becoming the active ingredient in this new recipe for change. 鈥楽winging London鈥 had put on its dancing shoes, allowing liberation in the workplace, personal relationships and British culture.
Fowler said: 鈥 探花直播1960s was a period of joy, music and optimism. By the early 1970s, there was a huge change in the economic and educational climate, culminating in the Oxford and Cambridge protests which erupted in 1972-4. Were the students reacting to political events? Or were they forming a cultural movement bigger than their own focus?鈥
This generation of university students took on the challenge of a complete re-invention of the education system and, according to Fowler, had 鈥渃lear, concrete, tangible educational goals鈥. Feeling increasingly constrained by stuffy traditional subjects in a rapidly evolving world, students were keen to explore cutting-edge areas of research.
They championed the study of subjects such as sociology, psychology and development studies, among many others. He added: 鈥淭here was huge demand for a different approach 鈥 it really was history from below. Students wanted to study the politics of Latin America, radical political movements and the lives and thought of revolutionary leaders such as Che Guevara, alongside the Henrician Reformation. This imaginative, interdisciplinary engagement was completely unheard of, especially in Oxford and Cambridge.鈥
探花直播pressure for a new curriculum was coupled with demands for a new type of university to house it: the campus. Visionary students dreamed of creating a new physical and intellectual community to cater for their progressive philosophy. A campus university, built on rural greenfield sites outside towns such as York, Warwick, Sussex and Leicester, appealed to their ideas of an educational and enriching sanctuary. Everything that a modern student may desire was available on campus, from everyday amenities to birth control to chaplaincy. Fowler notes that iconic architectural additions, such as the man-made lake on York 探花直播 campus, are clear indications of the students鈥 grandiose plans for a utopian learning experience.
探花直播Free 探花直播 Movement, started by students at King鈥檚 College Cambridge, was at the forefront of cultural change. Consisting of young students from all socio-economic backgrounds, its members included Guardian journalist Simon Hoggart, and historians Simon Schama, David Cressy and the late Roy Porter.
鈥淜ing鈥檚 College especially was a laboratory for creating a new culture which included both students and workers. It was not socialist, but anti-establishment, taking the monopoly of culture away from the high-brow, middle-aged, metropolitan establishment,鈥 Fowler explained.
探花直播movement was apolitical and egalitarian, and its aims were to cultivate a national environment of mutual learning between teachers and pupils. 探花直播first classes were held at the 鈥楢rts Lab鈥 on Mill Road, where teaching consisted of discussions, seminars, talks and film showings with members of the public invited to participate. Fowler claims that 鈥淒espite being run by an intellectual elite, the movement itself was far from elitist鈥; it represented a fervent attempt to overcome the problems of 鈥楾own and Gown鈥 which had metaphorically separated residents and students of Cambridge for centuries.
Most importantly, Fowler underlines that the students were an 鈥渋conoclastic generation鈥. Articulate and outspoken, they accompanied their struggle with the publishing of books and newspapers, and regular appearances in the media. 探花直播universities became centres to nurture this ambitious social and political change with peaceful and intelligent action. With this in mind, it is not surprising that Fowler remains unsympathetic to the November 2010 student protests; the crimes committed by Charlie Gilmour and Edward Wollard only demonstrate a lack of creativity, imagination and true egalitarian objective when compared with the student movement of the 1960s.
Fowler worries that contemporary student radicalism lacks real ideological depth. He points to the closure of Grammar schools under the Labour government in the late-1970s (he attended one of the last surviving state grammar schools, Nunthorpe, in York), which he argues significantly reduced the number of working-class and lower middle-class students.
He added: 鈥淢any working class students became revolutionary spirits and iconoclasts of cultural movements of the 1960s. 探花直播most creative of these students were Grammar school educated, and affected social and political movements outside of the education sector. Today, universities shamefully lack this diversity in the student body, which can only serve as a lesson to education policy makers.鈥
Dr David Fowler will be speaking on Thursday 20 October, 5.30-6.30pm at Mill Lane Lecture Rooms. Please visit /festivalofideas or phone 01223 766766.
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