Reviews
This exquisitely researched and elegantly argued book makes plain how the bewitching ideology of entrepreneurship has intoxicated leaders in higher education in recent decades. Fixated on heroic individualism and dreams of quick riches, the modern university has come to glorify greed and profit, eschewing its democratic mission and leaving us all poorer.
Universities justify their increasingly narrow focus on profit with empirically unfounded and theoretically incoherent ideas about entrepreneurial heroism. In this devastating critique, James Rushing Daniel clearly explains why the ideology of entrepreneurship has become the face of anti-intellectualism today—and helps us imagine how to start fighting back.
The Start-Up Factory is a uniquely imaginative addition to the literature on higher education. It persuasively argues that the remaking of the university's purposes can be traced to the cult and culture of market-based entrepreneurialism. The abstraction of neo-liberalism lives and breathes in this story of the buying and selling of higher education. The book's excellent diagnosis of problem and solution should be read by every scholar, policy maker and citizen committed to the independence of higher education, a prerequisite to serving the larger public good.
Book Details
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Entrepreneurial Fever
1. A Brief Intellectual History of the Entrepreneur
2. The Origins of the Entrepreneurial Turn in US Higher Education
3
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Entrepreneurial Fever
1. A Brief Intellectual History of the Entrepreneur
2. The Origins of the Entrepreneurial Turn in US Higher Education
3. Entrepreneurship in Vogue
4. The Entrepreneurship Machine
5. The Imbroglio of Entrepreneurship Education
6. Dispelling the Myths of Entrepreneurship
7. Challenging the Entrepreneurial Mandate
Conclusion: Entrepreneurship's Endgame