Readers sympathetic to Fred Inglis (鈥Trained obedience鈥, Features, 28 August) and Marina Warner (鈥Attempts to 鈥榞ag and silence鈥 academics are commonplace鈥, News, 11聽September) and their fears for the independence of academics amid a marketised higher education sector should read Paul Goodman鈥檚 The Community of Scholars (1962). Goodman observes that the 鈥減eculiar disease of modern administration is that it replaces in a formal and functionless way, the community of scholars itself鈥, turning teachers and students into 鈥渃ompany men鈥 and 鈥済rade-seekers鈥. Universities are run like banks; college presidents act like chief executives; education is considered a 鈥渂rand good for selling and buying鈥 like any other. Particular attention should be paid to the author鈥檚 final chapter, 鈥淎 simple proposal鈥, as it was a key influence on the free universities movement.
Martin Levy
University of Bradford
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