As the university becomes tied to the world of work, the professor - at least in the natural
and some of the social sciences - takes on the characteristics of an entrepreneur. (Clark Kerr, quoted in Harrington 1969: 142)
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
References
1.
Applebome, Peter (1998) 'No Room for Children in a World of Little Adults' , The New York Times Week in Review, May 10: 1,3.
2.
Braverman, Harry (1974) Labor and Monopoly Capital. New York and London: Monthly Review Press.
3.
Brown, Michael F. (1998) 'Can Culture be Copyrighted?', Current Anthropology39(2): 193-222.
4.
Costrell, Robert M. (1998) 'Criticism of Faculty Wage Study Unwarranted', The Campus Chronicle, May 1: 2.
5.
DiGiacomo, Susan M. (1997) 'The New Internal Colonialism', Critique of Anthropology17 (1): 91-7.
6.
Hamlin, Peter (1998) 'The Market-Model University', Harvard Magazine, May-June: 48-55.
7.
Harrington, Michael (1969) Towards a Democratic Left. Baltimore: Penguin Books.
8.
National Education Association (1998) The NEA 1998 Almanac of Higher Education. Washington DC: National Education Association.
9.
Ninetto, Amy (1998) 'Culture Sells: Cézanne and Corporate Identity' , Cultural Anthropology13(2) : 256-82.
10.
Oliven, Ruben George (1998) 'Looking at Money in America', Critique of Anthropology18(1) : 35-59.
11.
Schrag, Peter (1998) Paradise Lost: California's Experience, America's FutureNew York: The New Press .
12.
Znoj, Heinzpeter (1998) 'Hot Money and War Debts: Transactional Regimes in Southwestern Sumatra', Comparative Studies in Society and History40(2) : 193-222.