This chapter argues that the thrill of course and program elimination due to obsolescence and technological reproducibility quickly turns to horror in late academe with the recognition that obsolescence and technological reproducibility is a threat to not only courses and programs in the humanities, but to every course in the university catalogue. Short of a governmental order rendering higher education illegal, the quest for greater levels of efficiency in late academe is the most direct path to the extinction of higher education in America.

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  • Jeffrey R. Di Leo

摘要

This chapter argues that the thrill of course and program elimination due to obsolescence and technological reproducibility quickly turns to horror in late academe with the recognition that obsolescence and technological reproducibility is a threat to not only courses and programs in the humanities, but to every course in the university catalogue. Short of a governmental order rendering higher education illegal, the quest for greater levels of efficiency in late academe is the most direct path to the extinction of higher education in America.