The History of the University of Oxford: Volume VIII: The Twentieth Century: History of the University of Oxford
Editat de Brian Harrisonen Limba Engleză Hardback – 6 apr 1994
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198229742
ISBN-10: 0198229747
Pagini: 936
Ilustrații: 32 pp plates, figures, maps, tables
Dimensiuni: 165 x 244 x 51 mm
Greutate: 1.48 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria History of the University of Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198229747
Pagini: 936
Ilustrații: 32 pp plates, figures, maps, tables
Dimensiuni: 165 x 244 x 51 mm
Greutate: 1.48 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria History of the University of Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
Its depth, variety, readability, and authority make this volume indispensable to all students of higher education and modern British life
The eighth volume of the rather glorious History of the University of Oxford is a large and impressive achievement ... as an account of the objective framework of the life of the University of Oxford, this volume of its history could hardly be bettered.
This is a splendid book, vastly readable and often entertaining. Odd bits of information will stick in one's mind.
The scholarship is impeccable, the range of activities covered by the 33 contributors mind-boggling.
I am an interested party. But reading this excellent book - itself a monument to all that is good about Oxford scholarship - I have become all the more convinced that such a second dissolution would be a calamity not only for Oxford, but for us all.
the 24 contributors to this eighth volume all write with a wealth of information, and most of them with a critical insight which makes this monumental work far from being a complacent brochure of self-praise
It covers, with massive scholarship, all aspects of university life ... will bean invaluable work of reference for the history of ideas
this is an excellent book - absolutely first class- an intellectual triumph ... In short this book is worthy of its subject. Why did we ever expect anything more?
histories like this serve as reference books, or rather, collections of "reference essays"... the qualtity of writing and research is high and there has been a considerable amount of cross-referencing... the very amount of work involved in bringing this volume together is awe-inspiring... one is bound to be impressed with a volume that covers so much ground so well.
This must be the most detailed and comprehensive history of any university produced in our time. Dr Harrison and his team have been triumphantly successful in providing, in a form both scholarly and readable, the historical background to these unresolved issues. Whatever its other failings, this is an academic community which can produce recent and contemporary history of outstanding quality and substance.
The editor, Brian Harrison, who has contributed three of the best chapters to this volume, deserves to be praised.
The volume constantly displays the skill and learning of its editor. Elsewhere, Keith Thomas provides a fascinating view of college life as experienced by him, and J M Winter introduces the process of change in Oxford by an important account of the impact of the First World War. Fine chapters are many. The heft of the volume and its riches mean that it will provide materials and ideas for a long time to come.
formidably scholarly and informative
it will be consulted with confidence by generations of historians and other curious people for as long as a social, intellectual, cultural or political history survive as serious activities ... a massive and well-signposted quarry ... the richest store of anecdote and oral history that has been assembled about this curious place, or perhaps about anywhere else. This is a volume about the paradoxes of radical change and obstinate continuities.
The eighth volume of the rather glorious History of the University of Oxford is a large and impressive achievement ... as an account of the objective framework of the life of the University of Oxford, this volume of its history could hardly be bettered.
This is a splendid book, vastly readable and often entertaining. Odd bits of information will stick in one's mind.
The scholarship is impeccable, the range of activities covered by the 33 contributors mind-boggling.
I am an interested party. But reading this excellent book - itself a monument to all that is good about Oxford scholarship - I have become all the more convinced that such a second dissolution would be a calamity not only for Oxford, but for us all.
the 24 contributors to this eighth volume all write with a wealth of information, and most of them with a critical insight which makes this monumental work far from being a complacent brochure of self-praise
It covers, with massive scholarship, all aspects of university life ... will bean invaluable work of reference for the history of ideas
this is an excellent book - absolutely first class- an intellectual triumph ... In short this book is worthy of its subject. Why did we ever expect anything more?
histories like this serve as reference books, or rather, collections of "reference essays"... the qualtity of writing and research is high and there has been a considerable amount of cross-referencing... the very amount of work involved in bringing this volume together is awe-inspiring... one is bound to be impressed with a volume that covers so much ground so well.
This must be the most detailed and comprehensive history of any university produced in our time. Dr Harrison and his team have been triumphantly successful in providing, in a form both scholarly and readable, the historical background to these unresolved issues. Whatever its other failings, this is an academic community which can produce recent and contemporary history of outstanding quality and substance.
The editor, Brian Harrison, who has contributed three of the best chapters to this volume, deserves to be praised.
The volume constantly displays the skill and learning of its editor. Elsewhere, Keith Thomas provides a fascinating view of college life as experienced by him, and J M Winter introduces the process of change in Oxford by an important account of the impact of the First World War. Fine chapters are many. The heft of the volume and its riches mean that it will provide materials and ideas for a long time to come.
formidably scholarly and informative
it will be consulted with confidence by generations of historians and other curious people for as long as a social, intellectual, cultural or political history survive as serious activities ... a massive and well-signposted quarry ... the richest store of anecdote and oral history that has been assembled about this curious place, or perhaps about anywhere else. This is a volume about the paradoxes of radical change and obstinate continuities.