Institutional Crisis: State and Scholar in Hermann Hesse's the Glass Bead Game and Walter Miller's A Canticle for Leibowitz (Critical Essay) Institutional Crisis: State and Scholar in Hermann Hesse's the Glass Bead Game and Walter Miller's A Canticle for Leibowitz (Critical Essay)

Institutional Crisis: State and Scholar in Hermann Hesse's the Glass Bead Game and Walter Miller's A Canticle for Leibowitz (Critical Essay‪)‬

Extrapolation 2008, Spring, 49, 1

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Publisher Description

"I am Shiva, the Destroyer of Words" The above epigraph from the Bhagavad Gita was mouthed in 1945 not by a raving Nazi propagandist holed up in a Berlin bunker, nor by a corn-cob-pipe smoking Allied general wading ashore on a Pacific island. Rather, the speaker of these words was a university professor--Robert Oppenheimer. In August of 1945, shortly after the destruction of Hiroshima, Oppenheimer quoted from the Bhagavad Gita to describe the impact of the atomic bomb on humanity. Oppenheimer's exclamation marks a sea change of sorts in the relationship between knowledge and power. Although academic knowledge and political puissance have always been stranger bedfellows, during and after the Second World War, academics delivered into the hands of politicians an incredible amount of power. Stepping out of their classrooms and labs, professors moved into the public arena. Although some--like Fareed Zakaria, Henry Kissinger, and the recently departed David Halberstam--might argue that the importing of academic minds into the public sphere has been salutary, there exists a strong counter-argument that such engagement has not been an unqualified success.

GENRE
Professional & Technical
RELEASED
2008
22 March
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
35
Pages
PUBLISHER
Extrapolation
SIZE
236.4
KB
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