List of Abbreviations
List of Illustrations
Introduction
Part One: 1783-1843
1: New universities for a new century
2: The people and places of the University of London
Part Two: 1843-1880
3: Experiments in Ireland and England
4: Building the mid-Victorian university
Part Three: 1880-1914
5: The making of a modern university
6: Life in a modern university
Part Four: 1914-1949
7: Redbrick attacked
8: Redbrick inhabited
Part Five: 1949-1973
9: The expansion of Redbrick
10: Buildings and battles
Part Six: 1973-1997
11: Reshaping higher education
12: Students and staff
13: Towards a new architecture?
Epilogue: Redbrick since 1997
Bibliography
William Whyte is Professor of Social and Architectural History and Fellow of St John's College, Oxford. He is the author of Oxford Jackson: architecture, education, status and style (2006), and editor of several other books, including George Gilbert Scott: an architect and his influence (2014).
Whyte has written a fascinating architectural and social history of
the development of British universities
*A.W. Purdue, Northern History*
A magnificent review of the two-centuries-long evolution of the
civics ... perceptive.
*David Palfreyman, Times Higher Education*
Authoritatively and perceptively as it makes a case for its
subject, in prose that is often amusing as well as elegant ... it
makes a refreshing change to wish that a book had been much
longer
*Michael Hall, The Victorian*
This carefully researched and well-illustrated study is a
remarkable achievement.
*Dr Michael Wheeler, Church Times*
William Whyte has succeeded admirably in depicting the evolution of
Britain's extremely complex university sector in the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries ... This work of detailed scholarship has the
virtue of being both very readable and exceptionally informative.
Author and publisher alike are to be congratulated for producing
such an attractive book that casts important light on a really
complicated and previously overlooked topic.
*Hugh Clout, Cercles*
This superb book is the first history to cover the history of
British civic universities in 50 years ... Whyte draws on a
formidable array of archival research, discovering piquant quotes
from a range of obscure sources ... the portrait of Britain's civic
universities that emerges is, in the end, one that is almost
'beautiful' because it is a human portrait rather than an
institutional one ... The book will obviously be of interest to
those specializing in the history of education. However, the book's
methodology, which is cogently set out in the introduction, should
be read by all scholars thinking about how to write histories of
the way societies interact with the physical environments that they
occupy.
*Otto Saumarez Smith, Urban History*
Whyte's highly readable study of civic universities fills a
significant gap in the history of higher education ... an
outstanding book ... it brims with life by meaningfully weaving in
the stories of the men and, by the late nineteenth century, the
women who attended universities and inhabited their buildings. It
transcends the history of education to reveal the central place of
civic universities in the evolution of the modern state, the making
of the middle class, and the mutual tempering of social radicalism
and conservatism.
*Christopher Bischof, Journal of British Studies*
Rich, varied and amusing ... Whyte deserves congratulation for his
thoughtful, perceptive and witty work.
*Jeremy Black, History Today*
Beautifully written (not to mention witty) and drawing on extensive
archival research ... Whyte's book successfully asserts a
centrality for the British civic universities within both the
history of higher education and the life of the nation that is long
overdue. Its central thesis -- that there is a common civic
tradition within British higher education -- will spark much
debate. Good. The volume lends much-needed vitality to the history
of higher education in Britain and will provide an invaluable
starting point for all future historians of Britain's
universities.
*Mike Finn, History of Education*
William Whyte's excellent and provoking study of the evolution of
the modern university in Britain ... deserves a wide readership,
and provides valuable historical background to contemporary debates
about the place of universities within society.
*Alexander Hutton, English Historical Review*
Anyone searching for a scholarly, well-written, extensively
illustrated account of Britain's Redbrick universities ... may
retire from the hunt with this book in hand.
*Joseph A. Soares, American Historical Review*
The book is comprehensive, ranging from the eighteenth century to
the present; it perceptively attends to false starts and fictional
accounts, alongside more familiar and lasting successes; and it is
deeply researched, generously illustrated, and beautifully written
throughout ... Redbrick belongs on the shelf of every historian of
architecture, universities, and indeed modern Britain, and it
should also inform wider discussions about the university in
Britain past, present, and future.
*Journal of Modern History*
Whyte has breathed new life into the history of British
universities.
*Emily Rutherford, Twentieth Century British History*
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