Category Archives: Cambridge

David Armitage and the History of Political Thought

David Armitage (born February 1, 1965) is a British historian of intellectual history, international history, Atlantic history, global history, and the history of political thought. He holds the Lloyd C. Blankfein Professorship of History at Harvard University, where he has … Continue reading

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Two Runners, Two Deaths: The Hero Systems of Eric Liddell and Harold Abrahams

A man walks into Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, in the autumn of 1919, and the first thing he reads is a list of the dead. The names of the men who did not come back from France are fresh … Continue reading

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Ten Convenient Beliefs For Leaders Of Cambridge

Cambridge leaders believe their institution’s rivalry with Oxford, which structures so much of Cambridge’s self-presentation, its recruitment materials, its internal culture, and its claims to distinctive intellectual identity, represents a genuine competition between two different intellectual traditions, Oxford’s emphasis on … Continue reading

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Decoding Cambridge University Press

Cambridge University Press functions as the oldest and perhaps most self-conscious “prestige fortress” in the global academic alliance system. While Oxford often feels like a sprawling empire, Cambridge operates with a leaner, more focused brand of institutional authority. The Oldest … Continue reading

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Decoding Cambridge

Cambridge University operates a “Scientific Monastery” model that prioritizes technical mastery and rigorous sifting over the rhetorical polish favored at Oxford. In the framework of Alliance Theory, Cambridge functions as a machine for producing high-status “cognitive specialists.” It coordinates its … Continue reading

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Conflict in the Academy: A Study in the Sociology of Intellectuals (2015)

Review: “In late 1980, an apparently minor dispute at Cambridge University became headline news. The question was whether or not the young lecturer Colin MacCabe – whose work was heavily influenced by recent developments in structuralist and post-structuralist theory – … Continue reading

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