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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2004
May
New book focuses on
'remarkable people' who shaped the University of Illinois
Andrea Lynn, Humanities Editor
217-333-2177; andreal@uiuc.edu
5/4/04
CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. — Perhaps any large public research university could tell
the same basic story, but it is unlikely that any other telling would
be richer or deeper.
The story is in fact 21 stories – historical vignettes drawn from
one university over an entire century – which together reveal
“how knowledge is produced and how great public universities come
to be,” writes Richard Herman, the provost
of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, in his preface to
the new book, “No
Boundaries: University of Illinois Vignettes” (University
of Illinois Press).
Herman, who began working at the university in 1998, commissioned the
book after hearing story after story about “the remarkable people
who fashioned this institution across the generations, across so many
fields of learning, and who continue to remake it in new ways."
“There is a nobility of purpose here and a legacy to be preserved
and built upon,” Herman wrote about the Urbana campus.
The impression “No Boundaries” leaves is that Illinois always
has been a magnet for visionaries and risk-takers, as Herman says, and
always has been a cradle of academic invention, creativity, pioneering
– even from its earliest days and across all decades.
The new book, edited by Lillian Hoddeson, a professor of history
at Illinois, contains a few familiar stories, freshly retold, and many
previously unknown tales, newly revealed. Most of the contributors are
current or emeritus Illinois faculty members; all of their subjects
are Illinois faculty and staff members, now deceased.
“This is a book about people whose work shaped, and was shaped
by, the University of Illinois,” Hoddeson wrote.
“This book is also a kind of environmental history in that it
deals with the role of ‘place’ in a university’s production
of knowledge, culture, and well-educated people.”
The first part of the book focuses on “two backbones of the university,”
Hoddeson wrote – its buildings and its library. Part two deals
with the inception of athletic programs, including football. Part three
carries the university’s story into post-World War II, “when
numerous departments and institutes in the fields of science, engineering,
business, and the social sciences achieved international stature and
the university assumed its place among the great American institutions
of higher learning.” Part four, on fine arts, opens with a chapter
on Lejaren Hiller, “who broke new ground by employing the university’s
unique resources in digital computing to devise a revolutionary way
of composing music.”
In the book, enriched with photographs, readers are reminded of John
Bardeen’s travails and triumphs on the road to winning two
Nobel prizes while at Illinois. Hoddeson, who specializes in the history
of 20th century science and technology, wrote the Bardeen essay and
the introduction to the book. She is the author of several books, including
the most recent, “True Genius: The Life and Science of John Bardeen”
(Joseph Henry Press, 2002).
The book also makes clear the lengths to which the great baritone William
Ceasar Warfield, affectionately called “Uncle Bill,” went
to welcome, inspire and nurture music school students and colleagues.
“There are endless stories recounting his good deeds,” wrote
Ollie Watts Davis, who studied with Warfield and has been a professor
of voice at Illinois since 1987.
Katherine Sharp’s Herculean efforts and vision to hew a library
school and a major library out of the Illinois prairie in the 1890s
also is told. Sharp was a protégé of “the redoubtable”
Melvil Dewey, and often worked with “uncontrolled energy,”
wrote Donald Krummel, professor emeritus of library science and of music.
“Not until well into the 1960s were any other major American academic
libraries headed by women.”
The title of the book is taken from something Isabel Bevier wrote after
visiting the U. of I. campus in 1900, to interview for the new position
of professor of household science.
“I thought I had never seen so flat and muddy a place: no trees,
no hills, no boundaries of any kind.”
But, as Paula Treichler, director of Illinois’ Institute
of Communications Research, wrote in her essay on Bevier, “the
place had character, and as Bevier considered all that she had seen
and heard at Illinois, the landscape became for her a powerful metaphor
for the institution she was about to join: its openness to new ideas,
its support for co-education, and its commitment to the land-grant mission
that linked theory to practice, learning to labor, and science to the
problems of the world where men and women live.”
According to Treichler, the possibilities at Illinois “exhilarated”
Bevier, who was hired to carve out a new department, “essentially
from scratch.”
As Bevier later conceded: “This lack of boundaries, physical and
mental, the open-mindedness of the authorities and their willingness
to try experiments, indeed their desire to do so, opened up a whole
new world for me.”
Other profiles include Roger Adams, the powerhouse head of chemistry;
Oscar Lewis, the anthropologist of poverty; Charles Osgood, the pioneering
psycholinguist; and Stuart Pratt Sherman and J. Kerker Quinn, who together,
helped put the young campus “on the American literary map,”
wrote Bruce Michelson, a U. of I. English
professor and contributor to “No Boundaries.”
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