The Chosen: The Hidden History of Admission and Exclusion at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton

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Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2005 - Education - 711 pages

A landmark, revelatory history of admissions from 1900 to today--and how it shaped a nation

The competition for a spot in the Ivy League--widely considered the ticket to success--is fierce and getting fiercer. But the admissions policies of elite universities have long been both tightly controlled and shrouded in secrecy. In The Chosen, the Berkeley sociologist Jerome Karabel lifts the veil on a century of admission and exclusion at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton. How did the policies of our elite schools evolve? Whom have they let in and why? And what do those policies say about America?

A grand narrative brimming with insights, The Chosen provides a lens through which to examine some of the main events and movements of America in the twentieth century--from immigration restriction and the Great Depression to the dropping of the atomic bomb and the launching of Sputnik, from the Cold War to the triumph of the market ethos.

Many of Karabel's findings are astonishing: the admission of blacks into the Ivy League wasn't an idealistic response to the civil rights movement but a fearful reaction to inner-city riots; Yale and Princeton decided to accept women only after realizing that they were losing men to colleges (such as Harvard and Stanford) that had begun accepting "the second sex"; Harvard had a systematic quota on "intellectuals" until quite recently; and discrimination against Asian Americans in the 1980s mirrored the treatment of Jews earlier in the century.

Drawing on decades of meticulous research, Karabel shines a light on the ever-changing definition of "merit" in college admissions, showing how it shaped--and was shaped by--the country at large. Full of colorful characters, from FDR and Woodrow Wilson to Kingman Brewster and Archibald Cox, The Chosen charts the century-long battle over opportunity--and offers a new and deeply original perspective on American history.

 

Contents

Elite Education and the Protestant Ethos
13
The Big Three Before Selective Admissions
39
Harvard and the Battle over Restriction
77
The Jewish Problem at Yale and Princeton
110
Harvards Conant The Man and His Ideals
139
The Reality of Admissions Under Conant
166
Reluctant Reform Comes to Yale
200
Princeton The Club Expands Its Membership
227
Racial Conflict and the Incorporation of Blacks
378
Coeducation and the Struggle for Gender Equality
410
The Alumni Revolt at Yale and Princeton
449
Diversity the Bakke Case and the Defense of Autonomy
483
Money the Market Ethos and the Struggle for Position
514
The Battle over Merit
536
NOTES
559
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
676

Wilbur Bender and His Legacy
248
Tradition and Change at Old Nassau
294
Yale From Insularity to Inclusion
321
Inky Clark Kingman Brewster and the Revolution at Yale
349
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
683
PHOTO CREDITS
688
INDEX
689
Copyright

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About the author (2005)

JEROME KARABEL is a professor of sociology at the University of California, Berkeley, and a senior fellow of the Longview Institute, a new progressive think tank. An award-winning scholar, Karabel has appeared on Nightline, Today, and All Things Considered. He has written for the New York Review of Books, the New York Times Book Review, the Nation, the New York Times, and the Los Angeles Times.

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