Contents

  • Histories

    Essays on periods and aspects of New School history, partial and evolving.

  • People

    Profiles of people who have passed through the New School. Entries focus on their time at the school.

  • Reader

    Readings, artworks, and materials by and about people associated with the school, including faculty, staff, and students.

  • Reflections & Analysis

    Podcasts, scholarly commentary, and opinion.

About

This website seeks to explore and interrogate the past at a school dedicated to the new. Contributions by students, staff, faculty, alumni, and researchers.

Editors
Julia L. Foulkes, Professor of History
Mark Larrimore, Associate Professor of Religious Studies
Wendy Scheir, Director, New School Archives and Special Collections

Connections
The New School Archives Digital Collections from the Archives Public Seminar The New School

Contact
[email protected]

Link here to the Style Guide for the Histories of The New School website This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License

The New School for Social Research was not founded for interested graduate students who did not want degrees, as J. Kirk Sale asserts ["The New School at Middle Age," July- August 1969], but for interested adults of varied educational backgrounds. The average instructional cost of New School courses is not $450-$550, but considerably higher. It is not true that "nobody is checking to see what really goes on" in the planning and conduct of and business schools within the same universities.

Source:

Change in Higher Education, Vol. 1, No. 6 (Nov. - Dec., 1969), pp. 4, 61-63

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Posted on Wednesday March 6, 2019