For their part, junior faculty are encouraged to view themselves as 
civil servants with a well-defined career ladder. Understandably, they 
obsess over how “much” it takes to get tenure. These are post-boomers 
who didn’t cut their teeth on the civil-rights movement or anti-war 
protest and who don’t necessarily share our conception of the university 
as a site of social justice and an opening to a public sphere in which 
intellectual debate matters. They accept new norms of productivity, and 
they negotiate for handsome “start-up” funds with which to jump start 
their own careers. Start up, in my prehistoric era, was a used IBM 
typewriter. One has the sense that many post-boomer faculty could as 
well be running restaurants, flipping houses, or occupying a corporate 
cubicle. The politically engaged public intellectual of the sixties has 
given way to the academic who tweets.

full: http://www.counterpunch.org/2015/05/06/universities-inc/
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