Chapter 5. Martin and Peter Discuss the Fall, 1969 seminar
Chapter 6. Princeton Undergraduates Defend and Criticize Innovation
Chapter 7. On the Edge of the Platform: Tinkering with the 1971 Lecture Class
Chapter 8. The Search for Allies: Bill Caspary, Martin Duberman, and John Holt
Chapter 9. “Let in the Light”
Section III. After Princeton
Chapter 10. Self and community: Black Mountain (1972)
Chapter 11. Honesty, Power, and Desire in “Last Class” (1973)
Robert L. Hampel is Professor in the School of Education at the University of Delaware, USA. He is a historian of education who also studies contemporary education policy. Hampel has previously served as Secretary/Treasurer for the national History of Education society.
From 1966 to 1970, historian Martin Duberman transformed his undergraduate Princeton seminar on American radicalism. This book looks closely at the seminar, drawing on interviews with former students and colleagues, conversations with Duberman, and abundant archival material in the Princeton archives and the Duberman Papers. The array of evidence makes the book a primer on how historians gather and interpret evidence while at the same time shining light on the tumultuous late 1960s in American higher education. This book will become a tool for teaching, inspiring educators to rethink the ways in which history education is taught and teaching students how to reason historically through sources.