The Historical Role of Higher Education in China’s Political
Development
igher education, public or private, plays at least three roles: to serve the interests of the
state, to produce professional and independent new knowledge, and to produce
democratic citizens. Kant thought that the mission of the university “was to serve two
primary functions: first, to provide educated bureaucrats for the state, and second, to
conduct research whose goal was the production of new knowledge” (cited in Taylor,
2010: 18). This covers at least the first two roles. Weber (1973: 20) says that the state
may require those in the university to sing the tune of him whose bread they eat. So, if
the state provides for the university, higher education serves the interests of the state.
Consequently, universities do serve the state, even if it is totalitarian or authoritarian.
This is also the first role discussed above.
But Weber apparently thinks that there is a problem here. He says that “such a castration
of the freedom and disinterestedness of university education, which prevents the
development of persons of genuine character, cannot be compensated by the finest
institutes, the largest lecture halls, or by ever so many dissertations, prize-winning works
and examination successes” (Weber, 1973: 20). He seems to say that higher education
should not be influenced by the state or other particular interests and should remain free
and disinterested from partisan politics in teaching and research. This appears to speak
to the second role of professional and independent knowledge production. So, he
apparently acknowledges the first role but believes that it should not go too far.
The third role of the university being a gadfly, or conscience of society, or a critic of
unjustness and unfairness in society, i.e., a democratic role, does not seem to get much
attention. Even Marx, who was so concerned about social justice, alienation, class
struggles, etc., did not dwell on the role of higher education in social development. But
we can see this from a Marxian point of view in Gramsci, for example, when he talks
about ideological or cultural hegemony of the ruling class, or in Louis Althusser when he
talks about the subjugated groups’ “submission to the rules of the established order”
(cited in Yan Xiaojun, 2014:495). Gramsci also discussed organic intellectuals who serve
the interest of the bourgeois state (see Zhidong Hao, 2015:105). Such hegemony can
only be countered by a critical stance developed by intellectuals. Hence the third role of
higher education, a critical role, a challenge to an unjust system, and a call for a more
democratic system. In Henry Giroux’s (2018:157) words, higher education has a
potential role as a public sphere capable of educating students as informed, critical
thinkers capable of not only holding power accountable but also fulfilling the role of critical
agents who can act against injustice and resist diverse forms of oppression. Qian Liqun
(2012) calls this a reflexive, inquisitive, critical, creative (in thought, culture, and
scholarship) role, or in a word, a revolutionary role of the university. So, when Durkheim
talks about higher education “as a means of cultural transmission, socialization, social
control, or social processes” (Clark, 2007: 5), it can go all the three ways. Students can
be socialized into or influenced by knowledge of totalitarian ideologies, or democratic